News (Media Awareness Project) - US TX: Column: The Maple Leaf Forever |
Title: | US TX: Column: The Maple Leaf Forever |
Published On: | 2004-09-10 |
Source: | Austin Chronicle (TX) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 00:41:47 |
THE MAPLE LEAF FOREVER
In recent weeks, federal drug warrior John Walters has turned his
attention to the latest and apparently, in his esteemed opinion,
greatest threat: Canadian marijuana.
Walters, head of the White House Office of National Drug Control
Policy -- the "drug czar" -- in recent months has bemoaned the
increase in availability of the allegedly superpotent Canadian bud.
Canada has less strict marijuana laws than the U.S., and our northern
neighbors have allegedly been cultivating strains that contain about
7% THC, more than triple the amount commonly found in U.S. pot in the
Seventies.
This combination of lax laws and pot potency equals a national scourge
for Walters, who told Time that he blames a potent strain of the dope
cultivated in British Columbia -- the nefarious "BC Bud" -- for a rise
in marijuana-related emergency room visits in the late Nineties.
"Canada is exporting to us the crack of marijuana," he said.
Unfortunately for Walters, the U.S. Department of Justice doesn't
agree with his dire dope assessments. According to the annual National
Drug Threat Assessment report, released in April by the National Drug
Intelligence Center, California and Mexico produce most of the pot
smoked in the U.S., and growers in Hawaii are credited as the "leading
source of high-potency marijuana." Further, contrary to Walters'
claims, the increase in marijuana-related emergency room visits has
"not been significant."
At press time, the fight over the latest Nevada marijuana-legalization
ballot initiative was raging on, as supporters waited on the U.S. 9th
Circuit Court of Appeals to give a final nod on its fate. On Sept. 2,
Silver State election officials announced that initiative supporters
had gathered about 2,000 fewer signatures than the number required to
secure the measure a place on the November ballot.
However, that determination -- made after a district judge sided with
initiative organizers and ordered a signature recount -- is
potentially moot if the 9th Circuit rules in favor of the Marijuana
Policy Project on an action pending before the court.
At issue is the Nevada secretary of state's decision to rule invalid
the petition signatures of people who signed up in support of the
measure on the same day they registered to vote. The Silver State's
last citizen initiative to decriminalize marijuana was vociferously
opposed by Walters, whose campaign activities there led to previous
legal actions alleging the drug czar violated the federal Hatch Act,
which restricts the political activities of government employees.
In recent weeks, federal drug warrior John Walters has turned his
attention to the latest and apparently, in his esteemed opinion,
greatest threat: Canadian marijuana.
Walters, head of the White House Office of National Drug Control
Policy -- the "drug czar" -- in recent months has bemoaned the
increase in availability of the allegedly superpotent Canadian bud.
Canada has less strict marijuana laws than the U.S., and our northern
neighbors have allegedly been cultivating strains that contain about
7% THC, more than triple the amount commonly found in U.S. pot in the
Seventies.
This combination of lax laws and pot potency equals a national scourge
for Walters, who told Time that he blames a potent strain of the dope
cultivated in British Columbia -- the nefarious "BC Bud" -- for a rise
in marijuana-related emergency room visits in the late Nineties.
"Canada is exporting to us the crack of marijuana," he said.
Unfortunately for Walters, the U.S. Department of Justice doesn't
agree with his dire dope assessments. According to the annual National
Drug Threat Assessment report, released in April by the National Drug
Intelligence Center, California and Mexico produce most of the pot
smoked in the U.S., and growers in Hawaii are credited as the "leading
source of high-potency marijuana." Further, contrary to Walters'
claims, the increase in marijuana-related emergency room visits has
"not been significant."
At press time, the fight over the latest Nevada marijuana-legalization
ballot initiative was raging on, as supporters waited on the U.S. 9th
Circuit Court of Appeals to give a final nod on its fate. On Sept. 2,
Silver State election officials announced that initiative supporters
had gathered about 2,000 fewer signatures than the number required to
secure the measure a place on the November ballot.
However, that determination -- made after a district judge sided with
initiative organizers and ordered a signature recount -- is
potentially moot if the 9th Circuit rules in favor of the Marijuana
Policy Project on an action pending before the court.
At issue is the Nevada secretary of state's decision to rule invalid
the petition signatures of people who signed up in support of the
measure on the same day they registered to vote. The Silver State's
last citizen initiative to decriminalize marijuana was vociferously
opposed by Walters, whose campaign activities there led to previous
legal actions alleging the drug czar violated the federal Hatch Act,
which restricts the political activities of government employees.
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