Wayward's profileDeadheads United™PhotosBlogListsMore Tools Help
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us


Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us






One World, No Borders, No Rules....

Loading...

THE GROUND YOU STAND ON IS LIBERATED TERRITORY!

Loading...

You Are From

IP Address Lookup

Wayward Bill

Occupation
Location
Interests
5'6", Blonde/Gray Hair, Blue Eyes, A few extra #s. Monogamous, Old School Charm, Polite, Offbeat Witty, Intelligent, Chivalrous
"Go To People" For Making Your Space Truly Yours'!

Da Soundz

"I Am A Luna Tick!"

Loading...

Muzic For Da Mind

Loading...
≡>>>"My Guest Book!"<<<≡
(click above)
My Guest Book is open to all passersby!

 Image Hosted by ImageShack.usImage Hosted by ImageShack.usImage Hosted by ImageShack.us

Please take a moment
&
say a prayer
4
Iris Shea Sparrow!
She is fighting the big "C."
 

(Click Icons Below Phor Phantastic & Usable Sites)
 
 Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
 Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
 
 Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us 
     
 
KindWeb is a worldwide portal for KindFolks containing a web directory, message boards, music resources, news, shopping, ecards, and more. 
60s & Further 
    
  × Musicville ×  Link Corona Gurl Grphx!    
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us 
  UK Lady at wordpress 
UK Lady Graphics banner UK Lady at Blogger 

 Image Hosted by ImageShack.us Support Peace Action! Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
    The Animal Rescue Site
  GoodSearch: You Search...We Give! 

My
 
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us 
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us 
 
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
 
 Image Hosted by ImageShack.us 
 
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us  Image Hosted by ImageShack.us 

 Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

DrugSense Double-click on the box below to copy the code into your clipboard! (IE only!)  


  Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

<<<~My Guestbook~>>>

Wayward Bill's Facebook profile 

      
Midnight Fun Anti Spam !   Creative Commons License

Add to Technorati Favorites

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us 
Please wait...
Sorry, the comment you entered is too long. Please shorten it.
You didn't enter anything. Please try again.
Sorry, we can't add your comment right now. Please try again later.
To add a comment, you need permission from your parent. Ask for permission
Your parent has turned off comments.
Sorry, we can't delete your comment right now. Please try again later.
You've exceeded the maximum number of comments that can be left in one day. Please try again in 24 hours.
Your account has had the ability to leave comments disabled because our systems indicate that you may be spamming other users. If you believe that your account has been disabled in error please contact Windows Live support.
Complete the security check below to finish leaving your comment.
The characters you type in the security check must match the characters in the picture or audio.

Bill's Sandbox!

Loading...
There are no photo albums.

Observe Peace Day 2009!

Loading...

Deadheads United™

Peace, Love, Hippie Stuff

Happy Fourth of July…!!!

Happy

Fourth

Of

July…!!!

Peace,

Pot,

Politics,

Wayward

Bill

DrugSense Alert - Syndicated Columnist Supports Legalization

A SYNDICATED COLUMNIST SUPPORTS LEGALIZATION

**********************************************************************

DrugSense FOCUS Alert #406 - Wednesday, 1 July 2009

You may not agree with everything syndicated columnist George Monbiot
wrote below. The point he makes that is worthy of this FOCUS Alert is
that decriminalization is not the answer - full legalization is.

The referenced reports are worth reading.

World Drug Report 2009
http://drugsense.org/url/dhSmEL2y

The WHO report
http://www.tdpf.org.uk/WHOleaked.pdf

A Comparison of the Cost - effectiveness of the Prohibition and
Regulation of Drugs
http://drugsense.org/url/l4lH1McU

It is possible that MAP's Newshawks will find more newspapers that
print the syndicated column in the days ahead. If so they will appear
here
http://www.mapinc.org/author/George+Monbiot

If you would like to help with newshawking please see both
http://www.mapinc.org/newshawk and http://www.mapinc.org/hawk.htm

**********************************************************************

Note: Also printed in the Canberra Times (Australia)
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n667/a12.html

Pubdate: Tue, 30 Jun 2009

Source: Guardian, The (UK)

Copyright: 2009 Guardian News and Media Limited

Author: George Monbiot

YES, ADDICTS NEED HELP. BUT ALL YOU CASUAL COCAINE USERS WANT LOCKING UP

I Know People Who Drink Fair-Trade Tea and Coffee, Shop Locally and
Snort Drugs at Parties. They Are Disgusting Hypocrites

It looked like the first drop of rain in the desert of drugs policy.
Last week Antonio Maria Costa, the executive director of the UN
office on drugs and crime, said what millions of liberal-minded
people have been waiting to hear. "Law enforcement should shift its
focus from drug users to drug traffickers ... people who take drugs
need medical help, not criminal retribution." Drug production should
remain illegal, possession and use should be decriminalised. Guardian
readers toasted him with bumpers of peppermint tea, and, perhaps, a
celebratory spliff.

I didn't.

I believe that informed adults should be allowed to inflict whatever
suffering they wish on themselves. But we are not entitled to harm
other people.

I know people who drink fair-trade tea and coffee, shop locally and
take cocaine at parties.

They are revolting hypocrites.

Every year cocaine causes some 20,000 deaths in Colombia and
displaces several hundred thousand people from their homes.

Children are blown up by landmines; indigenous people are enslaved;
villagers are tortured and killed; rainforests are razed.

You'd cause less human suffering if instead of discreetly retiring to
the toilet at a media drinks party, you went into the street and
mugged someone.

But the counter-cultural association appears to insulate people from
ethical questions.

If commissioning murder, torture, slavery, civil war, corruption and
deforestation is not a crime, what is?

I am talking about elective drug use, not addiction.

I cannot find comparative figures for the United Kingdom, but in the
United States casual users of cocaine outnumber addicts by about 12
to one. I agree that addicts should be helped, not prosecuted. I
would like to see a revival of the British programme that was killed
by a tabloid witch-hunt in 1971: until then all heroin addicts were
entitled to clean, legal supplies administered by doctors.

Cocaine addicts should be offered residential detox.

But, at the risk of alienating most of the readership of this
newspaper, I maintain that while cocaine remains illegal, casual
users should remain subject to criminal law. Decriminalisation of the
products of crime expands the market for this criminal trade.

We have a choice of two consistent policies.

The first is to sustain global prohibition, while helping addicts and
prosecuting casual users. This means that the drugs trade will remain
the preserve of criminal gangs.

It will keep spreading crime and instability around the world, and
ensure that narcotics are still cut with contaminants. As Nick Davies
argued during his investigation of drugs policy for the Guardian,
major seizures raise the price of drugs.

Demand among addicts is inelastic, so higher prices mean that they
must find more money to buy them. The more drugs the police capture
and destroy, the more robberies and muggings addicts will commit.

The other possible policy is to legalise and regulate the global
trade. This would undercut the criminal networks and guarantee
unadulterated supplies to consumers.

There might even be a market for certified fair-trade cocaine.

Costa's new report begins by rejecting this option.

If it did otherwise, he would no longer be executive director of the
UN office on drugs and crime.

The report argues that "any reduction in the cost of drug control ...
will be offset by much higher expenditure on public health (due to
the surge of drug consumption)". It admits that tobacco and alcohol
kill more people than illegal drugs, but claims that this is only
because fewer illegal drugs are consumed.

Strangely however, it fails to supply any evidence to support the
claim that narcotics are dangerous.

Nor does it distinguish between the effects of drugs themselves and
the effects of the adulteration and disease caused by their prohibition.

Why not? Perhaps because the evidence would torpedo the rest of the
report. A couple of weeks ago, Ben Goldacre drew attention to the
largest study on cocaine ever undertaken, completed by the World
Health Organisation in 1995. I've just read it, and this is what it
says. "Health problems from the use of legal substances, particularly
alcohol and tobacco, are greater than health problems from cocaine
use. Few experts describe cocaine as invariably harmful to health.
Cocaine-related problems are widely perceived to be more common and
more severe for intensive, high-dosage users and very rare and much
less severe for occasional, low-dosage users ... occasional cocaine
use does not typically lead to severe or even minor physical or
social problems." This study was suppressed by the WHO after threats
of an economic embargo by the Clinton government. Drugs policy in
most nations is a matter of religion, not science.

The same goes for heroin.

The biggest study of opiate use ever conducted (at Philadelphia
general hospital) found that addicts suffered no physical harm, even
though some of them had been taking heroin for 20 years.

The devastating health effects of heroin use are caused by
adulterants and the lifestyles of people forced to live outside the
law. Like cocaine, heroin is addictive; but unlike cocaine, the only
consequence of its addiction appears to be ... addiction.

Costa's half-measure, in other words, gives us the worst of both
worlds: more murder, more destruction, more muggings, more
adulteration. Another way of putting it is this: you will, if Costa's
proposal is adopted, be permitted without fear of prosecution to
inject yourself with heroin cut with drain cleaner and brick dust,
sold illegally and soaked in blood; but not with clean and legal supplies.

His report does raise one good argument, however.

At present the trade in class A drugs is concentrated in the rich nations.

If it were legalised, we could cope. The use of drugs is likely to
rise, but governments could use the extra taxes to help people tackle
addiction. But because the wholesale price would collapse with
legalisation, these drugs would for the first time become widely
available in poorer nations, which are easier for companies to
exploit (as tobacco and alcohol firms have found) and which are less
able to regulate, raise taxes or pick up the pieces.

The widespread use of cocaine or heroin in the poor world could cause
serious social problems: I've seen, for example, how a weaker drug
khat seems to dominate life in Somali-speaking regions of Africa.
"The universal ban on illicit drugs," the UN argues, "provides a
great deal of protection to developing countries".

So Costa's office has produced a study comparing the global costs of
prohibition with the global costs of legalisation, allowing us to see
whether the current policy (murder, corruption, war, adulteration)
causes less misery than the alternative (widespread addiction in
poorer nations)? The hell it has. Even to raise the possibility of
such research would be to invite the testerics in Congress to shut
off the UN's funding.

The drug charity Transform has addressed this question, but only for
the UK, where the results are clear-cut: prohibition is the worse option.

As far as I can discover, no one has attempted a global study.

Until that happens, Costa's opinions on this issue are worth as much
as mine or anyone else's: nothing at all.

**********************************************************************

PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER

Please post copies of your letters to the sent letter list (
sentlte@mapinc.org ) if you are subscribed.

Subscribing to the Sent LTE list will help you to review other sent
LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or approaches.

To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see

http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form

Suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center

http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides

**********************************************************************

Prepared by: Richard Lake, Senior Editor www.mapinc.org

===
.
DrugSense provides many services at no charge, but they are not
free to produce. Your contributions make DrugSense and its Media
Awareness Project (MAP) happen. Please donate today. Our secure Web
server at
http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm accepts credit cards
and Paypal. Or, mail your check or money order to:
.
DrugSense
14252 Culver Drive #328
Irvine, CA 92604-0326.
(800) 266 5759
.
DrugSense is a 501c(3) non-profit organization dedicated to raising
awareness about the expensive, ineffective, and destructive "War on
Drugs." Donations are tax deductible to the extent provided by law.

A Message From President Barack Obama


The White House, Washington
 
Dear Friend,

Last week, I announced United We Serve – a nationwide call to service challenging you and all Americans to volunteer this summer and be part of building a new foundation for America.

And when I say “all,” I mean everyone – young and old, from every background, all across the country. We need individuals, community organizations, corporations, foundations, and our government to be part of this effort.

Today, for the official kick off of United We Serve, members of my administration have fanned out across America to participate in service events and encourage all Americans to join them.

The First Lady is rolling up her sleeves and getting to work too. But before she headed out today, she asked me to share this message with you.

A Message From The First Lady

Our nation faces some of the greatest challenges it has in generations and we know it’s going to take a lot of hard work to get us back on track.

While Michelle and I are calling on every American to participate in United We Serve, the call to service doesn’t end this fall. We need to stay involved in our towns and communities for a long time to come. After all, America’s new foundation will be built one neighborhood at a time – and that starts with you.

Thank you,
President Barack Obama




 

Colorado vs California - Who Will Be First To Legalize Commercial (Hemp), Medical, & Recreational Marijuana...??? - Act to Remove Federal Penalties for Personal Use of Marijuana by Responsible Adults Now In The House Of Representatives...!!!

Hey Now Kidz,
 
I know that I haven't been doing much personal writing here at my good ole blog.  Yes I have been involved with my cause at Facebook.  "The Green Blizzard!"  But today I do want to address who I think will be the first in the union to go marijuana green...!!!
 
In today's Denver Daily News is a blurb about the return of medical marijuana in Colorado to a licensed caregiver.  I am going to have type this verbatim because they haven't linked their Friday edition yet.
 
Medical Marijuana Returned
 
Attorney Robert J.Corry and his client Travis Sanford, picked up a jar of medical marijuana from the Denver Police Department yesterday Sanford is a registered caregiver with the state of Colorado who had been charged with the marijuana. All criminal charges against him were dropped, and the Denver County Court ordered the return of the marijuana.
 
This wouldn't have gone down this way in California or most other medical marijuana states.
 
We (Colorado) are also the only state to have a city and county (Denver) if you are 21+ years of age where less than an ounce of weed is legal.  Although the Mayor and Chief of Police in Denver insist on enforcing the state law.  $100 + costs for less than an ounce of pot.  To countermand the government status quo the citizens passed an initiative making it the least enforcable law in the city and county of Denver.
 
So who would you say is most likely to make the first move toward legalization, Colorado or California? I say my state...Colorado...!!!
 
More marijuana...!!! 
 
Yesterday Massachusetts Democrat Barney Frank, along with co-sponsors Ron Paul (R-TX); Maurice Hinchey (D-NY); Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA); and Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), reintroduced legislation to limit the federal government's authority to arrest and prosecute minor marijuana offenders.
The measure, entitled an "Act to Remove Federal Penalties for Personal Use of Marijuana by Responsible Adults," would eliminate federal penalties for the personal possession of up to 100 grams (three and one-half ounces) of cannabis and for the not-for-profit transfer of up to one ounce of pot - making the prosecutions of these offenses strictly a state matter.
Under federal law, defendants found guilty of possessing small amounts of cannabis for their own personal use face up to one year imprisonment and a $1,000 fine.
Passage of this act would provide state lawmakers the choice to maintain their current penalties for minor marijuana offenses or eliminate them completely.
Lawmakers would also have the option to explore legal alternatives to tax and regulate the adult use and distribution of cannabis free from federal interference.
 
I am urging you to contact your state's elected Congresional House of Representatives representatives by writing them a letter asking them to either co-sponsor, endorse, and/or vote for this milestone legislature.
 
Here is the link to get the name of your state's representatives and how to contact them:
 
 
It's your choice whether via snail mail (the best), email, or telephone.  The reason snail mail is the best because it gives them something tangible to respond to and it also let's you do a telephone follow-up.
 
Get inspired, once one domino falls then the cascade begins.  Help End Marijuana Prohibition!  Legalize, Regulate, and Tax commercial (hemp), medical, & recreational marijuana!
 
This doable folks....
Wayward Bill

Marijuana Policy Project Alert - Barney Frank Steps Up To The Plate Again

Marijuana Policy Project
Marijuana Policy Project Alert June 18, 2009
Drop Shadow

Dear Wayward Bill & Others:

Today, Congressman Barney Frank (D-Mass.) introduced a bill in the U.S. House of Representatives to eliminate all federal penalties for marijuana possession. This came only one week after he also introduced a bill to protect medical marijuana patients.

Would you please take one minute to ask your U.S. representative to support these two bills? MPP's easy online action center makes it simple — just enter your name and contact info, and we'll do the rest.

The Personal Use of Marijuana by Responsible Adults Act of 2009 would eliminate the threat of federal arrest and prison for the possession of up to 3.5 ounces of marijuana and the not-for-profit transfer of an ounce of marijuana — nationwide.

What's more, last week Congressman Frank introduced the Medical Marijuana Patient Protection Act, which would allow states to protect medical marijuana patients from arrest and jail without federal interference, as well as allow pharmacies to dispense marijuana to patients with a doctor's recommendation. You can take action on this bill here.

MPP has worked closely with Congressman Frank's staff in past months, helping to craft both pieces of legislation and build political support for the proposals on Capitol Hill.

Now members of Congress need to hear from their constituents who want to see it passed — that means you! It takes only a minute or two to use MPP's online action system to send a quick note to your member of the House, so would you please send your letter right now?

Eliminate threat of federal arrest and prison for marijuana possession

Protect medical marijuana patients nationwide

Thank you so much for your help.

Sincerely,

Rob Kampia
Executive Director
Marijuana Policy Project
Washington, D.C. 

Raised in '09
$842,952
Goal in '09
$2,350,000

MPP will be able to tackle all of the projects in our 2009 strategic plan if you and other allies are able to fund our work.

Contributions to MPP are not tax-deductible. To make a tax-deductible contribution, click here.

Popular Links:

 

Our mailing address is MPP, P.O. Box 77492, Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. 20013.

 
We are required by federal law to tell you that any donations you make to MPP may be used for political purposes, such as supporting or opposing candidates for federal office.
 

300 Days of Sun...

Loading...