Miami Valley NORML

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Welcome to Miami Valley NORML

CBS Reverses Decision, Agrees to Run Pro-Marijuana Ad

E-mail Print PDF

Was it Margaret Mead who said, "Never underestimate the power of 8,809 readers who care about criminal justice?" Okay, maybe not quite that. But I'm excited to announce that one story we've closely tracked here at Change.org -- CBS's refusal to accept a pro-marijuana legalization ad -- resulted in a victory this afternoon.

Last month, NORML reported that CBS had denied the group's request to place an ad in Times Square that touted the potential billions in taxes that would result from legalizing marijuana. Remember, this is a network that boasts marijuana-infused advertisements for their Showtime Network show, Weeds. It's also the network that was perfectly willing to air a controversial anti-abortion ad aimed at peak viewership during the Super Bowl. But still, somehow CBS decided that NORML's message (“Legalize Marijuana – Billions in Taxes”) would ruffle the network's too-delicate sensibilities.

In a Feb. 3 rejection email, NORML was told, "If CBS changes their morals we will let you know."

Well, it turns out that a month later, the network has decided to stop censoring NORML's message. This afternoon, our organizing director here at Change.org spoke with CBS's communication vice president, Shannon Jacobs. Jacobs told us that the network "communicated to the people who wanted to place the ad that they will accept the ad if they still want to run it."

Congratulations to NORML for winning this well-deserved turnaround -- and thanks to all the Change.org readers who helped rout CBS's decision.

Last Updated on Friday, 05 March 2010 10:49
 

Why Baby Boomers and the Elderly Are Smoking Martijuana

E-mail Print PDF

More and more of the nation's 78 million boomers are discovering they'd rather smoke marijuana than reach for a pharmaceutical.  Conventional wisdom dictates that as younger generations slowly replace the old, conservative social traditions are jettisoned.

This may be true for issues such as gay marriage, where there are clear divisions among younger and older voters, but when it comes to marijuana reform, the evidence indicates that simplistic divisions of opinion along age lines don't apply for pot.

Earlier this week, an AP wire article picked up a lot of buzz in the news-cycle, with a title and premise meant to shock the mainstream: "Marijuana Use by Seniors Goes up as Boomers Age."

The AP article was pegged to a December report released by the Federal Substance AbuAlternet Photo se and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). It revealed that the number of Americans over 50 who reported consuming cannabis in the year prior to the study had gone up from 1.9 percent to 2.9 percent in the period from 2002 to 2008.

This is supported by earlier polling results. In February 2009, a Zogby poll found that voters aged 50 to 64 were almost equally divided in their support for marijuana legalization at 48 percent. In that same poll, young voters aged 18 to 29 were the cohort who most enthusiastically supported legalization, at 55 percent. But overall support among all ages came in at 44 percent.

So who brought the average down? Don't lay the blame on the elderly. In fact, as early as 2004, an AARP poll found that 72 percent of its members (all 50-plus, with the lion's share over 65) supported marijuana for medical purposes, indicating their understanding of the benefits of legal cannabis availability.

Some expert observers in the marijuana reform movement believe the bulk of marijuana detractors are made up of 30- and 40-somethings -- adults of parenting age. And as more of the 65-and-over crowd is populated by baby boomers, it appears that in the not-too-distant future every age demographic including the elderly will approve of marijuana reform more than Americans in their 30s and 40s.

Last Updated on Saturday, 27 February 2010 12:06 Read more...
 

Cops break ranks about marijuana

E-mail Print PDF

From an article in Police magazine that asked police officers across the country about their thoughts on Marijuana.

Here are the highlights. 

  • FIFTY-FIVE PERCENT OF AMERICAN COPS FAVOR MEDICAL MARIJUANA!
  • ONE OUT OF THREE COPS SAYS BUSTING POT SMOKERS IS A WASTE!
  • ONE OUT OF FOUR COPS SAYS MARIJUANA SHOULD BE LEGALIZED!

Article Reference

POLICE MAGAZINE June 2009/Volume 33, Number 6
Is this Drug War LOST? Is it Still Worth Fighting?
By DAVID GRIFFITH, Police Magazine June 2009

POLICE MAGAZINE June 2009/Volume 33, Number 6, Front Page

Last Updated on Sunday, 21 February 2010 13:51 Read more...
 

Medical Marijuana dispensaries details being worked in Washington DC

E-mail Print PDF

Washington, DC: District of Columbia City Council members held their first hearing on Thursday regarding legislation to authorize the legal use and distribution of medical marijuana.

Members of the DC City Council Committees on Health and Public Safety jointly heard public testimony regarding B 18-622, the Legalization of Marijuana for Medical Treatment Initiative Amendment Act 0f 2010, which seeks to allow for the licensed production and distribution of cannabis to authorized patients.

The measure would implement components of Initiative 59 – a 1998 DC ballot measure that garnered 69 percent of the vote. However, until this year DC city lawmakers have been barred from instituting the measure because of a Congressional ban on the issue. Congress lifted its ban late last year.

Testifying before the Committee, NORML Executive Director Allen St. Pierre said: "The goals of Initiative 59 were threefold: To provide physicians with the legal authority to recommend marijuana as a therapy to those patients for whom they believed would benefit from its medical use; to legally protect patients who use marijuana under a doctor's supervision from criminal arrest or prosecution; and to provide patients with legal, safe, affordable above ground access to medical marijuana. While NORML commends the efforts of the DC City Council to implement safe and reasonable medical marijuana regulations, these efforts must not run contrary to the intentions of I-59, as unambiguously expressed by 69 percent of DC's voters."

Council members stated that the measure would likely be passed by May of this year. If approved by the Council, Congress has 30 days to either approve or reject the measure.

This article appeared in the NORML Weekly news follow this link for more news from NORML.

 

Working for Legalization

E-mail Print PDF

A group of 22 advocates for the Miami Valley chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) gathered around a small laptop screen on a table in the dining room of the Hideaway Cafe in Northside at the start of their Feb. 6 meeting.

They watched a new marijuana-legalization ad being aired on television sets across California.  "Wow. That's good," said one member of the group as they all stood in momentary silence when it was over. "This is the type of ad I want to see on TVs in Cincinnati," said Will Huber, the chapter's meet-up organizer.

The Miami Valley chapter of NORML, which started last September, is one among many in the national organization working to end the prohibition of marijuana in the United States.  "Our main goal is to educate the public about the recent science behind cannabis," Huber said.

The chapter supports the complete use of cannabis, including everything from medical purposes to recreational use, according to Huber.

With supporters in attendance ranging from college students to middle-aged store owners, the members first discussed their individual reasons for joinin NORML. For many, their approach. to the legalization of marijuana is both a civil-rights issue as well as a personal one.

"We're demonizing a part of our population and making them hide in the shadows and feel like criminals," said one member. "If we're going to be a caring nation, we have to stop harming our people."

Last Updated on Saturday, 27 February 2010 12:07 Read more...
 
  • «
  •  Start 
  •  Prev 
  •  1 
  •  2 
  •  3 
  •  Next 
  •  End 
  • »


Page 1 of 3

Polls

When will marijuana be legalized