home / subscribe / donate / books / t-shirts / search / links / feedback / events / faq
Inside the New Print Edition of Our Subscriber-Only Newsletter!
"Better Killing:" Anthropology Goes to War in Afghanistan
David Price describes how the Pentagon is recruiting PhDs to fight its counter-insurgency campaigns: today Afghanistan, tomorrow the world . Mark Grueter reports from Sulaimani, Iraqi Kurdistan, on a multi-million dollar campus designed to sell the American way of life. Welcome to the American University of Iraq. “Move your ass and your brains will follow.” Joe Paff remembers an astounding mobilization in San Francisco, 1967-1973 and the lessons it holds for left organizers today. Get your new edition today by subscribing online or calling 1-800-840-3683 Contributions to CounterPunch are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now! CounterPunch books and t-shirts make great presents.
Order CounterPunch By Email For Only $35 a Year !
Meet & Debate (Perhaps Even Date) CPers Online at CounterPunch's New Facebook Page
|
Today's Stories October 5, 2009 Pam Martens October 2-4, 2009 Alexander Cockburn Saul Landau Diana Johnstone Greg Moses William Blum Brian Cloughley Russell Mokhiber John Ross Ellen Brown David Ker Thomson David Macaray Gary Engler Robert Fantina Lisa Stolarski / Naomi Archer Anthony Papa Joe Allen Harry Browne Ron Jacobs Charles R. Larson David Yearsley Poets' Basement Website of the Weekend October 1, 2009 Andy Worthington Carl Ginsburg Mary Lynn Cramer Col. Douglas Macgregor Brian M. Downing John V. Walsh Ramzy Baroud Norman Solomon Dan Bacher Brenda Norrell Website of the Day September 30, 2009 Vijay Prashad Gareth Porter Andy Thayer Paul Craig Roberts Dean Baker Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Laura Flanders Dave Lindorff Seumas Milne Martha Rosenberg Website of the Day September 29, 2009 Marshall Auerback Alan Farago Jeff Sher Bruce Jackson Gareth Porter Jonathan Cook Bouthaina Shaaban Dave Lindorff Stephen Soldz Sara Mann Website of the Day September 28, 2009 Laura Carlsen Anthony DiMaggio Paul Craig Roberts Neve Gordon Bill Quigley Harvey Wasserman Nicola Nasser Ben Rosenfeld Murder in New Orleans: Remembering Kirsten Brydum Website of the Day September 25-7, 2009 Alexander Cockburn Daniel Wolff Rev. William E. Alberts Mike Roselle Saul Landau Eshan Azari Winslow T. Wheeler Robert Jensen Jonathan Cook Nelson P Valdés David Michael Green Ramzy Baroud John V. Whitbeck Andy Worthington David Ker Thomson Seth Sandronsky Jim Goodman Charles R. Larson David Yearsley Kim Nicolini Lorenzo Wolff Website of the Weekend September 24, 2009 Steven Higgs Christopher Brauchli Marshall Auerback Stephanie Westbrook Nadia Hijab Sen. Russell Feingold David Macaray Binoy Kampmark Joe Allen Website of the Day September 23, 2009 Paul Craig Roberts Gabriel Kolko Uri Avnery Shamus Cooke Missy Beattie Gareth Porter Mark Weisbrot Dr. Susan Block Norm Kent Richard Neville Website of the Day September 22, 2009 Franklin C. Spinney The Huge Hole in Gen. McChrystal's Afghan Counterinsurgency Strategy Russell Mokhiber Greg Grandin Nikolas Kozloff John Ross Ron Jacobs Tariq Ali Dave Lindorff Harvey Wasserman Vijay Prashad Kareem Shora Website of the Day September 21, 2009 JoAnn Wypijewski Carl Finamore Uri Avnery Nikolas Kozloff Paul Simpson, M.D. Alan Nasser Ray McGovern Dave Lindorff Lina Thorne Jeb Sprague Website of the Day September 18-20, 2009 Alexander Cockburn Russell Mokhiber Mike Whitney David Michael Green Jonathan Cook Nadia Hijab Mark Weisbrot Michael Winship Michael Leonardi Andy Worthington Fred Gardner David Macaray David Rosen Jason Mark Mike Ferner Farzana Versey Ron Jacobs elin o'Hara slavick Gilad Aztmon David Yearsley Charles R. Larson Lorenzo Wolff Website of the Weekend
September 17, 2009 Joshua Frank Brenda Norrell Robert Weissman Pam Martens Franklin Lamb Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Jed Bickman Alan Farago Website of the Day September 16, 2009 Ray McGovern Stephen Green Andy Worthington Dean Baker Anthony DiMaggio Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Benjamin Dangl Robin Willoughby Eric Walberg James Ridgeway Website of the Day September 15, 2009 Mike Whitney Mutadhar al-Zaidi Marshall Auerback Afshin Rattansi Jonathan Cook Gareth Porter: Dave Lindorff Winslow T. Wheeler Franklin Spinney Karen Korenoski / David Macaray Susie Day Website of the Day September 14, 2009 Paul Craig Roberts M. G. Piety Shamus Cooke Bouthaina Shaaban Alvaro Huerta John Ross Harvey Wasserman Adam Federman Stephen Fleischman Robert Jensen Website of the Day September 11-13, 2009 Alexander Cockburn JoAnn Wypijewski Carl Ginsburg Leonard Peltier Franklin Lamb Benjamin Dangl Mike Whitney John Berger Saul Landau Russell Mokhiber Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Felice Pace Jordan Flaherty Ron Jacobs David Macaray David Correia Robert Bryce Christopher Brauchli Paul Krassner Charles R. Larson Kim Nicolini David Yearsley Lorenzo Wolff Poets' Basement Website of the Weekend September 10, 2009 Joshua Frank Dean Baker Brian M. Downing Franklin C. Spinney Andy Worthington Chase Madar Farzana Versey Ronnie Cummins Binoy Kampmark Timothy Lebrón Charles R. Larson Website of the Day September 9, 2009 Richard Neville Melissa Checker Nadia Hijab Robert Weissman Jonathan Cook Russell Mokhiber James Ridgeway Richard W. Behan James McEnteer Martha Rosenberg Website of the Day September 8, 2009 Henry A. Giroux Stephen Soldz John Ross Jeff Leys Mike Whitney Ashcroft: Repugnant to the Constitution Shamus Cooke Ellen Brown Norman Solomon Men With Guns: In Kabul and Washington Deepak Tripathi Laray Polk Charles R. Larson Website of the Day September 7, 2009 Vicente Navarro Bouthaina Shaaban David Macaray Paul Craig Roberts Jonathan Cook Conn Hallinan Walter Brasch Mark Weisbrot Carl Finamore C. G. Estabrook Website of the Day September 4-6, 2009 Alexander Cockburn Carl Ginsburg Jonathan Cook George Wuerthner Marc Levy Ray McGovern Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Joe Paff Gareth Porter Devin Beaulieu Anthony Papa David Ker Thomson Don Fitz Lee Sustar / Jim Goodman Wajahat Ali Ron Jacobs Helen Redmond John V. Walsh Charles R. Larson Mark Scaramella David Yearsley Ben Sonnenberg Poets' Basement Website of the Weekend September 3, 2009 Marcus Rediker Ron Jacobs Mike Whitney Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Saul Landau Anat Matar Tanya Golash-Boza Dave Lindorff Andy Worthington Website of the Day September 2, 2009 John Ross Vijay Prashad Rev. Jim Rigby Joanne Mariner Missy Beattie Soren Ambrose Diane Farsetta Nadia Hijab Shamus Cooke Charles R. Larson Website of the Day September 1, 2009 Jeffrey St. Clair Paul Craig Roberts Mark T. Harris Dean Baker Jeffrey Buchanan Robin Mittenthal Ellen Brown Martha Rosenberg Website of the Day
|
Situation NORML 2009Reconciling Medical Pot Use and LegalizationBy FRED GARDNER More than 500 devotees of the cannabis plant attended the 38th annual NORML convention at the Grand Hyatt in San Francisco September 24-26. The crowd was not only larger than in previous years, but people seemed to be listening more intently to the speakers, less apt to gab outside the auditorium. NORML’s goals have been remote and vague for decades; now they seem attainable and in need of definition. Local media coverage centered on the “Regulate, Control, and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010” that is likely to be on the California ballot in November 2010. If approved by the voters, it would allow adults over 21 to cultivate, possess, and share up to an ounce. Distribution would be regulated and taxed by local governments. The prime mover behind Tax Cannabis 2010 is Richard Lee, an organizer with a record of accomplishment —founder of the Bulldog Coffeeshop, Café Blue Sky (one of Oakland's four permitted cannabis dispensaries), and Oaksterdam University (a trade school for the burgeoning industry). Lee also helped lead the 2004 campaign for Oakland's Measure Z, which made the use of marijuana by adults a low-priority matter for the police. To make the ballot, Lee’s team has to get 433,000 registered voters to sign petitions over the next five months. A professional signature-gathering outfit has been hired to coordinate the efforts of paid volunteers. C.W. Nevius of the Chronicle belittled the initiative's chances of winning. "I doubt voters in conservative Orange County will be thrilled to vote for the Regulate, Control, and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010," Nevius opined. He was covering sports in 1996 and might not know that Proposition 215 carried Orange County with 52% of the vote, overcoming opposition by Attorney General Dan Lungren, Governor Gray Davis, former Presidents Ford, Carter and Bush, Democratic Senators Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein, 57 of 58 district attorneys (Terence Hallinan being the lone supporter), the sheriffs' lobby, the police chiefs', the police officers', and former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop. Some of Rich Lee's former allies are not supporting Tax Cannabis 2010 because it would penalize smoking in the presence of children and stiffen the punishment for providing cannabis to those under 21. Dennis Peron is among the detractors. The Harborside Model A call for a slower approach to legalization was issued by Steve DeAngelo, executive director of Oakland's extremely successful Harborside Health Center. About 70% of the American people support legalization for medical use, DeAngelo noted, but fewer than 50% are for full legalization. "Why do so many Americans feel comfortable with people possessing cannabis but not obtaining it unless they are sick?" he asked. “What is the source of their reservations?" The answer that DeAngelo said he’d gleaned from neighbors, bureaucrats, cops, and other sources, is: "their discomfort springs from the lack of any positive image of what legal cannabis distribution would look like." People envision "armed dealers setting up shop and slinging weed on the corners of their suburban neighborhoods.” They don’t want their kids exposed to "glossy ads for reefer in the style of Anheuser-Busch." The way to win the hearts and minds of these swing voters, according to DeAngelo, is to establish professionally run dispensaries throughout California and other states where they are allowed. He called on NORML (and has been urging the Marijuana Policy Project and Drug Policy Alliance) to back dispensary-friendly initiatives in states that have yet to enact medical-marijuana laws. DeAngelo recently formed a consulting firm with the directors of two other high-end dispensaries —Don Duncan of the Los Angeles Patients Group and Robert Jacob of Sebastopol's Peace in Medicine. They advise newcomers to the industry and owners of existing dispensaries who want to upgrade their operations. It wouldn’t be surprising if this group developed a dispensary brand that is franchised nationwide. DeAngelo, 51, has been a pro-cannabis activist since his early teens. A cynic might say that he is now advocating a political strategy to advance his business interests. DeAngelo says that he created the business to advance his political strategy. They spent $400,000 to create a dispensary that Oakland would regard as an asset, not a threat. Indeed, Harborside is a secure, clean, well lit, spacious, facility. The budtenders are knowledgable and helpful. Members of the collective can get acupuncture and other alternative health care, free. The seting is a small business park, away from young passersby. The inventory is extensive and varied. All the cannabis that growers provide gets tested for pathogenic mold and cannabinoid content at the Steep Hill analytic lab, a visionary project that DeAngelo backed as an investor. Harborside pays taxes to the state and to the city (an obligation that DeAngelo and Rich Lee offered to incur). One observer impressed by the Harborside model was Roger Parloff of Fortune Magazine, who writes in the current issue, "Medical marijuana... has given legalization advocates in California a first-ever opportunity to devise and showcase a business prototype. They've been afforded the chance to show a skeptical public that a safe, seemly, and responsible system for distributing marijuana is possible. If they succeed, they'll convince the fence sitters and lead the way to a nationwide metamorphosis. If they fail, the backlash will be savage. If communities cannot adequately regulate the dispensaries, they'll descend into unsightly, youth-seducing, crime-ridden playgrounds for gang-bangers, and this flirtation with legalization will conclude the way the last one did: with a swift and merciless swing of the pendulum." In his talk to NORML, DeAngelo quoted Parloff'’s summary of the current situation, adding, "As one of those with his head on the chopping block, I am very concerned about that pendulum." Then he laid out his what-is-to-be-done: "We must demand the effective licensing and regulation of dispensaries... Today, 50% of California jurisdictions still prohibit dispensary operations, and many others unnecessarily restrict their operations. We must do the sustained political footwork needed to move them to effective licensing and regulation. "We must embrace the not-for-profit, community-service model of cannabis distribution. When you boil down the fear of our 25% of swing voters, I would submit that it likely comes down to them not wanting us as a society to make the same mistakes with cannabis that we made with alcohol and tobacco: glamorization, excessive advertising driving inappropriate use, profit-making corporations enticing their children into lifetimes of dependency.” DeAngelo does not support Tax Cannabis 2010. "If legalization initiatives lack effective distribution regulations," he argued, "they will likely manifest the worst fears of the key swing voters. A legal but unregulated cannabis market would turn into a free-for-all, leading to a public-relations mess." Looking beyond California, DeAngelo called for legislation and voter initiatives that "contain provisions that will enable the creation of an effective distribution system. All too often our movement has traded easy victory for laws that fail to adequately protect us… We have accepted medical cannabis laws that severely restrict the ability of doctors to write recommendations, which is the first step in creating a market large enough to sustain dispensaries…. We have accepted severe restrictions on the quantity of medicine patients may cultivate, or on their right to collective gardens-which are the first steps in creating a sufficient supply of medicine-another pre-requisite of an effective marketplace… We have accepted bans or restrictions on the right of patients to trade and distribute medicine amongst themselves, with obvious implications for developing a positive image of cannabis distribution. "These self-defeating half steps must end. If we accept these kinds of restrictions, we will never be able to place positive images of cannabis distribution in front of our fellow citizens. We will blow this historic opportunity to win them over. “Flip The Switch” DeAngelo told his NORML audience to fast forward five or six years to a time when, if events follow his scenario, “tens of millions of Americans have become legal cannabis consumers. Almost everybody has a friend or a relative with a recommendation, and knows that it has done them no harm, and indeed probably a whole lot of good. Fears and reservations about the distribution of cannabis have been allayed, and replaced with acceptance. Scientific research has solidly established both the safety and the medical efficacy of cannabis for a wide range of ailments, including everyday ailments. “Across the nation, thousands of not-for-profit, community service dispensaries have created a positive model of cannabis distribution. There's no reefer in the 7-11; kids aren't being subject to the machinations of a created market, and communities are benefiting from tax revenue, charitable donations, and community services. In short, a safe, seemly, and reliable distribution system will already be in existence.” At this point DeAngelo would have the reform movement push for legalization by advocating reclassification of cannabis as an over-the-counter drug. “At dispensaries all across the country,” he concluded with a flourish, “we will stop asking for medical cannabis identification, and simply ask for adult identification. We will flip the switch at the dispensary door, and all adult Americans will have what hundreds of thousands of Californians now have: free, safe, and affordable access to cannabis.” Say what you will about Steve DeAngelo, the man does not have a hidden agenda. Fred Gardner edits O'Shaughnessy's, the journal of cannabis in clinical practice. Email fred@plebesite.com.
|
Now Available from CounterPunch Books! Yellowstone Drift: Spell Albuquerque: Waiting for
Lightning
|