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  1.     
    #1
    Member

    Thats the most action the UN has ever taken!

    Sig, I deleted everything afterwards thinking it was here for the reviewing. As Norma sends posts my way ill repost here for those of us who enjoy the news about the fight. oh ya sig you should add jack herer to your friends list on MS. he has some great posts.:thumbsup:
    walterpklondike Reviewed by walterpklondike on . Thats the most action the UN has ever taken! Sig, I deleted everything afterwards thinking it was here for the reviewing. As Norma sends posts my way ill repost here for those of us who enjoy the news about the fight. oh ya sig you should add jack herer to your friends list on MS. he has some great posts.:thumbsup: Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Member

    Thats the most action the UN has ever taken!

    Confirmed!
    To the editor,

    Kudos to the Aurora Daily Sun & Sentinel for rightly criticizing the US
    Drug
    Enforcement Administration¹s decision to use taxpayers¹ funds and paid
    staff
    time to campaign against Amendment 44, The Alcohol-Marijuana Equalization
    Initiative. (³Tax dollars used for ill-conceived DEA push,² August 29,
    2006)
    Regardless of whether one favors or disapproves of Amendment 44, Colorado
    voters deserve the opportunity to decide this issue free from undue,
    federally sponsored interference.

    Of course, it¹s not surprising that the DEA would oppose any potential
    liberalization to the current blanket prohibition of cannabis a policy
    that results in the arrest of some 750,000 Americans on marijuana charges
    every year and costs taxpayers between $10 and $12 billion annually.
    Nevertheless, despite this costly criminal crackdown, the US National
    Institute on Drug Abuse reports that 94 million Americans -- that¹s 40
    percent of the US population age 12 or older -- have used cannabis during
    their lives.

    It makes no sense to continue to treat nearly half of all Americans as
    criminals for their use of a substance that poses no greater -- and
    arguably
    far fewer -- health risks than alcohol. The law should reflect this
    reality,
    not deny it.

    Sincerely,
    Paul Armentano
    Senior Policy Analyst
    NORML | NORML Foundation
    Washington, DC
    Source: Aurora Sentinel (CO)
    Published: August 29, 2006
    Copyright: 2006 Aurora Sentinel
    Contact: [email protected]
    Website: http://www.aurorasentinel.com/
    Colorado -- It's hardly news that Drug Enforcement Agency officials are
    opposed to a Colorado ballot initiative seeking to make it legal for adults
    to possess small amounts of marijuana.
    It certainly is news, however, when DEA agents admit to spending staff time,
    paid for by taxpayer dollars, fighting that ballot measure or any other. The
    Daily Camera reported Aug. 27 that DEA agent Michael Moore sent out e-mails
    to political consultants looking for someone to advise the federal agency
    how to set up a campaign against the amendment.
    The issue comes before voters in November and seeks to allow state residents
    over 21 to keep up to 1 ounce of marijuana.
    The wisdom of such a change in drug laws is certainly debatable. American
    learned hard lessons during Prohibition, mostly that it neither kept people
    from drinking nor persuade Americans to shun alcohol.
    Clearly, for all the hundreds of billions of dollars spent on fighting the
    so-called War on Drugs, illegal drug use seems as dangerous and pervasive as
    ever.
    It's unclear whether decriminalization of drugs such as marijuana would have
    any effect on American drug use or drug sales, but it's hard to argue that
    there's much of a black market for alcohol these days.
    There are many unanswered questions from this proposal that the media and
    voters will certainly look to the DEA to for answers. Rest assured anything
    the DEA says about the issue will be big news, freely disseminated as their
    side of the story. But any opinions from the DEA are just that.
    It's a given that drug-agency officials will be releasing only information
    that supports their position that legalizing even small amounts of marijuana
    would be bad for Coloradans. It could be that there would be a need for
    fewer DEA agents. That means current DEA would be spending time on the job
    paid for by taxpayers to lobby voters to keep them employed. That's wrong.
    Certainly DEA agents, like all Americans, enjoy the right of free speech.
    But here in Colorado, we've wisely limited how the government can use tax
    dollars to promote that free speech.
    Congress would do well to amend the age-old Hatch Act, which limits federal
    employee involvement in partisan political races, to include limits on all
    political questions.
    And DEA agents would do well to back off their ill-conceived plan against
    this state ballot issue so that any Hatch Act amendments are precautionary
    rather than justifiably punitive.

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    Thats the most action the UN has ever taken!

    LOL.....Classic! Hope this is what you were lookin' for....if not, give me a general idea and I'll transfer it.

    Have a good one!:thumbsup:


    T-town coppers and maybe one in edmond!

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    GRANT DECLINE CUTS PROJECTS

    Tulsa Police Forced to Reassess Priorities
    Federal grants to the Tulsa Police Department are drying up, forcing
    cuts to special projects including those that pay overtime costs for
    monitoring sex offenders and for meth-lab cleanups.
    Since 2002 -- the earliest year for which records could be located --
    grants to Tulsa police from the U.S. Department of Justice have fallen
    from about $952,000 to about $373,000 in 2006, said Cpl. Art Surratt,
    the Police Department's grants coordinator.
    The grants, now called Justice Assistance Block Grants, totaled as
    much as $3 million one year, Chief Dave Been said.
    The drop has forced the department to take hard looks at the special
    programs that are funded by the grants, some of which put more
    officers in crime-plagued areas of the city.
    The decline is specific to the Bush administration, Been
    said.
    "I'm not sure I disagree" with the philosophy of cutting federal
    grants, Been said. "As a local municipal police department, we need to
    find a way to finance our own needs. It shouldn't be up to the federal
    government to do that."
    Since Sept. 11, 2001, the International Association of Chiefs of
    Police reports that the Bush administration has cut about $2.3 billion
    that had been going to law enforcement, including proposed 2007 budget
    cuts to the Justice Assistance Block Grants.
    Been said the Police Department will have to live within its
    allocations. He pointed out that the department continues to be
    understaffed and won't be gaining any positions for additional
    officers this year.
    Pending approval by the City Council, the department has about
    $554,000 in recently received 2005 grants that are devoted to a list
    of programs, Surratt said.
    The money will pay for items that include more "stop sticks" that
    deflate tires on cars that are being pursued, Global Positioning
    Satellite technology for drug interdictions, a data-archiving system
    and evidence-storage improvements.
    The approximately $373,000 from 2006 grants is not yet available,
    Surratt said. Grants from 2003 paid the department about $815,000, and
    the following year's grants brought about $334,000.
    Faced with decreasing grant funds, department officials had to decide
    which programs were the most needed and make changes accordingly, Been
    said.
    One grant has been used to pay for overtime hours generated while
    officers check to see whether sex offenders are living where they say
    they do, Surratt said.
    The sex-offender registration program could see cutbacks at a time of
    high public and political concern about where such offenders live, but
    officials are looking at ways to do the job more effectively.
    Sgt. John Adams, who supervises the department's sex-offender
    registration program, said his unit has been giving on-duty patrol
    officers lists of sex offenders' addresses to check when they have the
    time. That results in about 15 to 20 hours of work a week but without
    overtime costs, he said.
    Tulsa has 478 registered sex-offenders, and "we are really behind on
    our efforts," Adams said.
    Been said the department is looking at several proposals to compensate
    for the grant cutback.
    One of those options is letting reserve police officers, who are
    volunteers, check sex offenders' reported addresses, Adams said.
    Another program funded by grants pays officers' overtime for cleaning
    up methamphetamine labs and also pays for such items as officers'
    protective clothing and respirators.
    A $250,000 grant that expires at the end of August has paid for
    expenses associated with helping children recover after living in
    homes used as meth labs. The city is not renewing that Community
    Oriented Policing Services grant, Surratt said.
    Anticipating cutbacks to the meth-lab cleanup grant, narcotics
    investigators will use their money to replace equipment before the
    grant expires, said Sgt. Harold Adair, a supervisor with the
    department's Special Investigations Division.
    Meth labs are cleaned by a team of officers who are on call and paid
    overtime for their work.
    Recent state legislation regulating the sale of a primary ingredient
    of the drug has dropped the number of labs seized by about 75 percent,
    and the teams now average about four to five labs a month, Adair said.
    The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration estimates that the average
    cost of cleaning up a lab has fallen to between $2,000 and $3,000, the
    Office of National Drug Control Policy's Web site said.
    Two programs that put more officers on the streets in specific areas
    of the city have been added to the overtime-grant package.
    The grant pays overtime costs for officers and supervisors working the
    patrols. It has also been used to buy equipment such as barricades,
    traffic cones and a trailer to transport equipment.
    One area of the North Peoria Enhanced Security Grant's focus has been
    violent crime sites, including murders, over the years. Police began
    heavily patrolling the 5000 block of North Peoria Avenue after a man
    fired shots into a crowd there July 7, 2002. That man, Aundra Maurice
    Talton, opened fire in a parking lot and wounded two people. He also
    shot at police, who returned fire and killed him.
    Another fatal shooting took place there early Oct. 3, 2004, when James
    Alan Brown Jr., 38, was killed.
    The 21st Street and Garnett Road Security grant is similar to its
    counterpart on Peoria, Surratt said.
    The extra patrols were in response to violent crimes, including
    shootings, in the area, Surratt said. "We have officers there to kind
    of keep the peace," he said.

  5.     
    #4
    Senior Member

    Thats the most action the UN has ever taken!

    Thanks...

  6.     
    #5
    Senior Member

    Thats the most action the UN has ever taken!

    Psycho4Bud, are you an okie?

  7.     
    #6
    Senior Member

    Thats the most action the UN has ever taken!

    Quote Originally Posted by Markass
    Psycho4Bud, are you an okie?
    Sorry.......cheesehead. LOL

    Have a good one!:thumbsup:

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