Book by B.C. researcher says media, police not talking straight on pot
By James Keller, The Canadian Press
OttawaCitizen.com
Dec 25, 2013

A demonstrator smokes a marijuana joint on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on April 20, 2010. Police would have the option of ticketing people for a range of minor offences, instead of laying criminal charges, under a plan that could yield significant savings for the cash-strapped justice system. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Pawel Dwulit
VANCOUVER – As it turns out, Nov. 6, 2012, was a big day for marijuana laws.
Voters in Colorado and Washington state approved initiatives to legalize pot, setting the stage for the regulated production and sale of the drug. Several other jurisdictions in the U.S. have since followed suit.
In Canada, the same day two American states were effectively abandoning part of the war on drugs, provisions of a new federal law came into effect that imposed strict mandatory minimums for drug-related crimes, including marijuana production.
The contrast, says University of Victoria professor Susan Boyd, could not have been greater.
“This new law and our revived war on drugs in Canada is so contrary to what’s going on around the world,” says Boyd, who specializes in drug law and drug policy.
“It seemed like Canada was veering towards a very punitive model while the rest of the world was taking a closer look at mandatory minimums and abandoning them.”
But the revisions to Canada’s drug laws — contained in the Safe Streets and Communities Act, or Bill C-10, as it was previously known — did not happen in a vacuum, says Boyd.
Instead, Boyd argues in a forthcoming book that Canada’s recent tough-on-crime approach to drugs is, in part, the product of decades of skewed media coverage and police messaging that has routinely exaggerated the dangers of the marijuana industry and its connection to organized crime.
For the book, titled “Killer Weed: Marijuana Grow Ops, Media, and Justice,” Boyd examined 2,500 articles from four major daily newspapers in British Columbia from 1995 to 2009.
She found news coverage about cannabis enforcement in B.C. frequently contained inaccurate information or exaggerated claims about the size and scope of the underground marijuana industry, the sorts of people associated with grow-ops, and the industry’s connection to gangs.
Assertions by police – particularly the RCMP, which is responsible for policing in much of B.C. — were left unchallenged, she says, and politicians, in turn, relied on such misinformation to push for stricter drug laws.
For example, the news articles she examined repeatedly asserted marijuana grow-ops are inextricable linked to gangs and other criminal organizations. Police spokespeople were frequently quoted explaining that modern-day grow-ops are not “mom and pop” operations.
But Boyd says the federal government’s own research does not support that claim.
She cited a Justice Department study that was completed in 2011, obtained by a reporter through an access to information request, that examined a random sample of 500 marijuana grow operations. Of those, just five per cent had apparent links to gangs or organized crime.
“This study wasn’t released by our federal government, and you could see why,” says Boyd.
[h/t: Easton Ellis]
Thailand: Regime’s “Men in Black” Strike Again
January 11, 2014 (ATN) – There have been several troubling warnings by the regime and its backers that they plan to deploy covert violence against protesters and their own police in order to disrupt growing dissent against the embattled regime of dictator Thaksin Shinawatra. These warnings are coming ahead of a fourth mass mobilization this Monday, January 13, 2014, and after nearly nightly attacks on protesters by “men in black” gunmen. Previous mobilizations have seen over a million people take to the streets, dwarfing even the biggest pro-regime rallies held years ago at the height of its now dwindling popularity.
The threats by the regime are serious, and several of them have already come to pass during clashes beginning at the end of November.
Food stamps won’t buy marijuana cookies in Colorado
RT
Jan 10, 2014

Marijuana laced cookies for sale at a medical marijuana “club” (AFP Photo / Robyn Beck)
A new bill that’s been introduced before the Colorado General Assembly will make sure residents there won’t be able to use their food stamp benefits to buy legal weed or marijuana-infused products sold in dozens of new state-sanctioned dispensaries.
Reports have yet to surface indicating that Coloradoans have used government-provided EBT cards to purchase pot products under new state laws, but lawmakers there want to make sure that won’t become a reality.
Under state law, residents can’t use their electronic benefit transfer accounts in liquor stores, casinos, gun shops and similar establishments. With recreational marijuana now legal for adults to buy and use in Colorado, though, state officials fear some of the new dispensaries may let customers cash out with their EBT cards.
“We need this bill, if for nothing else, as a statement,” State Rep. Jared Wright (R-Grand Junction) told the Associated Press this week.
“We shouldn’t be enabling anyone to buy a substance that is banned under federal law. It’s not a good use of taxpayer money,” he said.
Wright is intent on changing that, and is now proposing an amendment to state law that would add weed dispensaries to the list of establishments where EBT cards can’t be used.
COMEDY VIDEO — TSA: Now Hiring! (We Will Resist TSA & NSA Tyranny Infowars.com Contest)
Joy Camp
Jan 8, 2014
“TSA Now Hiring”
A contest entry video for: We Will Resist TSA & NSA Tyranny Infowars.com
http://www.infowars.com
Written, directed, and produced by JoyCamp.
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Starring: Benny Wills, Kevin Kostelnik, Nik Kazoura
Filmed by: Michael Kostelnik
Music: “Elevation” http://audiojungle.net/item/elevation…
License available upon request
Clips used meet requirements of Fair Use Act
VIDEO — Islamist protesters clash with cops, ‘Egypt slides back to Mubarak-style rule’
RT
Jan 4, 2014
At least 13 people have been killed across Egypt in a wave of protests, which saw demonstrators clashing with police forces. Over 50 other people were injured in the violence. Cairo, Alexandria, and Fayoum and Ismailia have all seen deadly scuffles as the Muslim Brotherhood-led National Coalition to Support Legitimacy organized protests on Friday. The protests were part of the Brotherhood’s boycott of the upcoming constitutional referendum. READ MORE: http://on.rt.com/rlrvz2
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VIDEO — There is nothing more opposite to freedom than NDAA: PANDA MD Carl Poole Testimony Against the NDAA
P.A.N.D.A. People Against The NDAA
Dec 14, 2013
PANDA Maryland’s Carl Poole testifies in favor of HB 558 in Annapolis, Maryland February 21, 2013.
Join the movement: http://www.pandaunite.org/takeback
The PANDA (People Against the NDAA Mission Statement:
Our Mission is to nonviolently defeat, strike down, repeal, stop, void and fight the indefinite detention provisions, Sections 1021 and 1022, of the National Defense Authorization Act for the Fiscal Year of 2012, to fight for American civil liberties, to combat laws restricting liberty in the interest of National Security, to support current government officials that are doing so and to engage a younger generation in the politics of the United States so this cannot happen again.
VIDEO — Canadian State Spies on Its Own Citizens and Lies About It
Press TV
Dec 22, 2013
LINK: http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2013/12/…
A Canadian federal judge says the country’s intelligence agency has asked foreign security agencies to spy on Canadian nationals abroad.
Federal Court Judge Richard Mosley censured the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) for deliberately keeping the country’s Federal Court “in the dark” to bypass the law to spy on Canadians, Russia Today reported on Sunday.
The judge said that he had been deliberately misled by CSIS to authorize interception of electronic communications of unidentified Canadians abroad.
CSIS had also assured Mosley that the surveillance was to be carried out from inside the country. However, the spy agency outsourced the task to intelligence agencies of the United States, Britain, Australia, and New Zealand.
“It is clear that the exercise of the court’s warrant issuing has been used as protective cover for activities that it has not authorized,” the judge wrote in a court document, adding, “The failure to disclose that information was the result of a deliberate decision to keep the court in the dark about the scope and extent of the foreign collection efforts that would flow from the court’s issuance of a warrant.”
Moseley also said that such actions put the life of Canadian citizens abroad at risk as they “may be detained or otherwise harmed as a result of the use of the intercepted communications by the foreign agencies.”
Under the country’s law, the Federal Court has does not have the authority to issue warrants involving surveillance of Canadians by foreign intelligence agencies, the judge added.

