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SentLTE-Digest Thursday, December 2 2010 Volume 10 : Number 075

001 LTE: Re: 'Time to legalize marijuana'
    From: Kirk Muse <>
002 LTE: Re: 'Marijuana, but no 'happy meals'
    From: Kirk Muse <>
003 LTE: 'Florida-Based Advocate Presses Case Across U.S.'
    From: John Chase <>
004 LTE: Re: 'Agents seize approximately 215 pounds of,marijuana'
    From: Kirk Muse <>
005 LTE: 'US embassy cables: Mexico is losing drug war, says US'
    From: John Chase <>


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Subj: 001 LTE: Re: 'Time to legalize marijuana'
From: Kirk Muse <>
Date: Sun, 28 Nov 2010 12:19:54 -0800

To the Editor of The East Valley Tribune:

I'm writing about Stan White's thoughtful letter: "Time to legalize 
marijuana"
(11-26-10).  I'd like to add that he should have said it's time to 
re-legalize
marijuana because for the vast majority of our nation's history,
marijuana was completely legal.

And contrary to the lies and propaganda of those with a vested financial
interest in criminalizing it, we had almost no problems with the users or
sellers of this very safe natural herb.

For those who oppose its use--don't buy it and don't use it.  Period.

Kirk Muse
1741 S. Clearview Ave.
Mesa, AZ 85209
(480) 396-3399

Thank you for considering this letter for publication.

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Subj: 002 LTE: Re: 'Marijuana, but no 'happy meals'
From: Kirk Muse <>
Date: Sun, 28 Nov 2010 15:30:04 -0800

To the Editor of The Flathead Beacon:

I'm writing about Wilma Beck's letter: "Marijuana, but no
"happy meals" (11-27-10).  If our government can criminalize
a natural herb that has never killed anybody in the 5,000
year history of its use, it can criminalize any food.

What could be more pro nanny-state than marijuana prohibition?

Beyond the fact that marijuana prohibition is counterproductive
and a complete waste of money, what about the right of adult
citizens to be left alone--especially in the privacy of our
own homes.

We don't punish those who attempt suicide and survive.  So why
do we punish those who consume the wrong (politically selected)
recreational drugs?

I don't want my government attempting to protect me from myself.
I want my government to protect me from those who want to harm
me against my will.

Today, our nanny-state government tells us which recreational drugs
we may or may not consume.  (Note that Viagra is OK, but marijuana
is not).  Note that nicotine is OK, but marijuana is not.

If Beck is opposed to the use of marijuana, medical or otherwise,
don't buy it and don't use it.  Period.

Kirk Muse
1741 S. Clearview Ave.
Mesa, AZ 85209
(480) 396-3399

Thank you for considering this letter for publication.

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Subj: 003 LTE: 'Florida-Based Advocate Presses Case Across U.S.'
From: John Chase <>
Date: Tue, 30 Nov 2010 12:20:27 -0800

Sent at http://www.heraldtribune.com/sendletter

Editors -

Re: Florida-Based Advocate Presses Case Across U.S., 30 November 2010

This article may surprise a public conditioned to believe that marijuana 
has no medical benefits. It does, and it is not risk-free. But its 
greater danger is not in the drug, but in the official dishonesty that 
prohibition has on respect for government. The federal government 
refuses to "reschedule" marijuana because, they say,  medical science 
has not found it to have benefits. But, for decades, the government has 
blocked all research unless designed to examine only the risks.  One 
example is an amicus curiae brief filed with the U. S. Supreme Court in 
support of Angel Raich in the 2007 case, Gonzales v. Raich.*  I read it 
and was shocked at the childish behavior of some officials at DEA and 
NIDA(National Institute for Drug Abuse). They, and their superiors, are 
the reason that most Americans know so little about marijuana as medicine.

* http://medicalmarijuana.procon.org/sourcefiles/mpprderamicus.pdf

John Chase
Palm Harbor, FL
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Subj: 004 LTE: Re: 'Agents seize approximately 215 pounds of,marijuana'
From: Kirk Muse <>
Date: Tue, 30 Nov 2010 18:27:20 -0800

To the Editor of The Yuma Sun:

I'm writing about John Gilbert's story:  "Agents seize approximately 215 
pounds of
marijuana" (11-30-10).

Congratulations to  the Border Patrol for doing their part in making 
marijuana the number
one cash crop in America.

Without operations like this, marijuana would be worth what other
easy-to-grow weeds are worth--very little.

Thanks to the Drug Enforcement Administration and other so-called
"drug warriors,"  the easy-to-grow weed is worth almost as much as
pure gold--and completely tax free.

Any marijuana growers, sellers or traffickers arrested will soon be
replaced.  They always are.

Kirk Muse
1741 S. Clearview Ave.
Mesa, AZ 85209
(480) 396-3399

Thank you for considering this letter for publication.

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Subj: 005 LTE: 'US embassy cables: Mexico is losing drug war, says US'
From: John Chase <>
Date: Thu, 2 Dec 2010 19:43:57 -0800

Editors, the Guardian -

Re: "US embassy cables: Mexico is losing drug war, says US", December 2nd
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/us-embassy-cables-documents/246329

It didn't take Wikileaks; anyone who pays attention to the news knows. 
Common sense has been highjacked by delusional leaders. Sr. Calderon 
could be forgiven, but not U.S. leaders. They should know of America's 
"noble experiment" of National Prohibition (1920-1933). Lacking that, 
just understand the rather simple law of supply and demand. The lesson 
of the 1920s was that driving a popular drug underground increases its 
price and attracts more reckless, violent men to the illegal trade. It 
causes more societal damage than it prevents, and the harder it is 
driven the more the damage. In the 1920s it was alcohol, but the lesson 
fits other drugs as well.

The longer today's delusion persists, the greater the chance that Sr. 
Calderon's government will reach an accommodation with the strongest 
cartel. If that happens the other cartels will disappear, the violence 
will abate. The TV cameras will go home, and we Americans will have a 
failed state, a narco-state,  on our southern border. It would become 
the new normal.

John Chase
727 787 3085
Palm Harbor, FL 34684
U.S.A.
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End of SentLTE-Digest V10 #75
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