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161 New Zealand: Cannabis Spray's Cost Puts It Beyond ReachTue, 28 Jan 2014
Source:Timaru Herald (New Zealand)          Area:New Zealand Lines:55 Added:01/29/2014

Getting high may be legal, medically speaking, but it helps if you're rich.

Ministry of Health figures show that almost nobody is using the medical cannabis mouth spray Sativex.

Medical cannabis users and advocates say that with a price tag of about $1300 a month, most patients were ignoring the spray and opting for the cheaper, but illegal, option of smoking cannabis instead.

Only four people have an active prescription for the spray and only 48 have ever received ministry approval. The medication has been available with a sign-off from the health minister since 2008.

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162 New Zealand: Cannabis Spray Priced Out Of Reach Say PatientsTue, 28 Jan 2014
Source:Dominion Post, The (New Zealand) Author:Heather, Ben Area:New Zealand Lines:105 Added:01/28/2014

GETTING high may be legal, medically speaking, but it helps if you're rich.

Ministry of Health figures show that almost nobody is using the medical cannabis mouth spray Sativex.

Medical cannabis users and advocates say that with a price tag of about $1300 a month, most patients were ignoring the spray and opting for the cheaper, but illegal, option of smoking cannabis instead.

At present, only four people have an active prescription for the spray and only 48 have ever received ministry approval.

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163 New Zealand: Column: Legalising Dope On Back-BurnerMon, 06 Jan 2014
Source:Dominion Post, The (New Zealand) Author:Armstrong, Dave Area:New Zealand Lines:93 Added:01/06/2014

IT'S BEEN great staying at home in Wellington this summer. The combination of awful television and dreadful weather has enabled me to catch up on heaps of reading.

But tucked in between the dreary viewing of inane reports on New Year celebrations around the world and heart-breaking road tragedies was an entertaining story about America's first legal marijuana stores.

In the state of Colorado, people queued for hours in snow just so they could be the first customers. As these happy shoppers talked to the television cameras, it dawned on me that dope fiends seem to be the same the world over.

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164 New Zealand: Editorial: Lessons For Us In Colorado's SmokeFri, 03 Jan 2014
Source:Manawatu Standard (New Zealand) Author:Cummings, Michael Area:New Zealand Lines:67 Added:01/04/2014

The legalisation of recreational marijuana in the American state of Colorado has attracted international attention, and New Zealand lawmakers should pay close attention to the experiment. Hundreds of people queued up on New Year's Day to be among the first people to legally purchase state-regulated marijuana, with media from around the world there to witness the historic moment.

The legalisation of the drug for recreational use by adults marks a significant change in America's drug culture, but whether it is positive or negative remains to be seen.

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165 New Zealand: Psychosis Risk High In Young Cannabis UsersFri, 29 Nov 2013
Source:Southland Times (New Zealand)          Area:New Zealand Lines:72 Added:11/30/2013

Some heavy cannabis users are up to 11 times more likely to develop schizophrenia, a drug symposium in Auckland has been told.

People with a certain gene combination that exists in 25 per cent of the population had that heightened risk, Otago University's Professor Richie Poulton told the Cannabis and Health Symposium.

Risk of psychosis was elevated for those who used the drug when they were young, the Dunedin Longitudinal Study showed, but not at the levels of that gene combination.

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166 New Zealand: OPED: Drug Liberalisation Worth A Shot In NZMon, 25 Nov 2013
Source:New Zealand Herald (New Zealand) Author:Gillespie, Alexander Area:New Zealand Lines:130 Added:11/25/2013

Model for Dealing With Problem Has Not Reduced Demand or Supply So We Should Go Way of Some US States

Illegal drugs are the scourge of the modern world.

They have the capacity to destroy everything in their path. It is critical that this problem is adequately dealt with. But the global war on illegal drugs that was declared five decades ago has been a disaster for all except criminals.

First, demand and supply for illegal drugs is much larger now than when serious attempts at prohibition began in the 1960s. Since 1998 when the UN held an event entitled "A drug-free world: we can do it", consumption of cannabis and cocaine has risen by about 50 per cent, while for opiates, it has more than trebled.

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167 New Zealand: Kiwis Prefer Cannabis To AlcoholFri, 15 Nov 2013
Source:Timaru Herald (New Zealand)          Area:New Zealand Lines:74 Added:11/16/2013

Many New Zealanders are turning to cannabis as an alternative to alcohol, which might explain why we are among the highest users in the world, a medical anthropologist says.

According to the Ministry of Health's most recent New Zealand Alcohol and Drug Use Survey, one in seven New Zealand adults will have used cannabis in the past year.

The survey found 46.4 per cent of all adults had used cannabis in their lifetime.

That put New Zealand among the highest cannabis users in the world, according to the 2013 United Nations World Drug Report.

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168 New Zealand: Roll Up - See The Cannabis Ban Go In A PuffSat, 02 Nov 2013
Source:Timaru Herald (New Zealand)          Area:New Zealand Lines:123 Added:11/03/2013

ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE, easily the best European interpreter of America, observed of how opinion shifts in this still-new country: "As long as the majority is still undecided, discussion is carried on; but as soon as its decision is irrevocably pronounced, everyone is silent, and the friends as well as the opponents of the measure unite in assenting to its propriety."

If you want to know why universal healthcare is still being fought over in America, the answer is that the country remains split on the subject. And if you want to know why gay marriage has suddenly gone from being unthinkable to being an increasingly accepted part of the American landscape, you'll notice how polling support for it has shifted from 57-40 against marriage equality as recently as 2009 to 54-43 in the latest Gallup poll four years later.

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169 New Zealand: Column: Mood Swings To Favour Legal MarijuanaMon, 28 Oct 2013
Source:Press, The (New Zealand) Author:Sullivan, Andrew Area:New Zealand Lines:133 Added:10/29/2013

More Americans Back Legalised Cannabis Than Support Obamacare, Writes Andrew Sullivan.

Alexis De Tocqueville, easily the best European interpreter of America, observed of how opinion shifts in this still-new country: "As long as the majority is still undecided, discussion is carried on; but as soon as its decision is irrevocably pronounced, everyone is silent, and the friends as well as the opponents of the measure unite in assenting to its propriety."

If you want to know why universal healthcare is still being fought over in America, the answer is that the country remains split on the subject. And if you want to know why gay marriage has suddenly gone from being unthinkable to being an increasingly accepted part of the American landscape, you'll notice how polling support for it has shifted from 57-40 against marriage equality as recently as 2009 to 54-43 in the latest Gallup poll four years later.

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170 New Zealand: Column: Sea Change In Cannabis AttitudesMon, 28 Oct 2013
Source:Manawatu Standard (New Zealand) Author:Sullivan, Andrew Area:New Zealand Lines:95 Added:10/29/2013

Legalisation of Cannabis in the United States Is Only a Matter of Time, Writes Andrew Sullivan.

Alexis de Tocqueville, easily the best European interpreter of America, observed how opinion shifts in this still-new country: " As long as the majority is still undecided, discussion is carried on; but as soon as its decision is irrevocably pronounced, everyone is silent, and the friends as well as the opponents of the measure unite in assenting to its propriety."

If you want to know why universal healthcare is still being fought over in America, the answer is that the country remains split on the subject. And if you want to know why gay marriage has suddenly gone from being unthinkable to being an increasingly accepted part of the American landscape, you'll notice how polling support for it has shifted from 57- 40 against marriage equality in 2009 to 54- 43 in the latest Gallup poll four years later.

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171 New Zealand: PUB LTE: Legalise CannabisSat, 26 Oct 2013
Source:Press, The (New Zealand) Author:Fibbens, Marc Area:New Zealand Lines:27 Added:10/29/2013

The latest Gallop poll in America has shown that a solid majority now support the legalisation of cannabis (Oct 25).

The irony is that America is behind the pressure to prevent other countries around the world from legalising cannabis.

The time has come for New Zealand to grow up and take a rational look at the benefits of hemp (cannabis). Let's move away from treating young and old as criminals for smoking a substance that has killed no-one and has minimal health risks, certainly far less than alcohol and tobacco.

MARC FIBBENS Halswell

[end]

172 New Zealand: PUB LTE: Dopey AnswersWed, 23 Oct 2013
Source:Nelson Mail, The (New Zealand) Author:Wilkinson, Steven Area:New Zealand Lines:40 Added:10/24/2013

I had the opportunity to speak to Nick Smith and Maryan Street at the Nelson markets. I asked them; with the amount of proof of the benefits of medicinal cannabis, why then are their parties dragging the chain on allowing people to use cannabis medicinally?

Nick Smith rattled on about how cannabis causes throat and head cancers. I challenged him to produce any peer-reviewed studies to back his claim (which there are none).

He muttered something about the studies he's seen from the Ministry of Health. Well, if it came from Peter Dunne, we know it will be dubious.

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173 New Zealand: Legal Highs 'Better Than Synthetic Lows'Sat, 12 Oct 2013
Source:Timaru Herald (New Zealand)          Area:New Zealand Lines:58 Added:10/13/2013

The Aotearoa Legalise Cannabis Party's leader believes new laws regulating synthetic cannabinoids mean the "dam is about to break" for cannabis legalisation.

Party leader Michael Appleby was in Timaru yesterday on his way to party's annual conference in Dunedin.

"We've been around years.

"We actually held our first ever conference in Timaru. I don't think we're a ginger group.

"Every little push we make has got our views closer to the mainstream."

He said the recently passed Psychoactive Substances Act, which regulates the sale and supply of synthetic cannabinoids, was a step in the right direction.

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174 New Zealand: Cannabis Lobby Open MuseumThu, 26 Sep 2013
Source:Timaru Herald (New Zealand)          Area:New Zealand Lines:51 Added:09/27/2013

Dunedin is a little closer to becoming the Amsterdam of the South Pacific as Whakamana: the Cannabis Museum of Aotearoa counts down to its opening.

A joint venture by the Aotearoa Legalise Cannabis Party and Otago cannabis lobby group Otago Norml, the museum will be officially opened on Sunday, October 6, under the directorship of long-time Otago cannabis lobbyist Abe Gray.

"All the local journalists and politicians will be invited, plus a few celebrity musicians. The general public are also invited," Mr Gray said. The opening would kick off Cannabis Awareness Week taking place online and at venues around Dunedin, he said.

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175 New Zealand: Decriminalise Cannabis and Stop Wasting PoliceMon, 23 Sep 2013
Source:Press, The (New Zealand)          Area:New Zealand Lines:75 Added:09/23/2013

A former senior New Zealand detective serving prison time in the Cook Islands for cannabis offences says the drug should be decriminalised because police are wasting money and resources chasing social users.

Former Detective Inspector Mark Franklin admitted during an interview with Fairfax Media at Arorangi Prison in Rarotonga that he had used cannabis throughout his police career to relieve stress.

He continued to use the drug in Rarotonga after he was diagnosed with cancer, as it was the only thing that helped with nausea.

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176 New Zealand: Column: Patience On DrugsTue, 10 Sep 2013
Source:Timaru Herald (New Zealand) Author:O'neill, Peter Area:New Zealand Lines:54 Added:09/11/2013

YOU'D be right to wonder what has changed in Timaru since the Psychoactive Substances Bill was passed in Parliament in July. And you wouldn't be far wrong if you concluded "not much".

Because in Timaru, unlike other centres, recreational drugs were no longer being sold from dairies anyway.

Instead, two Stafford St retailers were the only shops selling synthetic cannabis, and they still are. Now, they do so under an interim licence, interim because the law has some catching up to do.

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177 New Zealand: Hopes High For Dunedin 'Cannabis Capital' PlanTue, 03 Sep 2013
Source:Southland Times (New Zealand) Author:McCorkindale, Wilma Area:New Zealand Lines:60 Added:09/05/2013

Two organisations behind a joint venture Cannabis Museum in Dunedin want to see the city become Dunsterdam, the cannabis capital of the South Pacific.

Aotearoa Legalise Cannabis Party and Otago Cannabis lobby group Otago Norml want to achieve the status for Dunedin by opening New Zealand's first Cannabis Museum and launch a charitable trust in Dunedin this month.

The function of the museum would remain within the law, says Julian Crawford, who is setting up the facility with well-known Dunedin cannabis lobbyist Abe Gray.

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178 New Zealand: Policeman Sold CannabisWed, 21 Aug 2013
Source:Southland Times (New Zealand)          Area:New Zealand Lines:37 Added:08/22/2013

Former senior New Zealand policeman Mark Franklin pleaded guilty to drug charges in the Cook Islands High Court yesterday, Television New Zealand reported.

A one-time detective inspector in Northland, Franklin was arrested in 2011 over allegations that he was operating as a local drug dealer, selling cannabis from a bar, in Rarotonga.

Franklin's co-accused included a senior policewoman, Inano Matapo, and her partner, Giovanni Masters, who is the son of the country's deputy prime minister.

New Zealand police officers based in Rarotonga helped in the major drug bust, which may lead to further charges.

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179 New Zealand: The Psychological Consequences Of Puffing On PotWed, 21 Aug 2013
Source:Manawatu Standard (New Zealand) Author:Englund, Amir Area:New Zealand Lines:92 Added:08/22/2013

Researchers are getting a better understanding of the effects of cannabis use on mental health, but the definitive answer remains hazy, write Robin MacGregor Murray and Amir Englund.

Is cannabis harmful to mental health? That question has provoked much debate over the years, often generating more heat than light. The bottom line is this: Within the scientific community, there is a general consensus that most people who use cannabis will not develop significant mental health problems. Certain individuals, however, are more susceptible to the negative effects of its use.

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180 New Zealand: Cannabis Drivers Told To Wise UpMon, 19 Aug 2013
Source:New Zealand Herald (New Zealand) Author:Tait, Morgan Area:New Zealand Lines:58 Added:08/19/2013

A new ad campaign is targeting "sensible stoners" who falsely believe smoking cannabis makes them more focused behind the wheel.

The New Zealand Transport Agency's (NZTA) latest safety campaign began airing on TV screens, in cinemas and online last night, targeting the misinformed demographic - drivers in their 30s and 40s who smoke marijuana and drive - for the first time.

New Zealand Drug Foundation research has found that half of the drivers killed on New Zealand roads are impaired by alcohol, other drugs or both.

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