Smith, Jeff 1/1/1997 - 31/12/2025
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1 US WI: PUB LTE: It's Time For Medical MarijuanaMon, 08 Mar 2010
Source:La Crosse Tribune (WI) Author:Smith, Jeffrey Area:Wisconsin Lines:31 Added:03/08/2010

There is a medical marijuana bill in committee in the Wisconsin Legislature. We need the people's help to get it passed by calling their politicians in Madison. It's being held there by representatives who are good people but under-informed. What we are asking for in not a pot-smokers' law. Many of us vaporize it or eat it, which gives us the cannibnoids that help fight obesity, cancers, fibromyalgia, phantom pains and muscle spasms from paraplegia and other neuromuscular ailments.

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2 US WI: PUB LTE: For Paraplegics Like Me, Medical Pot SaferSat, 05 Dec 2009
Source:Capital Times, The (WI) Author:Smith, Jeffrey L. Area:Wisconsin Lines:38 Added:12/07/2009

Dear Editor: I'm writing in support of the Jacki Rickert Medical Marijuana Act. There will be public hearings on Dec. 15 by both the Assembly and Senate health committees. I strongly recommend that the bill be passed to the floor for debate and possible passage into law with the governor's signature.

I am a paraplegic. With my particular condition, the pharmacy drugs I should take for muscle spasms and nerve pains would have killed me from kidney failure.

Cannabis hemp has been the most effective agent in relieving both symptoms of this ailment. It has proven far safer than any pharmacological product or chemical preparations such as Marinol, which can cause death.

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3 US: U.S. Efforts Against Mexican Cartels Called LackingWed, 18 Mar 2009
Source:Washington Post (DC) Author:Smith, R. Jeffrey Area:United States Lines:112 Added:03/19/2009

U.S. efforts to help the Mexican government battle powerful organized crime networks are falling short, and a recent sharp spike in violence south of the border poses a growing threat to U.S. citizens, senators and independent experts told officials from three federal agencies yesterday on Capitol Hill.

Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard (D), who said his state is the principal American gateway for drugs and human smuggling from Mexico, called the Mexican cartels the principal criminal threat for the 21st century. But he criticized Washington's response as disjointed and called for more intelligence-sharing and better coordination.

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4 US DC: Report Details Bush Officials' Partisan TripsThu, 16 Oct 2008
Source:Washington Post (DC) Author:Smith, R. Jeffrey Area:District of Columbia Lines:157 Added:10/17/2008

House Panel Finds Federal Appointees Attended Many Events on Taxpayers' Dime

When Karl Rove's office requested special help for beleaguered Republican congressional candidates in the months before the 2006 elections, the head of the Office of National Drug Control Policy jumped to the task. Director John Walters was called a "superstar" by a Rove aide after carrying half-million-dollar grants to news conferences with two congressmen and a senator.

Walters's visits to Utah, Missouri and Nevada were among at least 303 out-of-town trips by senior Bush appointees meant to lend prestige or bring federal grants to 99 politically endangered Republicans that year, in a White House campaign that House Democratic investigators yesterday called unprecedented in scope and scale.

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5US AZ: OPED: The Pharma-KillersFri, 07 Dec 2007
Source:Tucson Citizen (AZ) Author:Smith, Jeff Area:Arizona Lines:Excerpt Added:12/08/2007

The giants of pharmaceutical drugs in the United States of America are committing mass murder, selective genocide, remote-control homicide on a monstrous scale.

But what the hell, the remote-control part puts it so far offshore it's clear on the far side of the planet, on the shores of the Bay of Bengal, near where mobs of millions swim in the Ganges, whose waters you wouldn't put in your own toilet.

And given the role of overpopulation in the myriad aspects of global epidemiology, one might make a case for casting a blind eye toward forcing the Third World's sick and dying to shuffle off this mortal coil to make room for the sacred cows that share their living quarters and occupy an upper floor in the high-rise house of caste and higher holiness.

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6 US: Millions Who Abuse Drugs Also Hold JobsMon, 16 Jul 2007
Source:Charlotte Observer (NC) Author:Nesmith, Jeff Area:United States Lines:54 Added:07/16/2007

Report Finds Less Likelihood Of A Problem Where Testing Occurs

WASHINGTON -- Nearly one in 12 of America's full-time workers -- more than 10 million people -- have illicit drug or alcohol abuse problems serious enough to require treatment, according to a government report being released today. It found that 9.4 million illicit drug users and 10.1 million heavy drinkers have full-time jobs. Construction workers, food service employees, and people who work in mining and similar jobs head the list. But corporate CEOs also have a problem: 7.9 percent describe being alcohol-dependent. It found that the rate of drug-abusing workers was lower in the South, 7.9 percent, than the national average of 8.2 percent.

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7 Afghanistan: McCaffrey Sees 2007 As a Crucial YearTue, 10 Apr 2007
Source:Washington Post (DC) Author:Smith, R. Jeffrey Area:Afghanistan Lines:99 Added:04/10/2007

"We Are Now in a Race Against Time."

When retired Army Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey visited Afghanistan in February for meetings with 23 senior Western and local military, intelligence and political officials, he came away with a cautiously optimistic view of the prospects for reform and political stability there.

McCaffrey, a respected division commander in the 1991 Persian Gulf War and commander of U.S. military operations in Central America and South America, now teaches at West Point. A copy of his trip report, written for his colleagues there but widely circulated in Washington and obtained from one of the recipients, included the following blunt observations:

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8 Yugoslavia: With Few Police To Stop It, Crime FlourishesSat, 23 Oct 1999
Source:Washington Post (DC) Author:Smith, R. Jeffrey Area:Yugoslavia Lines:112 Added:10/24/1999

JAZINCE, Yugoslavia--A silver truck with two large trailers pulled up to this border crossing with Macedonia recently, and Hasan Koshtanjevci leaned out the window to tell customs officials that he was carrying clothing meant for destitute ethnic Albanians in Kosovo.

But when the two U.N. policemen who patrol the crossing peeked beneath a canvas tarp at the rear of the truck, they found a Volkswagen Golf and a Mercedes-Benz, both headed north into the chaotic and crime-ridden environment of post-war Kosovo. The U.N. police ordered the truck back to Macedonia.

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9 US: Obscure Plant May Be Key To Breaking Addiction's HoldThu, 24 Dec 1998
Source:Chicago Tribune (IL) Author:Nesmith, Jeff Area:United States Lines:28 Added:12/24/1998

WASHINGTON -- The answer to America's drug problem may lie somewhere in the roots of an obscure plant that grows wild in African rain forests. That is, if only scientists could read and follow the directions the plant seems to be giving them.

With a single capsule -- or perhaps several over a period of weeks -- heroin addicts, alcoholics, cocaine users, even smokers might erase or at least interrupt their cravings. One researcher talks hopefully of a skin patch from which addicts would slowly absorb a compound that blocks the biochemical events that trigger the desire to smoke, shoot up or drink.

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10 UN GE: U.N. to Seek Support for Anti-Drug EffortWed, 03 Jun 1998
Source:Washington Post (DC) Author:Smith, R. Jeffrey        Lines:155 Added:06/03/1998

U.S., Other Nations Balk Over Plan to Give Aid to Afghanistan, Burma, Colombia

The United Nations plans to seek new international backing next week for the most ambitious counternarcotics effort in its history, but the United States and other wealthy nations are resisting pleas to fund the program partly because it would spend billions of dollars in some of the world's most corrupt or repressive nations, such as Afghanistan, Burma and Colombia, according to U.S. and U.N. officials.

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