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Hier finden Sie die " Cannabispetition " von Alfredo Dupetit, upgeloadet am 3/3/09 zum Deutschen

Bundestag , die eine Legalisierung des Selbstanbaus von Cannabis in der BRD für

erwachsene Bürger vorsieht.

Grund für diese Petition ist die Gefahr die durch gepantschten Cannabis auf dem

Markt entstanden ist, von dem sich 400 bis 800.000  Konsumenten, Woche für Woche, Tag für Tag, wegen der Prohibition,

bedienen müssen.

Dupetit´s fundierten Recherchen vor Erstellung der Petition haben diese Zahl ergeben!:

Dupetit Kombinierte dafür den REITOX-Bericht von 2004 mit der berühmten Kleiber  -

Kleiber, D., Soellner, R., Tossmann, P. (1997)  - Studie!

 

Bisher war die Zahl der tatsächlichen regelmäßigen

Konsumenten in der BRD nicht offiziell annerkant worden.

Es ist maheliegend, dass die tatsächliche Zahl der regelmässigen Konsumenten um einiges höher liegt.

Jetzt sind die verantwortlichen Politiker für unsere Gesundheit zum Handeln

aufgefordert!

DIESE KÖNNEN AB DIESER PETITION NICHT MEHR SAGEN, DASS SIE ES NICHT WUSSTEN

3/3/09

Hier geht zur PDF der Cannabis Petition: http://www.dupetit.com/images/petition.pdf

Infos über Verwendung von Cannabis als Medizin, so wie (in englisch) über das

endogene Cannabinoidsystem aller Warmbluter hiermit:

Hier geht es zur dronabinol.de mit Informationen über natürliches THC als Naturmedizin.

 

 

Ein paar Wochen danach, am 31/3/09 kam zur Hilfe in Fernsehen ein Bericht über

Kontaminanten in Cannabis (Sat 1)

Siehe hier:  http://www.sat1.de/ratgeber_magazine/akte/topthemen/persoenlich/content/38337/

 

Und wieder eine Intrige:

 

10/4/09

Die Petition wurde nicht online zur Abstimmung gestellt, weil , wie der Petitionsausschuss

Alfredo Dupetit telefonisch sagte: "Es wird ein Absturz des Servers erwartet" (!)

Und somit kann die Presse (die Politiker ganz oben wissen worum es tatsächlich geht -

aber das ist eine andere ganz gefährliche Story für selbstopfernde Journalisten...) 

wieder nicht wissen, wie viel dieses Anliegen dem Deutschen Volk interessiert... da

wenn es mehr als 50.000 Befürworter der Petition geben würde (und die gibt es

sicherlich unter den 400 bis mind.. 800.000 regelmäßige Konsumenten(!) müsste der

Bundestag mich zur Anhörung einladen. Fakten wollen diese, dem großen Bruder

"Loyalen" Politiker, nicht veröffentlichen!

Danach kamen Meldungen der verschiedenen politischen Lager, dass das Ministerium

die Petition ablehnen würde. Die Grünen legten nahe, dass man diese Ablehnung mit

einem Widerspruch entgegnen sollte.

 

10/6/09

Seit dem 10/6/09 hat Alfredo Dupetit die Information, dass das Gesundheitsministerium

die Petition doch den parlamentarischen Berichtserstatter weitergeleitet hat.

Ob das gut ist sollen wir alle erfragen...

 

23/8/09

Diese beiden Nachrichten (unter vielen anderen) sind  am Wochenende bei

www.drugsense.org erschienen (leider in English) und wurden informationsweise

gestern einigen der Politiker im Bundestag per Email gesandt, mit der Bitte die

Newsletter von Drugsense zu abonnieren...

In England befürchtet die Polizei, dass Cannabis mit Heroin gepantscht wird...

Siehe hier der Text der gesamten Email an die Politiker:

HOME

22.08.2009 14:52

Mail an die Linke und die Grünen:

Sehr geehrte Damen und Herren:

Die parlamentarische Berichtserstatter haben sich bis heute nicht über meine Petition geäußert.

Ich hoffe, dass das gut ist.

Wie in meiner Petition behauptet wurde, wird Cannabis in Großbritannien jetzt auch tatsächlich

mit Heroin gepantscht.

Anscheinend kommt Heroin aus Afghanistan jetzt viel billiger auf dem EU-Markt, so billig, dass

es zum Cannabis-Pantscher geworden ist.

Darunter folgend auch die Nachricht von Drugsense.org, dass in GB "Spice" vielleicht verboten

wird… (!)

Nur der Eigenanbau von Cannabis und dessen Vertrieb durch Apotheken oder dafür ausgebildete

genehmigte Personen (wie meine Petition fordert) kann die 400 bis 800.000 Bundeskonsumenten vor

dieser Entwicklung schützen!

In der Petition wird klar beschrieben, dass Cannabis, weil endokrinologisch (eigene Hormon-Anreger) am

ungefährlichsten von fast allen zugelassenen Medikamenten, (vor allem vielen mit gefährlichen krank-

und süchtigmachende Nebenwirkungen) viele tägliche Leiden der Menschen lindert und deswegen von

so vielen Menschen heute konsumiert wird trotz Verbote! Der Heilmittelstatus wird aber der Pflanze

aberkannt! Wieso?

Zudem bietet die Pflanze am Ende eines stressigen Arbeitstages Entspannung ohne Alkohol, wenn diese "nur"

als Entspannungsmittel genommen wird.

Können Sie diese neueste Informationen den parlamentarischen Berichterstatter zukommen lassen (siehe unten) ?

Sehen Sie nur 2 Nachrichten aus dem heutigen Newsletter von Drugsense ( hier gelangen Sie auf die Nachrichten

der Woche: http://www.drugsense.org/current.htm ) Darunter auch (als erste Nachricht darin), dass Mexiko

endlich den Besitz von allen Dogen legalisierte.

Abonnieren Sie selbst diese Newsletter um auf dem Laufenden zu sein!

Beide Nachrichten übersetze Ich Ihnen gerne umsonst falls erwünscht.

Mit freundlichen Grüßen

Alfredo Dupetit

Tel: 09378 99590

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(18) HEROIN LACED CANNABIS HEADING TO BRIGHTON STREETS, POLICE FEAR (Cannabis mit Heroin

gepantscht zielt nach Brightons Strassen, befürchtet die Polizei.)

Pubdate: Thu, 13 Aug 2009

Source: Argus, The (UK) (Quelle: The Argus (UK))

Copyright: 2009 Newsquest Media Group

Author: Naomi Loomes

Dealers are lacing cannabis with highly addictive heroin to get

users hooked on the deadly drug.

Secret off-the-record discussions between police and a supplier in

London have revealed how recreational drug users are being tricked

into becoming addicted to Class A drugs.

Officers fear it could lead to a surge in addicts in Brighton and

Hove, which is already known as the drug death capital of England.

They believe cannabis users are becoming accidentally dragged into

heroin use.

It follows the discovery that potent, paranoia-inducing cannabis,

known as skunk, was being sold in large quantities in Brighton and

Hove last year.

Detective Sergeant Hari McCarthy, of Sussex Police, said: "People

buy it thinking it's just very strong weed."

"It's not being sold as skunk, just good weed, but it's an easy way

to get users hooked on heroin."

[snip]

Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09.n789.a02.html

===

(19) LEGAL HIGH SPICE TO BE BANNED

Pubdate: Wed, 12 Aug 2009

Source: Daily Telegraph (UK)

Copyright: 2009 Telegraph Group Limited

Author: Tom Whitehead

A legal "high" known as Spice that is stronger than cannabis is to

be banned after advice from the Government's drug advisers.

The herbal mix mimics the effect of cannabis and pouches are widely

sold on the internet and in so-called "head shops" for around UKP20.

But the Home Office is now set to act after the Advisory Council on

the Misuse of Drugs said it should be banned.

[snip]

Spice is sold under brands such as Spice Silver, Spice Gold, Spice

Diamond and Spice Yucatan Fire - prices are similar to cannabis.

[snip]

"These are not harmless herbal alternatives and have been found to

cause paranoia and panic attacks."

A Home Office spokesman said: "We are determined to crack down on

those so-called 'legal highs' that pose a significant health risk. "

Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09.n792.a07.html

HIER DIE LETZTE NACHRICHTEN VON DRUGSENSE.ORG IM SINNE DIESER PETITION
Für entscheidende Politiker: Dupetit empfiehlt den Newsletter von Drugsense zu abbonieren! Unter: www.drugsense.org

LEGALISIERUNG IN ARGENTINIEN UND MEXIKO
Drugswense repport vom 29/8/09
International News
--------------------------- COMMENT: (17-20)

Argentina joined Mexico last week in decriminalizing small amounts
of drugs for personal use. The Argentinean government's cabinet
chief, Anibal Fernandez, said this ends the "the repressive policy
that the Nixon administration invented" in the U.S. and emulated by
Argentina. Prohibition has not "reduced a single hectare of crops in
any place in the world." The Mexican decriminalization laws force
users into treatment after users are caught with drugs three times.

The Canadian Province newspaper responded with a column from Jon
Ferry hailing the Mexican and Argentinean decrim, declaring,
"Legalization [is] the only way to win drug war... [Cannabis] could
be sold to adults under strict controls and with stern health

warnings that would put it on much the same footing as tobacco" with
an "enlightened and disciplined government approach."

Will legalizing lead to increases in crime? No, according to an
op-ed by Law Enforcement Against Prohibition members Peter Moskos
and Stanford Franklin in the Canadian Victoria Times-Colonist
newspaper last week. "Without the drug war, America's most decimated
neighbourhoods would have a chance to recover. Working people could
sit on stoops, misguided youths wouldn't look up to criminals as
role models, our overflowing prisons could hold real criminals, and
-- most important to us -- more police officers wouldn't have to
die."

===
(17) ARGENTINA EASES RULES ON MARIJUANA

Pubdate: Wed, 26 Aug 2009
Source: Wall Street Journal (US)
Copyright: 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Author: Matt Moffett

BUENOS AIRES -- Argentina's Supreme Court largely decriminalized
possession of small quantities of marijuana, part of a Latin
American trend toward easing sanctions on personal drug use.


The unanimous ruling struck down a 1989 Argentine law
that dictated prison sentences of up to two years for
drug possession. The case overturns the convictions of
five young men, swept up in a trafficking
investigation, for possession of between one and three
marijuana cigarettes each.

The Argentine ruling comes as many countries in the region are
trying to shift their drug-enforcement focus to traffickers rather
than consumers. Last week Mexico, which is in the midst of a battle
with sophisticated drug gangs that has claimed thousands of lives,
decriminalized small amounts of marijuana, cocaine and heroin.
Brazil and Ecuador are among other Latin American countries that

have moved in recent years to ease penalties against small-scale
possession.

[snip]

On Tuesday, the government's cabinet chief, Anibal Fernandez, hailed
the Supreme Court for bringing to an end "the repressive policy that
the Nixon administration invented" in the U.S. He said the military
government that ruled Argentina in the 1970s and part of the 1980s
had readily followed Washington's lead in establishing punitive
policies that haven't "reduced a single hectare of crops in any
place in the world."


[snip]

Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09.n815.a06.html

===

(18) MEXICO LEGALIZES DRUG POSSESSION

Pubdate: Fri, 21 Aug 2009
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2009 The New York Times Company

MEXICO CITY (AP) -- Mexico enacted a controversial law on Thursday

decriminalizing possession of small amounts of marijuana, cocaine,
heroin and other drugs while encouraging government-financed
treatment for drug dependency free of charge.

The law sets out maximum "personal use" amounts for drugs, also
including LSD and methamphetamine. People detained with those
quantities will no longer face criminal prosecution; the law goes
into effect on Friday.

Anyone caught with drug amounts under the personal-use limit will be
encouraged to seek treatment, and for those caught a third time
treatment is mandatory -- although no penalties for noncompliance
are specified.

Mexican authorities said the change only recognized the longstanding
practice here of not prosecuting people caught with small amounts of
drugs.

The maximum amount of marijuana considered to be for "personal use"
under the new law is 5 grams -- the equivalent of about four
marijuana cigarettes. Other limits are half a gram of cocaine, 50
milligrams of heroin, 40 milligrams for methamphetamine and 0.015
milligrams of LSD.

President Felipe Calderon waited months before
approving the law.

Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09.n806.a05.html

===

(19) LEGALIZATION THE ONLY WAY TO WIN DRUG WAR

Pubdate: Wed, 26 Aug 2009
Source: Province, The (CN BC)
Copyright: 2009 Canwest Publishing Inc.
Author: Jon Ferry, The Province

Attitude Shift With Mexico's Choice to Decriminalize
Pot

The news last weekend that Mexico has moved quietly to decriminalize
the possession of small amounts of marijuana and other currently
illegal drugs has clearly been a hit with Metro Vancouver drug
users.

That's not so much because of the immediate impact the new law will
have on Mexico's drug cartels, but because of what it says about
U.S. President Barack Obama's longer-term approach towards the war
on drugs and the possibility that "drug prohibition" is gradually
lifting.

"Everybody in the movement is happy that it's happened," said
Jeremiah Vandermeer, editor of Vancouver-based Cannabis Culture
magazine, noting that small-scale decriminalization is far from
outright legalization, but is a step in the right direction.

And it does signal an important change in attitude. As Christian
Science Monitor reporter Sara Miller Llana points out, three years
ago a similar Mexican initiative died amid a storm of controversy,
with Mexico being portrayed as going to pot.

[snip]
Marijuana, though, could be sold to adults under strict controls and

with stern health warnings that would put it on much the same
footing as tobacco.

Tobacco remains a legal drug. But because of mounting public concern
about its harmful health effects and the public nuisance its
drifting smoke causes, it's effectively been driven into the margins
of society.

Let's hope that, with a similarly enlightened and disciplined
government approach, marijuana and other currently illegal drugs can
soon join it there.

Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09.n816.a04.html


===

(20) LEGALIZING DRUGS WILL LEAD TO CUTS IN CRIME

Pubdate: Sun, 23 Aug 2009
Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC)
Copyright: 2009 Times Colonist
Author: Peter Moskos and Stanford Franklin

Many would continue prohibition, but some would try something new.

California and its medical marijuana dispensaries provide a good
working example, warts and all, that legalized drug distribution
does not cause the sky to fall.

Having fought the war on drugs, we know that ending the drug war is
the right thing to do -- for all of us, especially taxpayers.

While the financial benefits of drug legalization are not our main
concern, they are substantial. In a July referendum, Oakland,
Calif., voted to tax drug sales by a four-to-one margin. Harvard
economist Jeffrey Miron estimates that ending the drug war would
save $44 billion annually, with taxes bringing in an additional $33
billion.
Without the drug war, America's most decimated neighbourhoods would
have a chance to recover. Working people could sit on stoops,
misguided youths wouldn't look up to criminals as role models, our
overflowing prisons could hold real criminals, and -- most important
to us -- more police officers wouldn't have to die.

Peter Moskos is a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice
in New York City and the author of Cop in the Hood. Stanford
Franklin is a 32-year law enforcement veteran. Both served as
Baltimore city police officers and are members of Law Enforcement
Against Prohibition.

Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09.n815.a01.html
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