Showing posts with label California. Show all posts
Showing posts with label California. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Los Angeles Global Marijuana March 2014, 16th Annual

UPDATE:
“DON’T BE SCARED”
SISTER SOMAYAH KAMBUI
16th ANNUAL LOS ANGELES GLOBAL MARIJUANA MARCH & RALLY
When:May 3, 2014, 10a gathering at Leimert Park ’till dusk – Get your smoke on!
Event Highlights:10a-12 Noon: Coffee and Reefer (Mud & Bud) in the morningwith like minded souls – Participants available for press interviewsHigh Noon: March Starting at and returning to the park(Construction on Crenshaw Subway makes original route inaccessible)1p: Speakers & Music & Crafts & Foods & Fun & Great Marijuana4-5p: 4:20 Ceremony & Positive Vibes to Achieve Hemp For VictoryEvent Conclusion: Dusk
Why:So we can implement the hemp solution to modern problems.


This year’s historic, 16th Annual Los Angeles Global Marijuana March and Rally is being held on Saturday, May 3, 2014, 10 a.m. – Dusk at Leimert Park.
The last minute change regarding the march was instituted by the City of Los Angeles, who called event producer R. W. Akile on April 30th and said ‘due to construction obstructions caused by building the Crenshaw subway underneath the march route, the traditional path would not be available because of last minute safety issues.’  Their original suggestion was to postpone the march, but the whole purpose is on the same day to unify marijuana activists speaking with one voice about the need to stop the war on drugs so We The People can be free.
So in response, the event is being held at Leimert park starting at 10a with a march in the area beginning at High Noon, returning to the park for part two of the rally.
There is a  Facebook Page for the event in Los Angeles too! As we learn more it will be shared here and elsewhere.
This march is a tradition, a celebration in the greater LA marijuana, hemp, cannabis, pot, weed, ganga, Mary Jane, etc. legalization community.  The event was started and produced by legendary members of the Los Angeles marijuana movement many speaking at the events over the years.



The first Los Angeles Million Marijuana March was produced by the late Sister Somayah KambuiRichard M. Davis and Jim Rosenfield plus many other activists in 1999. The event itself goes back to the great marijuana and Ibogaine freedom fighter Dana Beal's “Million Marijuana March” in New York City, which in response to the magical events there, expanded in this century to become the Global Marijuana/Cannabis March held in hundreds of locations all over the world on the same day. It was Dana who approached Somayah to do the first of the Million Marijuana March series in Los Angeles. Somayah, Richard and Jim worked for the remainder of their lives to keep the annual event going.  


Because in great part of the tireless activism of many hemp heroes, some of whom will be producing and at the rallies including R. W. Akile, Jeff Clark, Patrick Moore, Jeanette Perez, Melissa Balin and countless others, many to be listed in future blog posts.  We've come a long way hemp babies, and we still have a long way to go.  Which is why now, with the victories in thee pro legalization states, including this, California, one of the first in the nation to legalize medical marijuana it is important to show up, say your piece, and network with like minded souls.

This year's event is ever bigger in a voice so loud 
that as it joins with others around the world 
to blow the lid off the drug war 
so WE THE PEOPLE OF EARTH can live freely to be our best selves.
CALLING ALL LOS ANGELES, CA HEMPSTERS 
BY WHATEVER FORM OF CONSUMPTION!  

Sister Somayah use to open up the rallies with her battle cry 'Don't Be Scared.' Dress up or just be comfortable. Come, and bring your friends and hemp plants if so inclined to the 16th Annual Global Marijuana March in Los Angeles or wherever you are on the first Saturday afternoon in May. Know that to do so is in defiance of a law system that wants so much control over our lives they interfere with our right to safely (as in NON-GMO) interact with plants. March in support of the end of the drug war and other non productive policies. If you can’t walk, cars are allowed, especially the theme on target decorated kind.
As shared joints tend to do, new bonds are formed, old ones secured, fun, knowledge and respect shared. Throughout their multi decade history, the marches and rallies thrived in an air of celebration of hemp in all its forms.
This is just an initial post on this year's events.  Checking in with folks and will be posting a lot more between now and May Day.  Just getting started so check back to this blog page for frequent updates.  This is going to be empowering! Get ready to fix this mess of modern society we have created with the hemp solution. 
Hemp is an awesome, non toxic technology that we should be using on a grand scale. It is imperative that we implement the hemp solution now i.e. Fukushima, fracking, GMOs, illnesses that cannabis cures, industrial uses (not counting 3D printing filament) via over 50,000 items from hemp bio-fuels, building materials, plastics, papers, foods, oils, dyes, fibers, buds (all of which can be used for 3D printing)…so many life improving & saving capabilities…no wonder it’s illegal. We can change this, we must change this now.
This blog coverage is written by J. Nayer HardinComputer Underground Railroad Ent. The railroad was informally started in 1984 and a NYS corporation since 1996. CURE's mission is to use computers and other technology to help people be free.’ Working the LA march blog which will be updated soon.  

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Marijuana Activist: Los Angeles City Council Decision Is Illegal!


Los Angels City Council Marijuana Decision Is Illegal

FOR IMMEDIATE COMMUNITY AND PRESS RELEASE            

Richard M. Davis
Founder & Curator, USA Hemp Museum
                                                     
Los Angeles, CA Hemp Hero Richard M. Davis, USA Hemp Museum’s founder and curator, author, hemp farmer and activist, is taking on the corrupt Los Angeles City Council’s decision to close down all but 100 medical marijuana dispensaries.  The press and public are invited to his museum, 1358 S. Flower Street, Los Angeles, CA every Saturday and Sunday, 12 noon-6 p.m. for a free museum tour.  Discuss and implement effective ways to implement the hemp solution to our problems now. 

Davis contends that despite a recent court ruling, the Council voted to take medicine away from sick people while turning the market over to 100 of their “lottery winners”.  He said “Once again, the City Council is in violation of the Will Of The People.  Their decision to shut down over 600 legal dispensaries, store front and mobile, is a violation of the July 2, 2012 Second Circuit Court decision (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC457089) regarding Prop 215, SB 420 and Health and Safety Code section 11362.5 is an obtuse abomination. The court’s decision reads:  

‘We conclude state law preempts County’s ban. - DISPOSITION - The order granting a preliminary injunction is reversed, our stay of the injunction is dissolved when the remittitur issues from this court, and the matter is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Defendants are entitled to their costs on appeal.”  So who do they think they are? In light of the above decision, the council’s vote to close down most of the marijuana dispensaries reeks of all forms of corruption.”  Davis is asking the City Council to answer these questions for the people:

Richard M. Davis teaching April Akuna
at THC Cup, July 2012

1.       Have you considered how many dispensary jobs will be lost as a result of your closing down not only over 600 legal marijuana dispensaries but stifling the growth of the mobile hemp industry?  What about the many service jobs lost?
2.      Have you considered the monopolies you will be creating among the 100 lucky lottery winners of dispensary owners?  How do we know that the lottery is not fixed to match contributions/bribes or other in kind donations?
3.      What about the Angelinos comfortable with their dispensary team that knows their case and condition, being forced to stand on even longer lines?
4.      What about the children who depend on their parent’s dispensary jobs for their education, their very lives?  What message does it send them?
5.      What benefit is it to the City Council members to impose these limitations? Could it be graft? Is it time to do the right thing and submit your resignations?

Davis’ three books in his HEMP FOR VICTORY series A GLOBAL WARMING SOLUTION, THE WONDER HERB and THE TRILLION DOLLAR CROP are available on amazon. He has appeared on the History Channel and other media as a go to guy on this subject.  “The hemp solution can help with so many problems like Fukushima, world hunger, global warming, medical conditions, crashing economies and so much more.   Peter McWilliams said in his great book title DO IT! For more on the court decision and the 50,000 plus other uses for the miraculous marijuana plant, come by the USA Hemp Museum. Private and group tours by appointment". ###

Friday, February 10, 2012

California Cannabis Hemp & Health Initiative 2012 Richard M. Davis

Dear Potential Supporter of California Cannabis Hemp and Health Initiative -  CCHHI:


I am Richard M. Davis, founder and curator of the U.S.A. Hemp Museum, soon to be opened in downtown Los Angeles, CA featuring my over 3,000 hemp items and artifacts I've collected over the last 40 plus years as a hemp activist, farmer, consumer and historian.


The year 2012 is the year for relegalizing Cannabis hemp and marijuana in California.  To this end we are offering the California Cannabis Hemp and Health Initiative (CCHHI) to the people of our State.  In California we have the right to change the law or create law by initiative, bypassing the government as was done with medical marijuana in 1996.  The role of the government is to protect liberty not control and harass the people over the historical and productive cannabis sativa plant – common name hemp.

We believe the people of California are ready to end the prohibition of industrial and recreational hemp for adults.  Relegalizing Cannabis will provide jobs, save family farms, help reverse global warming, provide biomass fuels (even synthetic gasoline), provide high protein foods, provide paper to protect our forests, provide fiber to replace the polluting cotton crop, provide herbal safe medicine (known since 1974 to kill cancer cells), provide building materials, plastics, paints and varnishes, and stress reducing relaxation.  As a carbon source, hemp can do anything fossil fuels (oil, coal, natural gas) can do.  Hemp’s potential for California could be hundreds of billions of dollars (paper for example produces $850 billion, and hemp could and should do this job.)  The reward on this initiative investment is beyond belief.  Hemp can produce an estimated 50,000 viable products.

Inalienable rights are those given by the Creator to individual citizens as stated in the Declaration of Independence.  Cannabis was also given to the people by the Creator, not to the government.  Hemp hero Dr. David Bearman has states: “Do we really need the government to protect us from the plants that grow in our garden.” Hemp hero Dr. Lester Grinspoon has said that not until everyone can legally obtain cannabis will patients be guaranteed access to their medicine.  Dr. William Courtney, Cannabis expert, stated: “…the National Cancer Institute has acknowledged that there are direct antitumor (anticancer) effects (from Cannabis).” He feels the fresh leaves and flowers eaten in quantity do the most to promote health.  Food, medicine, liberty, seeds, privacy, happiness and safety belong to the people.

We need your help to get CCHHI on the ballot.  We need to gather 805,000 signatures in the next four months.  The quickest way to do this is to ay petitioners.  At one dollar per signature, we think that one million dollars will enable us to do this.  Any part or all of this million you can give will help the people of California to step ahead in Cannabis research in the U.S.  Many other developed countries are already growing hemp, including Canada, all of Europe, China, Russia, Australia, etc.

Many of you have proved you know how to develop an idea and to make it profitable.  We would love your direct involvement.  We want to use your name, and your activism, as well as your financial help.  Fifteen years ago, Cannabis production was broken by initiative Prop. 215. This proves we can do this without the federal government, which had to respect the right of the people to invoke medical marijuana as a right, out of thin air.  Specifically, CCHHI invokes the Ninth and Tenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution sot there is no mistake where the power of the people to act comes from.  Help us and your grandchildren will thank you.

Hemp hero Jack Herer, father of CCHHI passed away in 2010.  We like to call this initiative the Jack Herer Hemp Initiative.  His vision for a world in hemp has started a revolution around the world to develop hemp.  The U.S. farmer is being left behind in the development of hemp, a crop I call the Trillion Dollar Crop.  Jack Herer from the start knew that for justice to be served non-violent offenders needed to be released and records whipped clean for hemp offenses.  Recently, Jack’s assertion that farming six percent of the U.S. could fuel our country was confirmed by research of five Swedish scientists.  This initiative gives the farmer the right to grow hemp.  This is taking back the freedom and liberty enjoyed by our founders.

For my part, I plan to open to the public the U.S.A. Hemp Museum of which I am curator and owner, so we can clearly see the economic, medicinal, nutritional potential of hemp.  I have supported this initiative in the past and support it even more today.  We need the jobs and energy that hemp farming will bring to California.  Beyond getting on the ballot is the campaign to November, 2012, which will demand even more resources.  The reward on this initiative investment is beyond belief.  The hemp resource can span 50,000 viable products.

For those of you with money, challenge your friends to match your generosity.  For those with no money, spread the word.  One purpose of the Jack Herer Hemp Initiative is to end Cannabis hemp prohibition.  The legislative analyst has estimated that the savings from releasing non-violent offenders will be in the “tens of millions of dollars’ annually.  Sign the initiative petition, collect signatures from work or home, and donate to the liberation of a plant.  With you we can make history, again.

Thank you,

Richard. M. Davis
Founder, Curator
U.S.A. Hemp Museum
1358 S. Flower Street
Los Angeles, CA 90015






Monday, September 20, 2010

What's Wrong With Prop. 19 - The Regulate, Control and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010

Notes on TRCATCA OF 2010
Founder & Curator

The above act is an initiative by the people of California to regulate, control and tax Cannabis.  I wonder if the people of California really understand what they are getting by this act.  But these are the sentiments of a 40 year smoker and grower of the plant.  I’m a court stipulated marijuana and hemp expert.  I’m not a lawyer, but I think a lot about the law and my rights in relation to hemp.
I want legalization as pre-1937.  I want freedom and due process.  I want equal rights.  I want hemp.  I want this proposed Cannabis Act to be no more than an educational experience for California.  I do not want to be at the mercy of a really bad bill dealing with marijuana again.  I want, as Arlin Trout put it: unconditional surrender.  Prop. 19 is not legalization.  To find out what it really means has been a long road that leads to the conclusion that I should VOTE NO ON PROP. 19, based on the many reasons below.
As background for my reasons to oppose Prop. 19, I spent two and one half years in court protesting S.B. 420, the State’s Medical Marijuana Program, as unconstitutional. I didn’t win, but I didn’t lose either.  I was not allowed standing in court because I was not harmed by this voluntary law.  Recently the California Supreme Court partially backed up my pleading by declaring plant limits void because they amended the Compassionate Use Act of 1996.  But guidelines, clarification, changes, etc., are also amendments and will be exposed.  Someday a case is going to change the ballgame and the ‘whole rotting edifice’ will come down and we will be left with the Compassionate Use Act of 1996.
 So you know what I’m talking about, the legislature passed S.B. 420 using (citing) the power of the Ninth and Tenth Amendment to do so.  Then they assumed because their power came from the Federal Constitution they did not have to follow the California Constitution and send S.B. 420 back to the voters as the CA Constitution requires of all amendments to Proposition 215.
Another greatly disturbing point is that in passing Proposition 215, the people assumed the power over medical marijuana (sort of out of thin air as the Federal Constitution has no enumerated power over medical marijuana, and the  State government couldn’t get a bill past Pete Wilson).  In other words the people had already claimed title to medical marijuana through Amendments Nine and Ten which clearly reads “the states or the people.”  In California this means something as the people hold all the power.  No contest. 
And this initiative Proposition 19 is much more serious than I ever imagined.  Prop. 19, as was pointed out by lawyer Letitia Pepper, effectively shreds the CA Constitution and all the personal rights contained therein.  I had an old copy of the CA Constitution that did not contain this article.  “Article 18:  Amending and Revising the Constitution by Initiative.  Section 3. The electors may amend the Constitution by Initiative.”  Prop. 19 is a proposed initiative law that can and will amend the Constitution to gain legality.  Listen to the following broad and vague statements from Prop. 19.  “Section 11300:  Personal Regulation and Controls. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law,” and Section 11301: Commercial Regulations and Controls.  Notwithstanding any other provision of state or local law…”  These two statements wipeout all Constitutional checks on legislation.  They also wipe out and are capable of wiping out both the state (S.B. 420 Medical Marijuana Program) and initiative law on medical marijuana (The Compassion Use Act of 1996 or Prop. 215).  All of our rights are written into law, including all our inalienable rights, and all appear to be in danger of being negated by “notwithstanding any other provision of state or local law” and turned over to “local control.”
 The dictionary definition of notwithstanding is: “in spite of; without being opposed or prevented by.”  In spite of is defined as:  “in disregard or defiance of.”  This could easily be interpreted as “In disregard or defiance of any other provision of state or local law.”  And I don’t want to be a stickler, but don’t forget CA Const., Article I, Section 22, Constitution Mandatory and Prohibitory:  The provisions of this Constitution are mandatory and prohibitory, unless by express words they are declared to be otherwise.”   Could these words express that mandatory and prohibitory are declared to be otherwise.  Correct me if I am wrong.  I am not a lawyer, but I want to know why I might be giving up all my rights for the City of Oakland and Oaksterdam.
I suspect that Prop. 19 is a blatant putdown of my rights, and the rights of all citizens of CA, under the CA Constitution Declaration of Rights.  Control, Regulate and Tax is certainly not legalization and the text of the law doesn’t mention legalization.  Let’s be honest about the initiative, it was written for the Oakland City relationship with Oaksterdam.  This relationship is why the local control is written into law instead of equal rights for all citizens of California as called for by the CA Constitution, Article 1, Section 3 (b)(4):  “Nothing in this subdivision supersedes or modifies any provision of this Constitution, including the guarantees that a
person may not be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, or denied equal protection of the laws, as provided in Section 7.”
There is repeated one especially troublesome and unconstitutional part of both S.B. 420 and Proposition 19, that I think I can explain.  The legislature after assuming a mythical power to subvert the California Constitution, gave up the people’s state law (Prop. 215) of a general nature (we all have the right to obtain and use medical marijuana, for any ailment for which it provides relief) to 538 local governments in violation of the “California Constitution, Article 4, SEC. 16.  (a) All laws of a general nature have uniform operation.  (b) A local or special statute is invalid in any case if a general statute can be made applicable.
There can be no uniform operation from 538 local governments.  We have seen this in the 15 years of operation of Prop. 215 and six years of operation of S.B. 420.  This same lack of uniform operation is to be found in Proposition 19.  This time it is the people themselves through their initiative power that will violate this Constitutional mandate.  And this mandate can’t be ignored unless Prop. 19 wipes out the Constitution.  Once again we will have 538 local governments with 538 different regulate, control and tax laws.  What’s good for Oakland is good for San Diego, and what’s good for Alameda County is good for Orange County, because California citizens live in those 538 different locales.  No uniform operation.  Anything less is unconstitutional.  We don’t need more bad law.  There are 538 cities and counties in California.  There is no possibility of uniform operation of this law with 538 possible different local laws, including many bans.  This is lawmaking at its worst.   The Regulate, Control & Tax Cannabis Act contains this same “local government” violation of the Constitution.  Prop. 19, “Section 3: (d) Definitions, (vi) ‘local government’ means a city, county, or city and county.”  Again, this is mandatory. 
According to Prop. 19 there will be 538 new regulate, control and tax laws or bans across CA creating an impossible patchwork of laws.  Not counting old criminal codes, just the medical marijuana program, Prop. 215, and the proposed law, we’re up to 1614 different laws or codes in California to control, regulate, and tax marijuana.  Follow me on the math if you can. First, S.B. 420 allowed 480 cities and 58 counties to control medical marijuana, which equals 538 different medical marijuana laws (or not).  But then S.B. 420 is voluntary and if you did not volunteer for it, it doesn’t apply to you.  Another 538 laws to cover those who didn’t apply for the government’s scheme under S.B. 420.
Regulation, control, and taxation are the opposite of freedom, the opposite of legalization.  Fifteen years have gone by since the Compassionate Use Act of 1996 put the crack in the prohibition dam by taking the legislative power away from the state, creating new rights and freedoms and making marijuana legal for every California citizen under certain circumstances.  Proposition 19 gives the power back to the state to draw up new laws and regulations the people will have no power over.  Sure you think you can change the law after the fact, but look at the medical marijuana fiasco that came out of the state’s 538 medical marijuana programs.
The title of Prop. 19 itself is deceiving.  This is a marijuana act not a Cannabis act.  Any good Cannabis act would have given to the people the whole plant, and certainly Cannabis hemp for farmers.  The omission of hemp killed the initiative for me.  Someone has a completely different priority than me.  If you don’t legalize Cannabis for the farmer, it’s not legal.  I am a farmer.  Some of us want equal rights.  Farmers need to control the means of production, and when the government controls the means of production it is called communism.  
The age limit of 21 years or older in Prop. 19 also violates the “CA Constitution, Privileges and Immunities, Article I, Section 7 (b) A citizen or class of citizens may not be granted privileges or immunities not granted on the same terms to all citizens.”
But then maybe the focus groups that gave us this false legalization have never read the Constitution.  The adults 18 – 21 years have the same inalienable rights I have in California and are adult citizens.  Because 18 – 21 year olds are citizens, they cannot be excluded from the law.  It was the Federal Government that gave us, under threat of highway funds being withheld, the 21 year old age limit for alcohol.  The federal government is not now in control.  The California Constitution and the people are in charge.  Prop. 19 does not follow the law.  But again maybe the focus groups didn’t know this was a constitutional violation.  My question is did anyone take this into consideration?  Is there some hidden agenda to bypass the CA Constitution and plead federal law again?  If every 21 years in Prop. 19 has to be changed to 18 years, the initiative is doomed.  All those people including the AG in his summary who thought 21 meant 21 were deceived.
“California Constitution, Article I, Section 23, Rights Reserved:  This enumeration of rights shall not be construed to impair or deny others retained by the people.”  The people have retained the right to use and obtain medical marijuana in Prop. 215.  Not only am I given no right to my ounce in Prop. 19, but I can’t sell what I produce on my property, in privacy, exercising my liberty and recognizing that of others.  Forty years of fighting for liberty around Cannabis and I get an ounce and no industrial hemp.  According to Chris Conrad there are 50,000 viable uses for Cannabis, in Prop. 19 we get one use, one measly ounce that we already have a real right to in medical marijuana if we choose.  Ask your doctor.
This is not a cool Cannabis Act.  Unworkable, unconstitutional, unequal, unfair and so on, we can use the opportunity to educate ourselves and the rest of the world about what freedom is and is not.  I don’t feel bad about depriving people of their ounce, because I’m not.  They have the right and I can respect that.  What I don’t like is being allowed an ounce and a 5 foot X 5 foot garden being called legalization by the government written summary and proponents.  What this Prop. 19 is could be called a form of restrictionism – a policy by a legislative body (in this case local control by cities and counties, enabled by the people) to enact restrictions on marijuana.
CA Constitution, Article I, Section 26, states in full:  “The provisions of this Constitution are mandatory and prohibitory, unless by express words they are declared to be otherwise.”  In Prop. 19, the phrases “Notwithstanding any other provision of law…,” and  “Notwithstanding any other provision of state or local law…,” are express words meant to obviate and eliminate any part of the Constitution including the before mentioned age limit and uniform operation.  It is a question I can’t answer at this time as to whether these express words also curtail our individual liberties written into state law, such as privacy.  It does give me great concern; if Prop.19 can obviate the Constitution, it can certainly wipe out a prior initiative like Prop. 215 and a statute like S.B. 420.  VOTE NO ON GIVING UP OUR CONSTITUTIONAL SAFEGUARDS; VOTE NO ON PROP. 19.
Prop 19 neglects to legalize the most important and lucrative part of the Cannabis plant – HEMP.   Yes, I am bummed that nobody asked my opinion on this Cannabis act.  I had written an initiative I called the Cannabis sativa Act.  I had experience on Jack’s 1994 initiative effort and wanted to see if I could improve on his effort.  I did lower the age limit to l8 years, because of the CA Constitution, but in it we would get the 50,000 uses, people would be let out of jail, records would be wiped clean of non-violent pot crimes, etc.  I believe that the Prop. 19 focus groups never got a glimpse of Jack’s initiative.    NO HEMP; NO ON PROP.19.
We get no Cannabis hemp.  This initiative is not about Cannabis, it is about marijuana.  TRCATCA OF 2010 should have been about hemp as the legislature has passed two hemp bills that were vetoed.  Hemp is what is best for California, not restrictionism that will certainly make a hemp farmer think twice about going beyond a 5 x 5 foot square.  This Cannabis plant like every other plant needs to be controlled by the people through our inalienable individual rights.  I like the tomato model, not the wine model.  Let the farmer grow; unconditional surrender.  Vote NO ON RESTRICTIONISM.
What does this mean and does it violate the one-subject rule?  Prop. 19,Section 2, B, 13.  “Permit California to fulfill the state’s obligations under the United States Constitution to enact laws concerning health, morals, public welfare and safety within the State.”  This is certainly not covered by the title.  It is broad and vague and carries no explanation about why it is included in this marijuana bill.   Does the state now have a problem enacting laws that the people now have to permit them to do so, or is this another attempt to allow the state to bypass the California Constitution and do something devious?  Sounds rather ominous in a Regulate, Control, and Tax initiative.  VOTE NO ON BROAD AND VAGUE LAW; VOTE NO ON PROP. 19.  Can anyone explain the why this purpose is included in Prop. 19?  And why is it not unconstitutional under CA Constitution, Article 4 Legislative, Section 9:  “A statute shall embrace but one subject, which shall be expressed in its title.  If a statute embraces a subject not expressed in its title, only the part not expressed is void.”
I saw a couple of people in Orange County lighting up tobacco cigarettes outside a Pep Boy’s store and it reminded me that according to the Attorney General’s opinion after Prop. 215 was passed, I could smoke my medicine anywhere you could smoke cigarettes in public.  Why should I give up my right to be equal with other smokers?  Why was this unequal and unfair section even put in the law?  I now suspect it is to drive people into the marijuana shops of Oaksterdam.  VOTE NO ON INEQUALITY OF LAW.
Short list of possible Constitutional problems:
1.    CA Constitution, Article 13 TAXATION:  Section 3, “The following are exempt from property taxation; (h) Growing crops.”
2.    CA Constitution, Article 13 TAXATION:  Section 20, “The Legislature may provide maximum property tax rates and bonding limits for local governments.”
3.    Prop. 19 is not about legalization and as Dennis Peron stated, “It is thinly veiled prohibition.”  Look at the wording in Prop. 19:  Section 11301:  Commercial Regulations and Controls, “Notwithstanding any other provision of state or local law, a local government may…(g) prohibit and punish through civil fines or other remedies the possession, sale, possession for sale, cultivation, processing, or transportation of cannabis that was not obtained lawfully from a person pursuant to this section or section 11300.”
4.    CA Constitution, Article 4 Legislative, Section 9:  “A statute shall embrace but one subject, which shall be expressed in its title.  If a statute embraces a subject not expressed in its title, only the part not expressed is void.”
5.      CA Constitution, Article I, Section 26, states in full:  “The provisions of this Constitution are mandatory and prohibitory, unless by express words they are declared to be otherwise.” 
6.    “California Constitution, Article I, Section 23, Rights Reserved:  This enumeration of rights shall not be construed to impair or deny others retained by the people.” 
7.    The age limit of 21 years or older in Prop. 19 also violates the “CA Constitution, Privileges and Immunities, Article I, Section 7 (b) A citizen or class of citizens may not be granted privileges or immunities not granted on the same terms to all citizens.”
8.    “California Constitution, Article 4, SEC. 16.  (a) All laws of a general nature have uniform operation.  (b) A local or special statute is invalid in any case if a general statute can be made applicable.”
*******
One of the many questions from those who heard our NO ON PROP. 19 talks was, “What else is there to vote on.?”  Other more comprehensive initiatives have been written, such as Jack Herer’s California Cannabis Hemp and Health Initiative.  I am including an initiative I wrote years ago.  This was written as an exercise in initiative writing.    
 
INITIATIVE MEASURE TO BE SUBMITTED DIRECTLY TO THE VOTERS
TO THE HONORABLE SECRETARY OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA:
We, the undersigned, registered, qualified voters of California, residents of the fore-described County (or City and County), hereby propose changes to the Health and Safety Code Sections 11357- 11362 relating to the Cannabis sativa plant by whatever name, and petition the Secretary of State to submit the same to the voters of California for their adoption or rejection at the next succeeding primary or general election or at any special statewide election held prior to that primary or general election or otherwise provided by law.
The proposed statutory initiative reads as follows.
THE CANNABIS SATIVA ACT OF 2012 A.D.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT
AS FOLLOWS:
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE SECTIONS 11357- 11362.

SECTION 1.
TITLE
This initiative shall be known as the Cannabis sativa Act of 2012 A.D.
SECTION 2.
FINDINGS AND DECLARATIONS.
A. The People of the State of California find and declare their rights under the U.S. Constitution, Articles IX and X.  Article IX states:  “The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.”  And Article X states:  “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively or to the people.”
B. The United States Federal Government is forbidden by law to control farm production as it has with the plant Cannabis sativa in California (see U.S. v. Butler, 297, U.S. I, 1936), has interfered with medical use of the plant Cannabis sativa under the Compassionate Use Act of 1996, in violation of the spirit and intent of the U.N. Single Convention Treaty,  and has continually (from the U.S. Marijuana Tax Stamp Act of 1937, to the present) subjected us to silence on the benefits of Cannabis hemp and the safety of medical Cannabis, while mounting the most pernicious campaign against the inalienable rights and privileges of California citizens as expressed in the California Constitution, Article 1, Declaration of Rights, Section 1:  “All people are by nature free and independent and have inalienable rights.  Among these are enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing, and protecting property, and pursuing and obtaining safety, happiness, and privacy.”
C. The People of the State of California find and declare that  physicians,  caregivers, producers and patients are continually being sanctioned, harassed, arrested and prosecuted for the recommendation, transportation, distribution and use of cannabis for medical purposes.
D. The People of the State of California find and declare that the development and use of Cannabis sativa (hemp) as a basic natural renewable resource is in the best interest of the state economy and that the development of Cannabis sativa for the production of hemp and hemp products can be of tremendous medical, environmental and social advantage.
E. The People of the State of California find and declare that the safety of Cannabis sativa (no overdose deaths in recorded history, no toxicity), warrants removal of the plant from the Schedules of the Controlled Substances Act, thereby re-establishing Cannabis sativa as a free market agricultural resource.
F. The People of the State of California find and declare that due to the safety
and lack of toxicity and many medical applications of Cannabis sativa, the government is not warranted to invade the privacy of the family unit on adolescent use of Cannabis, unless due process is used. Control of Cannabis sativa use in the home is in the proper purview of parents or guardians of underage Californians.
SECTION 3. PURPOSE & INTENT
A. Therefore, be it resolved that the People of California do hereby declare that the purpose and intent of the Cannabis sativa Act of 2012 A.D. is to re-establish as an inalienable right of liberty of the people of California to use, grow, farm, sell and develop economically the plant Cannabis sativa free of interference by the United States Federal Government, pursuant to the Ninth and Tenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States.
B. Therefore, be it resolved that the People of the State of California do hereby recognize the medical value of cannabis, and do hereby propose this Cannabis sativa Act of 2012 A.D. with the intent to authorize physicians to prescribe, pharmacists to dispense, producers to supply, and patients to use with or without a prescription Cannabis sativa for medical purposes, with the full protection of the law of the land given an inalienable right.
SECTION 4. DEFINITION OF MEDICAL USE
Medical use shall be defined as the personal consumption in any manner of any form of Cannabis sativa for any medical purpose as determined by an adult citizen of California or determined by the parent or guardian of underage Californians. This is an inalienable right of liberty for Californians.
SECTION 5. EXCLUSION OF PRIOR ACTS
The Cannabis sativa Act of 2012 A.D. shall be construed to repeal, delete, expunge, deny or abridge any California Statute or Code, criminal or civil, relating to the Cannabis sativa plant.
SECTION 6.
 PRESCRIPTION BY A LICENSED PHYSICIAN
Any prescription issued by a licensed physician in the State of California for medical Cannabis shall conform to the standard format of a prescription and
recommendations of medical Cannabis sativa for any medical purpose may be made as deemed appropriate by the physician or the patient, recognizing the inalienable right of the patient to the plant.
SECTION 7. DISPENSING BY A PHARMACIST
Any pharmacist licensed in the State of California may purchase, transport, store, dispense, and sell Cannabis sativa for the purpose of filling a prescription issued by a physician.   All Cannabis sativa sold by licensed pharmacists must be organically produced in accordance with the California Organic Food Act of 1990. No special form or procedure shall be required of a pharmacist filling a prescription for Cannabis sativa.
SECTION 8. ZONING RESTRICTIONS
Zoning restrictions regarding the cultivation of Cannabis sativa for industrial purposes may be set forth by the proper authorities in the same manner as with any other food, agricultural or industrial enterprise, recognizing the inalienable right of the citizen to the plant.
SECTION 9. FREEDOM FROM HARASSMENT
(A) People engaged in the activities described in this Act shall be free from sanction, harassment, arrest and prosecution by any and all authorities.
(B) "Harassment" shall be further defined as any act departing from the norm observed in the course of inspecting or supervising a commercial agricultural enterprise, including, but not limited to, aerial surveillance of a kind not customary to a commercial agricultural enterprise.
SECTION 10.  CEASING PROSECUTION, VACATING
SENTENCES, RELEASING FROM PRISON, EXPUNGING OF RECORDS
(A) Enactment of this initiative shall include: release from prison, jail, parole and
probation, and clearing, expungement and deletion of all criminal records for all
persons currently charged with, or convicted of any Cannabis sativa offenses included in this initiative which are hereby no longer illegal.
(B) Evidence of criminal proceedings involving the plant Cannabis sativa which under this initiative are no longer illegal shall be expunged from a defendant’s record within 30 days of the passage of this Act.
SECTION 11.  LIBERAL CONSTRUCTION
This Act is an exercise of the public power of the state for the protection of the health, safety, and welfare of the citizens of the State of California, and shall be liberally construed to effectuate these purposes, remembering the citizen’s inalienable right to Cannabis sativa.
SECTION 12.  SEVERABILITY
The provisions of this Act are severable. If any provision of this Act or the application thereof to any person or circumstance is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect any other provision or application of this Act which can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable.
SECTION 13. CONFLICTING MEASURES   
If this measure is approved by the voters but superseded by any other conflicting ballot measure approved by more voters at the same election, and the conflicting ballot measure is later held invalid, it is the intent of the voters that this Act shall be self-executing and given full force of the law.
SECTION 14. EFFECTIVE DATE
This Act shall become effective immediately upon its approval by the voters.
SECTION 15. SELF-EXECUTION
This Act shall be self-executing.
SECTION 16. AMENDMENT
This Act shall not be altered or amended except by a vote of the people.
*****    
Dennis’ List
Dennis Peron:  TRCATCA OF 2010 is not legalization it is thinly veiled prohibition.  Money spent at Bluesky is being used against you by keeping the reins of Prohibition on Cannabis with:
1.    The plant police (5x5 restricted grow space & one ounce limit (this is supposed to be legalization)
2.    The tax ensures police and new plant police will be paid to weigh our medicine equals high priced medicine.
3.    Age limits (21) send the wrong message.  Cannabis is safer than alcohol why equate it with it.  [Alaska – age 19][French Commission on legalization of Marijuana recommended age 14].
4.    Making public consumption illegal (currently there is no state law against it)
5.    Creating new felonies where there were none.
6.    Can’t smoke around your own kids (Cops can take them away)
7.    No one gets out of prison, the status quo is preserved.
8.    What is legal in one county or city will be illegal in others.
9.    Creates a monopoly by limiting competition (excessive regulations prevent ordinary people from entering business)
******

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

From The Family of Jack Herer - Re: California's Prop. 19


Casper Leitch, the host of Time4Hemp, which airs week nights on American Freedom Radio, forwarded this note from Jack Herer's family about Prop. 19 that sheds light in the storm brewing because of the latest marijuana proposition to come before California voters.  Hemp For Victory!!!


"Jack Herer would ask — no, he would demand your yes vote on Prop 19, along with a pledge to continue fighting for the plant, the people and the planet."

From the Family of Jack Herer, author of The Emperor Wears No Clothes
Van Nuys, California

August, 2010

Dear Friends of Hemp and Cannabis,

Our father, Jack Herer, was a man of leadership, compassion and idealism. He worked relentlessly for decades to achieve his dream of legalizing Cannabis hemp in all its forms, personal, medical and industrial. He wanted Cannabis to be free and open, and to be given full respect for its enormous economic, environmental and cultural benefits.

As an idealist, Jack was adverse to half measures. He originally opposed Prop 215 because it stopped at medical use only. He initially opposed Senate Bill 420 because it set limited quantities as a safe harbor. Over time, however, he came to appreciate the freedoms they created, and took pride in the role he played in inspiring those changes. Jack’s great fear about Prop 215 and SB 420 was that people would accept those limits, become complacent and stop working for full legalization. He feared we would be stuck with medical use forever.

Likewise, Jack railed against Tax Cannabis 2010, now Proposition 19, and its plan for limited legalization and local authority to tax and regulate marijuana sales to adults 21 and above. It falls far short of what he wanted. Jack ‘wanted it all,’ and Prop 19 is just a part of that dream. Unfortunately, Jack passed away before Prop 19 made the 2010 ballot; so many people think he would still oppose it. We don’t believe that, and we ask that everyone stop saying he would cling to that position as we move toward the Nov. 2 vote.

As his family, we want the world to know that the last thing Jack Herer would want is for Californians to vote to keep Cannabis illegal. He was smart and had the political savvy to know that once a measure is on the ballot, the time for bickering has passed. That is why he campaigned for Prop 215 despite its shortcomings. That is why, were he able, he would now be telling voters to rally around and Vote Yes on Prop 19.

Does that mean he would want everyone to stop and be happy with the modest changes that Prop 19 affords? Absolutely not! What Jack would want us to do right now is to support Prop 19, and come Nov. 3 he would be right back again, telling you to renew your commitment to bring a comprehensive California Hemp and Health Initiative to the voters in 2012 or some future date. Jack Herer would ask — no, he would demand your yes vote on Prop 19, along with a pledge to continue fighting for the plant, the people and the planet.

It is true that Prop 19 does not fulfill our father's dream; but it takes us much closer to achieving it than we are now, and for that reason we, his family, endorse Prop 19 today. Please vote yes on Prop 19 Nov 2, but do it with the dedication to keep working toward complete legalization in Jack's honor.

Sincerely, Dan Herer et al.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

N.A.A.C.P. Endorsing Prop. 19 Finally Does Something Right by R.W. Akile

Alice Huffman, President of the California Chapter of the NAACP must be commended for endorsing Proposition 19, the November ballot initiative that calls for the legalization of Marijuana for Adult Recreational Use.  Though the proposed law has some flaws such as the amount of tax to be imposed on an ounce of Marijuana it is a step in the right direction.  Many Blacks are in jail today due to the unfair application of drug prohibition laws.

Critics of the NAACP position display their lack of investigative fortitude and brings into question their knowledge on the subject of Marijuana.  Joe Hicks, VP of Community Advocates continues to display his lack of discernment when he says that "Marijuana is a Valley issue that really doesn't concern Blacks."

Such a posture is way off the mark.  The racist strategy used to make Marijuana illegal in the first place targeted Mexican Farm Laborers in the early 1900s in the Western states.  California was the first state in 1913 to pass a law making Marijuana Use a crime.  Montana and other Western states begin to follow suit.  Virtually all of these laws were targeting Mexican Farm Labor.  This posture was fueled by William Randolph Hearst's policy of racist "Yellow" journalism.  The Hearst publishing empire would print editorials stating such things as: "If your children smoke Marijuana they will hang out with "greasy Mexicans and dirty Niggers."

Most of us are unaware that W. R. Hearst had an axe to grind against Pancho Villa after Villa influenced the seizure of 800,000 acres of Hearst owned Timberland in Mexico.  Hearst had planned to feed his publishing empire with paper produced from his Mexican land holdings.  Hearst used a liberal amount of ink to criminalize Blacks and Mexicans as the source of Marijuana crime.

The NAACP is to be commended for standing up on this issue.  Those who wish to know more about this much maligned herb can find a surprising amount of positive information in "The Emperor Wears No Clothes" by the late Jack Herer or "Hemp, Lifeline to the Future" by Chris Conrad. 

The late Somayah Kambui, demonstrated that Hemp was actually a very beneficial nutritional herb.  Indeed, of the 20 elements for good nutrition the Hemp seed contains 16 of those elements.  Cold pressed Hemp oil is a perfectly balanced source of "Essiential Fatty Acids." 

Hemp has been found in the tombs of Kmt (ancient Egypt).  Hemp fabric can be traced to the 18th Dynasty of Kmt.  Seshat, the Ntr of the Library, a keeper of knowledge has as her symbol a seven fingered Marijuana leaf.  In the sacred text known as the "Emerald Tablet" the author alludes to the periodic "bathing in the glow of the flower" as a source of immortality.  Like it or not the flower spoken of is none other then "Yamba" or "Matokwani" or Marijuana.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

USA Hemp Museum at the THC Expose April 23-25 LA Convention Center

The USA Hemp Museum is exhibiting at the THC Expose this weekend, April 23-25 held at the Los Angeles Convention Center.  This evolutionary event calls together some of the biggest movers and shakers in the newly developing international hemp industry.

Below are photos from the USA Hemp Museum's new home located at 1358 S. Flower Street, LA, CA.  The grand opening is concurrent with the opening of the THC Expose.

Richard M. Davis, founder and curator & artist Sherwood Akuna
at the USA Hemp Museum, 1358 S. Flower Street, Los Angeles, CA



Jack Herer cover on High Times magazine on display at the USA Hemp Museum 


 Happy Hemp.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

A Lot of Hemping Going On

There's a lot going on in our hemp nation and here's just a couple articles of note that show we are hemping coast to coast.

From the Los Angeles Times

"California Supreme Court Strikes Down Marijuana Limits

Jonathan Riley —  Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 1:01 PM


The Wall Street Journal reported on the legalization movement on Friday

"We're beyond a tipping point culturally," said Roger Goodman, a Democrat representing Kirkland, Wash., and other Seattle suburbs in the Washington legislature who co-authored the legalization bill, known as HB 2401. "Now we're at a point where we're figuring out the safest way to end prohibition."

West Coast states—especially California—are particularly in the vanguard of the marijuana-legalization push given the region's more-liberal attitudes toward a variety of issues. Legalization measures in other states, such as Massachusetts and New Hampshire, haven't gotten as far, said Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws."

For more on how we can use hemp to help us save ourselves visit the USA Hemp Museum and check out the books you'll find there too. Keep on Hemping!!!

Saturday, November 21, 2009

THE MEDICAL MARIJUANA MESS IN L.A.

The Los Angeles City Council met on Wednesday to further discuss the fate of some 800 dispensaries that provide medical marijuana to the millions of citizens of the city.  I attended that meeting and heard the discussion.  I did not get a chance to speak, so let me take this opportunity to put in my two cents on the subject.  
 
My name is Richard M. Davis author of the HEMP FOR VICTORY book series: A GLOBAL WARMING SOLUTIONTHE WONDER HERB  and THE TRILLION DOLLAR CROP .  I am a court stipulated expert witness on marijuana and hemp ( the two varieties are tied together under the drug laws),  the founder and curator of the USA Hemp Museum (www.hempmuseum.org), a medical marijuana patient and caregiver for a bunch of people,  a citizen and voter in this state, a marijuana felon,  a nuclear veteran,  with forty years smoking and growing Cannabis.  I have testified in Steve Cooley’s court (People v. Sister Somayah Kambui) as caregiver for the defendant, and sued to have Senate Bill 420 declared unconstitutional in Superior Court.
I believe that the power and freedom given to the people of California is unique in the world.  We possess as individuals inalienable rights given us by the people through the California Constitution:
“Article I, Section 1.  All men are by nature free and independent, and have certain inalienable rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty; acquiring, possessing, and protecting property; and pursuing and obtaining safety, happiness and privacy.”
From our Declaration of Independence, an inalienable right is one given us by the Creator.  We in California were given a bunch of these rights.  To me they all say I can grow a God given plant.  Period.  Case closed.  What we citizens need to recognize is that all marijuana laws are bogus.  Just look above at the rights I have.
1.        I was told by the Second District Court of Appeals that I had no standing to challenge S.B. 420 as I had not volunteered for its conditions.  S.B. 420 is a voluntary law!  I am not covered by that law in any way; I have that in writing from the Attorney General, who I sued.   The fact is the court refused to shoot down this unconstitutional law for me in my case because it was not “ripe” for determination.  The appeals court since has ruled that plant limits are unconstitutional for the very reason they were not sent back to the people for a vote.  An unconstitutional law is no law at all and need not be obeyed.  They simply did not follow the constitution.  S.B. 420 is void.
2.       Look at the mess this unconstitutional law has brought.  By constitutional law, a statewide measure (like the Compassionate Use Act of 1996, must be instituted evenly statewide.  This was not done, but given to 58 California counties and hundreds of cities to concoct hundreds of different medical marijuana laws, licenses, bans, taxes.  This violates the spirit and letter of our act which authorized a safe and affordable distribution to ALL Californians.
3.       The only viable marijuana law in force in California is the Compassionate Use Act of 1996.  If City law does not follow the Compassionate Use Act of 1996, but amends or changes it in any way or restricts its implementation it will be unconstitutional unless sent back to the people of California for a vote (just follow the law).
4.       The question of federal jurisdiction comes up again and again.  Here is my take.  If the federal government could have stopped medical marijuana in California in 1996, they would have.  The facts are they could not stop medical marijuana and here is why.   In California the people have all the power.  The power of the federal government is limited by the U.S. Constitution.  Rights and powers not specifically enumerated in the Federal Constitution are reserved to the states or the people.  There is no federal power spelled out over medical marijuana, so it was up for grabs (so to speak) through the Ninth and Tenth Amendment, and the people of California got there first.  The feds and the state governments were left out in the cold.  To really complicate matters in 2003, the state tried to use the power of the Ninth and Tenth Amendment to establish the power to set up an entire medical marijuana program that amended the Compassionate Use Act of 1996 in numerous ways, and failed to send it back for that vote by the people.
5.       Every person in California has the right to obtain and use medical marijuana for any ailment for which marijuana provides relief.  The California Supreme Court in People v. Mower called the rights and powers in the CSU of 1996, guarantees.  We need to guarantee that all people of California are served with medical marijuana.  New freedom is often not popular.
6.       Our initiative law (again unchallenged by the federal government) allows both concentrated and edible marijuana as medicine.  Amendments must be sent back to the people of California.
7.       What about the “free market” that we all profess to believe in?  It is the restrictions that create the black markets.  If a business is not profitable or reliable, won’t it fail?  And to answer the question of sales we did authorize an affordable distribution, meaning money will change hands, and we the people of California control medical marijuana even sales, not the feds.  The spirit and letter of the law is to make medical marijuana available to ALL Californians in need.  Please follow that spirit.
8.       I believe the definition of primary caregiver can be read to include a primary caregiver for safety.  Again safety being an inalienable right of individuals, it is our right to name whatever protection for that safety.
9.       The CA Supreme Court in People v. Mower that medical marijuana must be treated like any other prescription drug.  Any tax on medical marijuana would constitute an amendment to the Compassionate Use Act of 1996 which requires no tax on medical marijuana.
10.   Lastly I heard the City Council say they needed tax money from medical marijuana.  I wonder if they know that the money for California is not in medical marijuana taxes, but in a new resource we get when the plant is legal for us all.  Hemp for paper, fiber, fuel, plastic, food, medicine and recreation.  Our latest book on Amazon is Hemp For Victory:  The Trillion Dollar Crop.  The marijuana prohibition is a smokescreen to prevent the growing of hemp as a resource.
Limiting anything having to do with medical marijuana such as limiting access, or taxing patients, or I.D. cards seems to violate the spirit of the Compassionate Use Act of 1996.  History will note that this act helped end the prohibition of Cannabis/hemp/marijuana.
Richard M. Davis, Curator, USA Hemp Museum         www.hempmuseum.org