| For those who
came in late...
"In March 1993, after a decade of raids
and arrests, and a particularly intensive recent period of random
street searches, arrests and rough treatment, a spontaneous demonstration
erupted, and marched to the police station, pelting it with eggs
and toilet paper. Negative newspaper reports followed. Nimbin
Hemp Embassy (formerly "Nimbin Hemp") members decided
to hold a peaceful protest in a non-confrontational
atmosphere, that ordinary people could comfortably attend,
on May 1, 1993. That was the first MardiGrass. (The spelling is
that officially used by the MardiGrass Organising Body) The MardiGrass
Organising Body (MOB) was formed to manage the event and consists
entirely of volunteers. The intention is to hold a MardiGrass
every year until prohibition ends."
That's what Wikipedia
says and we couldn't have summed it up better ourselves.
What YOU
can do
to end drug prohibition
In order to end drug prohibition four things need to occur:
• Reformers need to organize.
• Information about the failures of the current system and
potential benefits (and challenges) of a new approach needs to
be shared widely.
• Discussions need to happen.
• Politicians and other leaders need to be persuaded that
it is in their best interest to talk about ending prohibition.
The battleground for change will be in the media. Journalists
and reporters need to be engaged in the process where ever possible.
Get organized
• Join existing drug policy reform groups and / or start
new a new group, meet regularly, plan and implement strategies.
• Contribute money, resources and time to existing groups!!!!
• Go to drug policy reform conferences to share ideas and
meet people.
• Organize fund raising events.
Share Information
• Educate yourself. Explore the internet, read books, find
and understand the research (www.whyprohibtion.ca, www.drugwarfacts.org,
www.tdpf.org.uk, www.drugpolicy.org, etc)
• Share the best of the above with family, friends and community.
• Learn the language of change. Talk about the need to regulate
and control all currently illegal drugs based on human rights
and public health principles – not “drug legalization”
and the need to “protect our children – end prohibition
now”. See the document “questions, answers and soundbytes
at www.markhaden.com)
• Find good books and recommend them to your local library.
• Give research information on the failures of drug prohibition
to students and encourage them to write papers on this topic.
• Join email list-serves where you get regular information
about what is happening.
• Make distribution lists and then tweet, facebook, email
and spam others with the information.
• Start a web site where you share information.
• Develop an information brochure and hand this out widely.
• Come out of the closet – take about your own experiences.
Promoting Discussion
• Hold events which support open public discussions –
invite speakers to share their ideas. Invite the media to attend
and participate where possible. Be prepared for lots of tears
when people speak as prohibition is the source of a lot of pain
and suffering in many people’s lives.
• Show up to existing drug policy reform events, offer your
support and speak your truth.
• Ask health officials / managers why they are not speaking
out about the need to promote of a health perspective to drugs
and challenge the criminalization of drugs. Show them that the
research shows that criminalization of drugs increases both health
and social problems and remind them that they say that their approach
is “evidence based”.
• Ask the police what evidence they have for supporting
drug prohibition and ask them why they are not encouraging alternative
approaches to reducing drug use and associated harms, as the research
shows that criminalization of drug users encourages crime.
• Be honest with your children. Teach them about both the
harms from drugs and the harms from drug prohibition.
• Buy or make bumper stickers, T shirts, mugs, stickers
with catchy slogans and use them everywhere.
• Stage visually dramatic events, take lots of pictures,
send to the media and post on the web. Examples: Put up crosses
in a park with the names of all the people who have died from
illegal drugs, carry a coffin into city hall, hang a drug war
dummy, have groups with logo T shirts in interesting locations.
• Call in to radio talk shows after memorizing the soundbytes
of change.
Influencing politicians and leaders
• Talk to the leaders. Find people who play a leadership
role in a variety of communities (e.g. faith communities, civil
rights groups, health groups, citizen action groups, union leaders,
aboriginal groups, etc) and share the research with them and ask
them to help.
• Write a letter to a politician - “yes” this
makes a difference.
• Set up a table in a public place where you have a variety
of text / sentences / Q&A’s on small sheets of paper
exploring a range of reasons to end drug prohibition. Ask people
who walk by to write a letter, either in their own words or using
the supplied text supporting the cause. Keep and copy the letters
and meet with politicians and the media and give them the letters.
Save the copies and repeat.
• Write letters to the media.
• Participate in online polls and sign online letters and
declarations and share the links to these widely (e.g. Vienna
Declaration)
• When you see an article in the news about drugs, prohibition
or HIV, etc find the article online and contribute a thoughtful,
compassionate response in the comments section. Assume politicians
are reading what you say and present yourself as a concerned member
of mainstream society who wants to reduce the damage done to our
children by drug prohibition.
• Organize peaceful public demonstrations or go to existing
protests. Take professional looking banners, signs to be waved,
brochures and bullhorn (with new batteries). Memorize catchy chants.
• Vote for politicians who support freedom / liberty and
against politicians who promote fear of others.
Be prepared to be persistent as lots of polite repetition is
required.
This document is available at www.markhaden.com
2011

2011 HEMP Olympix Results:
Growers Iron Man:
1st - Luca (Italy) - 31
seconds
2nd - Clemont (France) - 33 seconds
3rd - Ollie (France) - 37 seconds
Growers Iron Woman:
1st - Karen (Sunshine Coast)
- 51.06 seconds
2nd - Hannah (Sunshine Coast) - 51.45 seconds,
3rd - Sarah (Aratula) - 55.23 seconds
Mens Bongthrow:
1st - Hayden (Bongchucka
Heads)
2nd - Garry ( Nimbin)
3rd - Luke (Caboolture)
Womens Bongthrow:
1st - Rachael (Ipswich)
2nd - Sallie (Nimbin)
3rd - Lisa (Dublin)
Joint Rolling:
Speed Roll:
1st - David (France) - 24
seconds
2nd - Bob the Joint Builder
3rd - Sally (Nimbin)
Blindfold:
1st - Bob the Joint Builder
- 53 seconds
2nd - David (France)
3rd - Sarah (Aratula)
Adverse Conditions:
1st - Raphael (France) -
36 seconds
2nd - Bob the Joint Builder
3rd - Selina (Brisbane)
Artistic Roll:
1st - Tobias (Germany) -
"Orchestral Triangle with Striker"
2nd - Sarah (Aratula) - "Tulip"
3rd - Bob the Builer - "Prince William" & Sally
(Nimbin) - "Kate Middleton" - a Joint Effort.


A New Perspective for people opposed
to ending Prohibition. By WGH.
Imagine if you will, that you are eating a nice meal and drinking
the best red wine in your collection, or maybe just an medium
priced bottle of good Aussie wine. In front of you is the newspaper
you picked up on the way home and suddenly with disbelief you
read the headline on the front page, “Alcohol Prohibition
Now a Certainty, New Laws Passed!”
You read it again and look at the wine bottle on the table. This
is the first you have heard, but for weeks now, the new government
has talked constantly about the need to tackle the huge social
cost of this legal nightmare drug, alcohol. Violent crime in the
city is up nearly three hundred percent, alcohol related health
costs are soaring as the population ages, and the number of chronic
alcoholics has reached epidemic proportions.
“We had to do something drastic” claims the minister
of health, a newly elected Christian anti drug campaigner and
active member of the Drug Free Australia organization.
You read on, “During a tumultuous parliamentary session
lasting all night, the bill to add alcohol to the list of already
illegal drugs, such as cannabis and heroin, has passed with a
very narrow majority through both houses of parliament”.
“Production and consumption of alcohol will now be a criminal
offense with possession of up to a litre (in any form) punishable
by a maximum of a two thousand dollar fine, or two years in prison”.
After your disbelief settles, you get angry, “How dare
they do this!” you think and “screw them, I will make
my own wine and beer and they can go to hell!”. You are
not alone, Many, otherwise law abiding citizens, make the same
decision to use the drug of their choice. After all, what right
has the government to tell us what we can and can't put in our
own bodies? Lots of legal rights, as it turns out. You feel it
is a little like the censorship of your thoughts, and you would
be right. It turns out there are millions of fellow Australians
who are willing to break this ridiculous law in the privacy of
their own homes. Most think, “they can't lock us all up”.
What you soon realize though, is that the law enforcers, at the
behest of the government, are prepared to violently invade your
home and your basic civil liberties, to search for this newly
added contraband.
One year into total prohibition and now the zealots have added
tobacco to the list of prohibited products. Taxes have risen markedly
to cover the black hole created by the loss of tax revenue. There
has been a huge increase in spending on law enforcement and the
prison budget has blown out by billions, with fifteen new private
prisons planed to house the nearly four million expected inmates.
There are now thousands of people, who the previously legal industry
employed, out of work. Some get new jobs, others have joined the
ever growing black market entrepreneurs, to supply a huge number
of illegal drinkers.
This large black market industry of very unsavory types controls
every aspect of the supply of alcohol and other drugs, except
that is, the safety of it's users. They don't ask our kids for
ID, they don't care as long as they have the money for the product.
Prohibition supporters are now claiming a link between alcohol
and harder drugs such as heroin. The so called “gateway
drug” status is now associated with alcohol. Over seventy
percent of all prisoners, are now inside for a drug, alcohol,
or tobacco related crime, at a cost of $65,000 per prisoner, per
year. Some members of the public are pushing to have the law changed,
but powerful vested interests, are now lobbying the government
to retain the status quo.
Police remain stretched to the limit. Rapes, murders and burglaries
go unsolved as priority is given to “drug crimes”
because the tables laden with cash and contraband look so much
more glamorous in the media. The drug lords of the black market
now just sit back and watch the “tax free” dollars
flow in like a river in full flood. They now have no other means
of settling disputes over territory so violent turf wars are a
regular occurrence in the streets.
You have also decided not to deal with street dealers. You are
prepared to take a greater legal risk to do so by using your shed
to produce beer or grow tobacco for your own use. You also install
a carbon exhaust filter system to clean the smell from the air,
to reduce the risk of your neigbours reporting you to the police.
You still buy illegally distilled spirits from street dealers,
risking possible blindness from high levels of wood alcohol. You
feel a little paranoid whilst watching news reports each night
showing raids by heavily armed SWAT teams on suburban homes suspected
of producing alcohol or growing tobacco illegally. You think “I
could be next”.
Each day, normal people from all walks of life - teachers, police,
lawyers and doctors, are arrested. In many cases they become unemployed
because the criminal record for “drug production”
never really goes away - it is a actually a life sentence. These
newly created criminals also find out when they go to travel that
many countries refuse them a visa based on their criminal record.
Those who can't find work further burden tax payers through welfare
payments.
As the penalties increase over the next twenty years, due to
lack of impact, or any real reduction in “alcohol crime”,
drinkers and smokers become more and more cautious and scared
to speak out.Politicians are now afraid to suggest bringing an
end to prohibition for fear of being labeled “soft on alcohol”.
Action groups are forming all over the Internet, claiming this
law has to change and the issue treated as a health problem -
not a criminal one, but this cry falls on deaf ears.
There is a major annual festival in the former wine growing district
of the Hunter Valley to draw attention to the heavy handed approach
by the Police and lack of evidence behind this failed and costly
policy. Helicopters circle the area for months each year, searching
for clandestine grape crops hidden in state forests, or grown
hydroponically under lights in many suburban homes.
The recently elected Prime minister admits to “having a
few drinks” at university and no one bats an eye, I mean,
who cares, everybody does it, don't they? Just don't get caught.
ooOoo
Entirely fictitious, the above scenario sounds quite ridiculous
and far fetched by today's standards. It is however, the very
real and unjust situation many of the world's millions of cannabis
users live with every day of their lives, and have done for the
past forty or fifty years, simply for choosing to use a drug now
well known to be much safer than alcohol or tobacco, but unfortunately
illegal and considered a serious criminal offense. In
the USA today, a cannabis user is arrested every thirty seven
seconds, think about that for a minute.
The penalties cannabis users and small time growers face do far
more harm than the drug itself. Self righteous anti drug campaigners
would rather see thousands of people's lives and families destroyed
by overly draconian penalties maintaining a failed and costly
policy, for doing nothing more than getting a little high in the
privacy of their own homes.
Welcome to the evils and the nightmare that is cannabis
prohibition.

2010

2010 HEMP Olympix Winners
Women's BongThrow:
1. Rachael - Ipswich - 43.8 metres
2. Liddie - Bong Chucker Heads - 37.6 metres
3. Emma - Bong Chucker Heads - 35.1 metres
Men's Bong Throw:
1. Brendan - Bong Chucker Heads - 51.5 metres
2. Zac - Newcastle - 51.3 metres
3. Voss - Sydney - 46.6
Men's Iron Grower/Person:
1. Scott - Sydney - 1minute 14 seconds
2. Ghost - Coast - 1 minute 17 seconds
3. Mark - Tasmania - 1 minute 19 seconds
Women's Iron Grower/Person:
1. Andrea - Victoria - 1 minute 31 seconds
2. Jakira - Nimbin - 1 minute 35 seconds
3. Rachael - Ipswich - 1 minute 44 seconds
Joint Roll - Speed:
1. Bob the Builder - Australia - 25 seconds
2. Sally - Nimbin
3. Matt - France
Joint Roll - Blind:
1. Bob the Builder - Australia - 44 seconds
2. Matt - France - 1 minute 14 seconds
3. Sally - Nimbin - 1 minute 15 seconds
Joint Roll - Adverse Conditions:
1. Bob the Builder - Australia - 31 seconds
2. Sally - Nimbin
3. Ash - Sunshine Coast
Joint Roll - Artistic:
1. Matt - France
2. Bob the Joint Builder
3. Groover - Sydney

Saturday, 4:20, Million Man Marihuana March.
2010 Mardigrass Photos
In the Adobe photo galleries below, clicking on an image
makes it BIG, ok?
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Gallery LR 1
Jann
Subiaco Photo Gallery Adobe
Jann
Subiaco Photo Gallery Picassa
Kathwa's
Photos Flickr
Gallery
by Byron Bay Photographer Tao Jones Porta

Dr Bob Melamede and Mark "Moose" Heinrich at
MardiGrass.
The winds of change blowing on cannabis law reform
Global cannabis prohibition dates from a League of Nations meeting
in Geneva
in 1924. The arguments put up at that meeting made no scientific
sense but
were accepted by the delegates. Australia was represented at the
meeting so
the Commonwealth then wrote to the states advising that cannabis
should be
prohibited. NSW wrote back saying that the drug was not known
in this state
but if the Commonwealth wanted NSW to prohibit the drug, then
NSW would
comply. More than three score and ten years later we still prohibit
cannabis. But an edifice built on sand is slowly getting unstable.
It is hard to keep the same attitudes to cannabis prohibition
when Obama and
the two previous US Presidents are known to have smoked cannabis.
Perhaps
cannabis is a gateway drug after all * the drug that young Americans
have to
try if they want to become President of the USA.
Public opinion on cannabis prohibition is changing rapidly in
the USA. In
1969, the national Gallup poll recorded 84% opposition and 12%
support for
the question ‘do you support the legalization of marihuana?’
But in 2009,
opposition had dropped to 54% while support had increased to 44%.
At this
rate of change, supporters will outnumber opponents within a few
years. In
several other national US public opinion polls, supporters already
outnumber
opponents. Medical marihuana is already legal in 14 states of
the USA
(representing a sizeable proportion of the population of the country).
The
number of states starting to allow medical marihuana is steadily
increasing.
The Obama Administration is allowing state law to prevail ov er
federal law
on the question of medical marihuana. In November, the citizens
of
California (and possibly some other states) will vote to decide
whether or
not cannabis can be taxed and regulated. The global financial
crisis has
bankrupted several states (including California). Taxing cannabis
provides a
new revenue stream while abandoning prohibition promises to cut
law
enforcement costs. The need to increase government revenue while
cutting
expenditure is likely to grow in other countries, including Australia.
In Europe, several countries have either directed police to not
enforce laws
against personal possession of drugs including cannabis (the Netherlands,
Germany) or removed legal sanctions against personal possession
(Portugal,
Spain, Italy and the Czech Republic). Similar developments have
occurred in
half a dozen South American countries.
Attitudes to medicinal cannabis are also starting to more closely
reflect
the scientific evidence in a growing number of countries. The
evidence for
benefit keeps growing. It is scandalous that Australian men and
women in
2010 continue to suffer from symptoms that could be made less
unpleasant
with cannabis.
The proportion of Australians consuming cannabis is among the
highest in the
world. But in Australia the health damage from tobacco is 40 times
greater
than cannabis, alcohol is eleven times greater than cannabis and
all illicit
drugs is ten times greater than cannabis. Concerns about possible
mental
health problems in people smoking cannabis are discussed a great
deal in
Australia and the UK. There is still no evidence (or even arguments)
to
suggest that these possible health complications are decreased
while demand
is largely supplied by criminals and corrupt police.
The debate on cannabis law reform in Australia is now way behind
the debate
occurring in other developed countries. It’s high time (no
pun intended) we
started asking whether prosecuting minor cannabis offences is
an appropriate
use of scare law enforcement resources in 2010, or whether we
would be
better off treating cannabis more like alcohol and tobacco * and
therefore
taxing and regulating it. many senior police now favour a more
rational
response to cannabis.
The safest way to use cannabis is not to use it at all. But if
you are going
to use it, please follow the Nimbin Health and Medical Research
Council
(NHMRC) guidelines on safer use.
Let’s work together to achieve the taxation and regulation
of cannabis and
its medicinal use to ease suffering.
Dr Alex Wodak,
President,
Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation

Ganja faeries have started meeting each
Tuesday at 5.30pm at the market stage. All welcome
"Drug
Lords" vs "Drug Czars": Cut the ground out from
under both of them!
Prohibition is a sickening horror and the ocean
of incompetence, corruption and human wreckage it has left in
its wake is almost endless.
Prohibition has decimated generations and criminalized millions
for a behavior which is entwined in human existence.
Based on the unalterable proviso that drug use is essentially
an unstoppable and ongoing human behavior which has been with
us since the dawn of time, any serious reading on the subject
of past attempts at any form of drug prohibition would point most
sensible people in the direction of sensible regulation.
By its very nature prohibition cannot fail but create a vast increase
in criminal activity, and rather than preventing society from
descending into anarchy, it actually fosters an anarchic business
model - the international Drug Trade. Any decisions concerning
quality, quantity, distribution and availability are then left
in the hands of unregulated, anonymous, possibly ruthless drug
dealers, who are interested only in the profits involved.
Many of us have now finally wised up to the fact that the best
avenue towards realistically dealing with drug use and addiction
is through proper regulation, which is what we already do with
alcohol & tobacco --two of our most dangerous mood altering
substances, the two with the most deaths caused. But unfortunately
policy is dominated by those who will no doubt remain sorely upset
with any type of solution that does not seem to lead to the absurd
and unattainable utopia of a drug free society.
There is an irrefutable connection between drug prohibition and
the crime, corruption, disease and deaths caused. If you are not
capable of understanding this connection, then maybe you're using
something far stronger than the rest of us. Anybody 'halfway bright'
and who's not psychologically challenged, should be capable of
understanding, that it is not simply the demand for drugs that
creates the mayhem; it is our refusal to allow legal businesses
to meet that demand.
No amount of money, police powers, weaponry, diminution of rights
and liberties, wishful thinking or pseudo-science will make our
streets safer; only an end to prohibition can do that. How much
longer are you willing to foolishly risk your own survival by
continuing to ignore the obvious, historically confirmed solution?
If you still support the kool aid mass suicide cult of prohibition,
and erroneously believe that you can win a war without logic and
practical solutions, then prepare yourself for even more death,
corruption, terrorism, sickness, imprisonment, unemployment, foreclosed
homes, and the complete loss of the rule of law and human rights.
"A prohibition law strikes a blow at the very principles
upon which our government was founded." (Abraham Lincoln)
The only thing prohibition successfully does is prohibit regulation
and taxation while turning even our schools and prisons into black
markets for drugs. Regulation would mean the opposite!
From: Malcolm Kyle
Hello Australia and the
fine folks at Nimbin Hemp Embassy
Greetings from Canada’s
2nd Annual Treating Yourself Expo!
Treating Yourself magazine is excited to host the upcoming 2nd
annual Treating Yourself Expo in June of 2011 at the Metro Toronto
Convention Centre. We want you to be a part of it. Mark June 3rd
- 5th, 2011 on your calendar and join patients, their friends
and loved ones, professionals, distributors, manufacturers from
the Alternative Medicine , Hemp , and the Medical Cannabis industries
from across North America, Europe and other parts of the World.
Showcase, demonstrate, educate you about their products.
Counting patients, vendors, medical and professionals from the
alternative medicine and hemp industries among it’s expected
attendance of 20,000+. Treating Yourself Magazine’s 2nd
annual Expo promises to be a world stage like no other seen before
in Canada, offering three days of networking, learning, advertising,
and vending in an interactive, inclusive environment.
Don’t miss your chance to be a part of this extraordinary
event!
Treating Yourself .Com was founded in May 2002 by Marco Renda.
In 2005 we started our publication and is now distributed in countries
world-wide, Treating Yourself is a journal written for patients,
by patients. Our mission is to build awareness, generate interest,
educate and provide our readers (which include medical cannabis,
alternative medicine users, members of the hemp community, their
caregivers, professionals in this and related industries) with
conscientious, ethical, and reliable information to assist them
with the management of their wide and varied health needs and
provide them with access to safe and reliable products.
To help us achieve this goal, the 2011 Expo will be hosting a
series of workshops, seminars, documentaries and short films on
subjects like alternative medicine , medical cannabis, activism,
security and safety, nutrition, hemp, cooking, and more.
This one-of-a-kind event will also have a government-approved
4000 square foot vapor lounge to accommodate medical cannabis
patients who can feel comfortable and relaxed medicating. While
there is absolutely no selling or distributing of cannabis permitted
at the Expo, we encourage patients to bring their own medicine
along with them, as vaporizers of all makes and models will be
available for use. These include, but are not limited to the HerbalAire,
and the De-Verdamper. Our hope is to give patients an opportunity
to determine which type is most suitable for their individual
needs.
Go to our event website for more information or to purchase tickets.
http://www.treatingyourselfexpo.com/
Take Care and Peace
Marco Renda
Federal Exemptee
Publisher
Treating Yourself
The Alternative Medicine Journal
This webpage prior to MardiGrass 2010
This webpage prior to 27th January
2008
This webpage prior to MardiGrass
2007 |