Kiwivoice - Have your say today - Political discussion nz, Political Forum nz, Blog, Cultural discussion nz, Business nz, Sports nz, New Zealand, NZ Forums
 Forum Home        Member List    Calendar    Who's On   
Welcome Guest ( Login | Register )
      


««12

MarijuanaExpand / Collapse
Author
Message
Posted 1/11/2010 9:51:59 p.m.


Guru Member

Guru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru Member

Group: Foundation Member
Last Login: 10/07/2011 4:40:44 p.m.
Posts: 125, Visits: 168
Isn't the mayor allegedly a pothead?

BoB

Post #2391
Posted 3/11/2010 9:15:46 p.m.


Guru Member

Guru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru Member

Group: Foundation Member
Last Login: 2/08/2011 8:23:58 a.m.
Posts: 97, Visits: 126
Once tobacco has been outlawed dope will never be.

1

Post #2393
Posted 4/11/2010 10:47:33 a.m.


Guru Member

Guru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru Member

Group: Forum Members
Last Login: 8/02/2012 3:57:03 p.m.
Posts: 272, Visits: 596
Inver's government department's are certainly locked into some timezone compared to most cities'...

Tim Shadbolt has a CV history that validate's my above comment...

Which make's me wonder why the rest of the country are held accountable on every PC point of policy&philosphy yet Inver's Governtment Depts can do what ever they want and have absolute know accountability...

Look if you want change for your community down their then you have to spark up the community spirit to be pro active it take's written complaints sent to the Government Service Provider's  example Police complaints office....

You may think that it's a waste of time however they work on quoter's and every written complaint is documentented as a number so the issue may not of given you the appropriate outcome but the 1 complaint means far more because after the department hits double figure's you can be sure National Government Bodies go on red alert hehehe....It's true AH

Policy Change's start happening and accountability is issued on the weakest link to the actual State Providers...

Post #2394
Posted 16/01/2011 8:38:05 p.m.


Guru Member

Guru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru Member

Group: Foundation Member
Last Login: 2/08/2011 8:23:58 a.m.
Posts: 97, Visits: 126
I see there is a lobby group behind removing things like pipes and other drug related utensiles from the market. Bloody crazy, as if thats going to stop people. Just more rules on the masses while the 'few' stand on their soap boxes. What a bunch of wankers.

1

Post #2445
Posted 5/07/2011 10:17:48 p.m.


Guru Member

Guru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru Member

Group: Foundation Member
Last Login: 2/08/2011 8:23:58 a.m.
Posts: 97, Visits: 126
These legal highs are a big double standard. Sounds like they are worse than the real thing to you. What's that about?

1

Post #2665
Posted 14/07/2011 2:12:11 p.m.


Guru Member

Guru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru MemberGuru Member

Group: Foundation Member
Last Login: 2/08/2011 8:23:58 a.m.
Posts: 97, Visits: 126
See the show last night on TV re the debate/ information around the world and NZ re this subject. It's bullshit this subject is not even debated in this country. Lets just all get pissed ...thats legal.

1

Post #2704
Posted 11/10/2011 9:57:12 p.m.
Active Member

Active MemberActive MemberActive MemberActive MemberActive MemberActive MemberActive MemberActive Member

Group: Forum Members
Last Login: 10/03/2012 8:42:25 p.m.
Posts: 12, Visits: 16
The global war on drugs has failed - NZ losing millions in drug revenues.
 

This is the executive summary of the UN Global Commission on Drug Policy released in June 2011.

"The global war on drugs has failed, with devastating consequences for individuals and societies around the world. Fifty years after the initiation of the UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, and 40 years after President Nixon launched the US government’s war on drugs, fundamental reforms in national and global drug control policies are urgently needed.

Vast expenditures on criminalization and repressive measures directed at producers, traffickers and consumers of illegal drugs have clearly failed to effectively curtail supply or consumption. Apparent victories in eliminating one source or trafficking organization are negated almost instantly by the emergence of other sources and traffickers.

Repressive efforts directed at consumers impede public health measures to reduce HIV/AIDS, overdose fatalities and other harmful consequences of drug use. Government expenditures on futile supply reduction strategies and incarceration displace more cost-effective and evidence-based investments in demand and harm reduction.

Urgent action required

Begin the transformation of the global drug prohibition regime. Replace drug policies and strategies driven by ideology and political convenience with fiscally responsible policies and strategies grounded in science, health, security and human rights – and adopt appropriate criteria for their evaluation."

New Zealand's missing out

In New Zealand, all psychoactive drugs except alcohol are prohibited, and users are prosecuted. And yet over 700,000 Kiwis smoke cannabis every year, 100,000 nearly every day. The number of prosecutions for cannabis offences is rising and in 2008, there were 9,500 convictions. Enforcement and social costs have gone up accordingly. In 2001, the black market for cannabis in New Zealand was estimated at $190 million; in 2006 the social costs, which includes the cost of police, the courts and Corrections to enforce cannabis laws, were estimated at $430 million.

This approach is part of the failed strategy of prohibition condemned by the UN and is a huge waste of money and resources. Police time could be better spent investigation more serious crimes - ones with victims.

If cannabis was deregulated and taxed (like alcohol and cigarettes), and police no longer had to enforce prohitibition laws against cannabis users, the net benefit to society is estimated to be between $400 and $860 million.

That revenue could be put to much better use than making criminals out of the 700,000 New Zealanders who like to smoke it every year. It could even be put into improving alcohol and drug treatment services which are woefully underfunded.

Flying Blind - How the justice system perpetuates crime and the Corrections department fails to correct


Roger Brooking: Author of Flying Blind - How the justice system perpetuates crime and the Corrections Department fails to correct

Post #2744
Posted 12/10/2011 6:21:33 a.m.
Active Member

Active MemberActive MemberActive MemberActive MemberActive MemberActive MemberActive MemberActive Member

Group: Forum Members
Last Login: 10/03/2012 8:42:25 p.m.
Posts: 12, Visits: 16
Addiction expert supports call to decriminalise cannabis


Prof Doug Sellman, Director of the National Addiction Centre at the University of Otago, has welcomed Don Brash’s call for a change in our cannabis laws. Dr Brash suggested that cannabis should be decriminalised after the UN Commission on Drug Policy said the worldwide war on drugs had failed. ProfSellman responded to Dr Brash’s comments saying:

“Compared with alcohol, which has been demonstrated to be a Class B equivalent drug with a high risk to public health, cannabis is estimated to be of low/moderate risk to public health”.

He says there are four main risks associated with frequent heavy cannabis use:

1) Chronic respiratory illness, including lung cancer associated with smoking the drug;
2) Injury and death from driving under the influence of cannabis, but less than with alcohol intoxication;
3) Increased psychotic symptoms, which is clinically relevant in less than 1% of the population; and
4) Negative impact on learning which is particularly relevant for adolescents.


Illegal drugfound in wine

Adding to the risk posed by alcohol, recentresearch in Britain has found that wine actually contains GBL which in New Zealand is classified as a Class B drug. This means that wine drinkers are now getting two Class B drugsfor the price of one-one of themlegal -but the other one not.

Dr Sellman said that New Zealand wines should be tested for the presence of theseillegal drugs.He noted that:

The recent Law Commission Review of the Misuse of Drugs Act has encouraged public discussion about drugs from a health perspective rather than just as a criminal justice issue, and to use scientific evidence to guide policy making rather than perpetuating drug use as a moral issue”.

The 700,000 cannabis smokers in New Zealand would probably agree.ButMr Brash was roundly criticized by politicians and pundits alikefor raising the subject without consulting his ACT colleague, John Banks. Unfortuntely, there was almost no discussion in the mainstream media about whether cannabis should actuallybe decriminalised.

www.flyingblind.co.nz

Roger Brooking: Author of Flying Blind - How the justice system perpetuates crime and the Corrections Department fails to correct
Post #2748
« Prev Topic | Next Topic »

««12

Reading This TopicExpand / Collapse
Active Users: 0 (0 guests, 0 members, 0 anonymous members)
No members currently viewing this topic.
Forum Moderators: Admin, kiwivoice management

PermissionsExpand / Collapse

All times are GMT +12:00, Time now is 4:56a.m.