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MPP-TV VIDEOS |
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- MPP Says Michigan and Massachusetts Initiatives Signal "Sea Change"
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Michigan voters said yes to medical marijuana by a ratio of nearly 2-1. ... Michigan is the 13th state to allow medical use of marijuana. ... Massachusetts voters on Nov. 4 approved the first statewide measure to decriminalize marijuana ... Rob Kampia, executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project ... said the efforts in Michigan and in Massachusetts demonstrate a "sea change" in public attitudes ... "Last year an American was arrested on marijuana charges once every 36 seconds, which is more arrests for marijuana possession alone than for all violent crimes combined." Kampia said in a press release. "Voters have loudly said, 'Enough!' ... "Marijuana prohibition is about to take its place next to alcohol Prohibition on the ash heap of history." (November 16, 2008)
- Op-Ed Cites Michigan Medical Marijuana Initiative As Example of "Pure Democracy"
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Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, "We pray to be conventional. But the wary Heaven takes care you shall not be, if there is any good in you." Regarding Ballot Question 2 to decriminalize an ounce or less of marijuana, many a politician's prayers to be conventional were answered. Instead of "together we can" or "change you can believe in" ... [too many] politicians in massive unison took a platform of "together you won't" and "more of the same." And then something funny happened. In Berkshire County, Question 2 was overwhelmingly supported. (November 10, 2008)
- MPP Quoted on Wisconsin Considering Medical Marijuana
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People who support using marijuana for medical purposes in Wisconsin hope a Michigan proposition could have a ripple effect in the Badger state. ... Twelve other states and Michigan allow severely ill patients to use marijuana in their treatment. ... "The federal government has been hostile to these laws," said Bruce Mirken, communications director for the Marijuana Policy Project, a Washington, D.C.-based group that lobbied for the Michigan law. "But a quarter of the country now allows it." ... Groups including the Wisconsin Nurses Association and the Wisconsin Public Health Association support the legalization of medical marijuana. (November 8, 2008)
- Hawaii County Makes Marijuana Lowest Law Enforcement Priority
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Voters approved the [Hawaii County] measure [making marijuana the lowest law enforcement priority] 34,957 to 25,464 in Tuesday's election. It was one of several victories for advocates of less punitive marijuana penalties. ... Other cities that have previously passed "lowest priority" initiatives in recent years include Denver, Seattle and Eureka Springs, Ark., as well as the California cities of Santa Barbara, Santa Monica and Oakland. In San Francisco and West Hollywood, similar measures were passed by elected officials. (November 8, 2008)
- MPP Quoted on Absurdity of New Drug Czar Ads
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"Become a Burrito Taster!" screams its latest print ad [from ONDCP], designed to look like an old-school comic book pitch. ... The punchline comes at the bottom: "[T]here aren't many jobs out there for potheads." ... It's all a bit much for the folks at a Marijuana Policy Project ... "We couldn't make this stuff up," said Bruce Mirken, MPP's director of communications. ... On MPP's blog, Mirken continues: "By the way, jobs held by people who’ve acknowledged smoking marijuana include governor of California (Arnold Schwarzenegger), astronomer (Carl Sagan), mayor of New York (Michael Bloomberg), billionaire rock star/songwriter (Paul McCartney), and — well, you get the point." (November 7, 2008)
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MPP tracks marijuana policy in all 50 states and at the federal level.
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MPP in the News
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May 13, 2008 —
MPP's Rob Kampia and Montel Williams discuss marijuana law reform on Fox Business News' "Happy Hour".
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October 6, 2007 —
Medical marijuana patient Clayton Holton asks GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney if he would end federal raids targeting patients in medical marijuana states during a forum in Dover, New Hampshire. Romney refused to answer Holton's question and walked away.
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June 5, 2008 —
MPP's Aaron Houston discusses the financial savings and potential revenue that could be generated by taxation and regulation of marijuana, on FOX Business News channel.
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August 24, 2007 — MPP executive director Rob Kampia appeared on the Austin, Texas, ABC affiliate KVUE to discuss a new law allowing police the option of citing -- rather than arresting -- minor marijuana offenders. Each marijuana arrest costs Texas taxpayers an estimated $2,000 and takes a police officer off the street for four- to-six hours to book that nonviolent offender.
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August 8, 2008 -- MPP's Dan Bernath discusses the portrayal of marijuana users in films and television on CNN Headline News' "Showbiz Tonight."
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April 16, 2008 -- MPP's Neal Levine on CBS affiliate WCCO in Minneapolis, urging Minnesota lawmakers to pass a law protecting qualified medical marijuana patients from arrest.
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Jan. 24, 2008 - Bruce Mirken appears on FOX affiliate KTVU in San Francisco, discussing the California Supreme Court decision giving employers the right to fire legal medical marijuana patients in the state.
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Jan. 27, 2008 - Bruce Mirken appears on KRON in San Francisco, discussing the California Supreme Court decision giving employers the right to fire legal medical marijuana patients in the state.
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March 9, 2007 – MPP's Rob Kampia appears on Fox News Channel's "The Big Story" to discuss dispensing medical marijuana to high schoolers who have doctor's recommendations and parental consent
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July 30, 2007 — MPP's Bruce Mirken discusses the safety and efficacy of medical marijuana on the Comcast Network's "Art Fennell Reports."
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May 4, 2005 — MPP's Rob Kampia speaks in favor of federal legislation to protect medical marijuana patients at a Capitol Hill news conference on Wisconsin's WSAW-TV.
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December 19, 2006 — MPP's Rob Kampia appears on MSNBC to discuss a new study identifying marijuana as the top cash crop in the U.S.
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May 22, 2003 — MPP's Rob Kampia watches as Gov. Robert Ehrlich (seated, center) signs Maryland's new medical marijuana bill into law.
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June 6, 2005 — MPP's Bruce Mirken discusses the Supreme Court medical marijuana decision on San Francisco's KRON-TV.
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May 4, 2005 — Congresswoman Linda Sanchez (D-CA) presents MPP's Public Face of Reform Award to TV host and medical marijuana patient Montel Williams at MPP's 10th anniversary gala in Washington, D.C.
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March 11, 2007 — MPP's Aaron Houston discusses medical marijuana on Fox News Channel's 'Studio B.'
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Oct. 6, 2006 — MPP's Bruce Mirken discusses new research showing marijuana may prevent Alzheimer's disease — and holds up the U.S. government's patent on cannabinoids as nerve-protecting agents — on CNBC. Note the misleading, DEA-supplied "fact" at the bottom of the screen.
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June 6, 2005 — MPP's Rob Kampia discusses the Supreme Court's medical marijuana ruling on MSNBC.
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May 9, 2005 — Comedian Tommy Chong and MPP's Rob Kampia at MPP's 10th Anniversary Gala in Los Angeles.
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Singer/songwriter Ani DiFranco is on MPP's advisory board.
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MPP Executive Director Rob Kampia and award-winning news correspondent John Stossel
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In March 2006, more than 700 MPP supporters attended MPP's party at the Playboy Mansion, raising more than $170,000 for MPP's work to reform marijuana laws. - Pictured: Hugh Hefner after receiving Pioneer Award from MPP's Rob Kampia.
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"Marijuana is beneficial to many patients."
— Dr. Joycelyn Elders, former U.S. Surgeon General
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"It's about personal freedom. We should have the right in this country to do what we want, if we don't hurt anybody. Seventy-two million people in this country have smoked pot. Eighteen to 20 million in the last year. These people should not be treated as criminals." — Woody Harrelson
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"[A] marijuana grower can land in prison for life without parole while a murderer might be in for eight years. No rational person can defend this; it is a Dostoevskian nightmare and it exists only because politicians fled in the face of danger." — Garrison Keillor, radio personality
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Montel Williams called for passage for New York's medical marijuana bill at an MPP-organized press conference in Albany in May 2004 (pictured here with New York health officials and legislators).
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Nobel Laureate Milton Friedman -- shown here with MPP's Rob Kampia --
was a lifetime member of MPP and a staunch advocate of marijuana
policy reform.
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"I am absolutely in support of legalizing marijuana. It doesn't make any sense to me to keep it illegal when there is little argument that alcohol and tobacco are clearly far more deadly." — Margaret Cho
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"There's been medical marijuana ever since there's been medicine. Nobody gets hurt, so why not? People still smoke marijuana, and they still go to work." — Gary Coleman
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