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Essay on drug reform |
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This is the first 1,000 characters of 2850 words (11.4 pages) in the essay titled drug reform
Activists hope ballot questions signal support for marijuana bills
By Steve Leblanc, Associated Press, 12/5/2000 17:05
BOSTON (AP) When researchers launched the nation s most ambitious heart study 50 years ago, they chose Framingham, a middle-class town west of Boston and cross-section of America.
Now supporters of liberalized marijuana laws are hoping voters in this Massachusetts heartland are signaling a fundamental shift in public attitudes about the state s war on drugs.
On Election Day, Framingham voters overwhelmingly approved a nonbinding question calling for a law that would make possession of less than one ounce of marijuana a civil violation with a fine of no more than $100.
Voters in Ipswich, Winchester and Harwich also backed nonbinding questions calling for easing of marijuana laws. In March, Amherst voters called for the repeal of laws prohibiting the possession and use of marijuana.
Approval of the measures comes as the U.S. Supreme Court indicated it will hear the federal government s efforts to block state laws allowing ill patients to use marijuana for pain relief.
Sponsors of the questions say they prove support for weakening of marijuana laws extends beyond traditional liberal enclaves like Cambridge and Amherst.
There is a terrific, discernible disconnect between the public and our elected officials on the issue of the war on drugs, said Allen St. Pierre of the National Organization for the Repeal of Marijuana Laws.
Armed with those ...
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Keywords: marijuana laws, ounce of marijuana, marijuana activists, medical marijuana law, associated press, war on drugs, reform activists, possession, discernible, framingham, amherst, boston, civil infraction, traditional liberal, fundamental shift, ballot questions, steve leblanc, heart study, civil violation, signal support
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