Aspirin vs. Marijuana

References: http://www.onmarijuana.com/2007/03/24/marijuana-is-safer-than-aspirin/
and http://www.saferchoice.org/content/view/24/32/
This is a repost with a few edits…
When Bayer introduced aspirin in 1899, cannabis was America’s number one painkiller. Until marijuana prohibition began in 1937, the US Pharmacopoeia listed cannabis as the primary medicine for over 100 diseases. Cannabis was such an effective analgesic that the American Medical Association [...]

Federal judge blasts Putnam treatment facility

http://lohud.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080709/NEWS01/807090370/-1/newsfront
Courtesy:  LoHud.com
By Terence Corcoran
The Journal News • July 9, 2008
A federal judge yesterday blasted representatives of a for-profit mental-health company that treats young adults with psychiatric problems at two Putnam County facilities for lobbying former patients to opt out of a multimillion-dollar class-action lawsuit brought against the company.
U.S. District [...]

West 57th KIDS and Straight Inc., Virgil Miller Newton exposed

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A social network for the astral plane
While Facebook and MySpace are dominating the mass audience social networking space, the niche network–and eventually, I think, networks of niche networks for some great ad targeting–will increase in popularity as people fan out into their respective areas of interest. One such network that caught my attention this morning [...]

Recent Articles:

Women’s shelter reflects on crucial role

Lewis House in Eagan was begun 30 years ago as a disbelief about domestic abuse began to fade.

By PETER COX, Special to the Star Tribune

Last summer, a woman in her 20s asked Mary Ajax, who heads the Lewis House women’s shelter in Eagan, to coffee.

The woman had stayed at the shelter when she was 5, and wanted to tell Ajax about a significant moment.

“She said, ‘I remember being at the kitchen table and being safe, just feeling like we weren’t going to have to run and hide and lock ourselves in the bathroom, because that’s what we’d have to do at home,’” Ajax said. “For the first time in her life, she’d felt safe.”

Such stories have dotted the 30-year life of the shelter for battered women.

In January, the Community Action Council, which runs the Lewis House, celebrated those 30 years of service.

The house opened its doors in 1979 in a refurbished single-family home. It was named after Sen. B. Robert Lewis, who had written bills aimed at preventing domestic violence.

“We quickly outgrew that, and there wasn’t another facility that would work for us in our area,” Ajax said. So they built their own.

In 1985, the council built a new Lewis House.

Ajax had been working with the council since 1975. In her first few years, abuse was viewed as something that needed to be kept secret and behind closed doors. Ajax remembers people being skeptical of the need for her job.

“When I first started out, people looked at me and said, ‘What are you talking about?’” Ajax said. “‘We don’t know anyone in an abusive relationship.’ Therapists would say that; county people would say that.”

The year 1979 was pivotal: Legislators created a law to allow police to arrest domestic assault suspects as they arrest for other crimes; prior to that officers had to witness the abuse. An order-for-protection law was passed. Lewis House opened.

Since those early days, the Lewis House has helped more than 60,000 women and added another location in Hastings. Together, the two houses can shelter more than 40 people at a time.

Lewis House shelters about 500 women a year and serves three times as many through outreach programs, said Doreen L’Allier, director of youth advocacy at the council.

“I meet women who I helped in the Lewis House 16 years ago,” she said. “They want to give back or volunteer. For me, the most fulfilling part is when we are able to welcome these women back.”

For local law enforcement, the shelter is an option the justice system can’t provide.

Said Lakeville Police Chief Tom Vonhof: “It’s an unheralded service that our community has had for so many years. One of those organizations that quietly works in the background, by making things much better for people that are victimized.”

Peter Cox is a St. Paul freelance writer.

Source: http://www.startribune.com/local/south/83738722.html?elr=KArksLckD8EQDUoaEyqyP4O:DW3ckUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aUUJ

Family First: Minister Of Justice Should Demand Kahui Inquest

Family First NZ is calling on the Minister of Justice to demand that the chief coroner ensure that the Kahui inquest happens as soon as possible.

“The twins were murdered in 2006 and we are still waiting on both justice to be delivered and now the inquest to happen,” says Bob McCoskrie, National Director of Family First NZ.

“The police acknowledge that the closing of ranks by the families and the ‘right to silence’ and refusal to be interviewed has stonewalled the investigation. The Kahui family has been referred to as the ‘tight 12′. Yet we now have two victims of child abuse screaming for justice and nobody held to account.”

“This should not be allowed to be swept under the carpet because of administrative delays or the scale of the inquest. NZ’ers want answers to this case – who killed the twins, why did the prosecution fail, and what were the contributing factors to these murders that need to be tackled to avoid similar cases in the future.”

Family First NZ has also been calling for laws surrounding the right to silence for families suspected of child abuse to be dumped.

“The right to silence afforded to family members who may have witnessed child abuse should also be removed,” says Mr McCoskrie.

“The rights of victims to justice and the urgent need for offenders to be held accountable far outweighs the right to silence and other privileges that families may seek to use to mask their guilt or involvement,” says Mr McCoskrie.

Source: http://www.voxy.co.nz/politics/family-first-minister-justice-should-demand-kahui-inquest/5/37556

Berlin archdiocese to set up inquiry into clerical abuse

DEREK SCALLY in Berlin

THE CATHOLIC archdiocese of Berlin is to establish a commission to investigate allegations of clerical child abuse after an “avalanche” of claims from victims in recent days.

A week after abuse allegations surfaced at a Jesuit school in Berlin, the number of former victims to come forward there has passed 40. Meanwhile, abuse cases continue to surface around the country.

“The numbers are growing from day to day – the whole thing is like an avalanche,” said Ursula Raue, a lawyer asked by Berlin’s Canisius College to act as contact person for pupils abused there in the 1970s and 1980s.

A survey of Germany’s 27 dioceses by Der Spiegel magazine revealed that, since 1995, some 97 priests and church officials have faced child abuse allegations, and 30 have been convicted.

German bishops will discuss the rising spectre of clerical abuse at their annual conference at the end of the month.

“It would be unrealistic to assume that after the current revelations that everything has come to the surface,” said Fr Hans Langedörfer, secretary of the German Bishops’ Conference, to Der Spiegel. “But we want full clarity so that we can help. The revelations show the dark face of the church.”

Church lay organisations have criticised the approach of bishops to abuse allegations so far and have called for the appointment of an independent ombudsman.

German lay organisation “We the Church” called for an end to church taboos surrounding sex education to “end the vicious circle of abuse of power and sexualised violence”.

Source: http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/world/2010/0208/1224263954845.html

Amnesty calls for child abuse inquiry

DAN KEENAN

FRINGE MEETING: AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL has called for a judicial inquiry into child abuse in public institutions in Northern Ireland.

Speaking at a packed fringe meeting at the SDLP conference which was attended by victims of abuse, Amnesty’s executive director in Ireland, Colm O’Gorman, said: “Individual cases of child abuse must be investigated and prosecuted through the criminal justice system.

“Inquiries into child abuse in the Republic and Wales have led to significant advances in child protection and children’s rights, and the Scottish government is currently developing plans to address institutional child abuse there.”

He said state authorities in the North have such a responsibility in respect of the child victims of institutional abuse, and Amnesty International was calling for an investigation which is independent, impartial and effective in delivering justice for the victims.

The Assembly has already called for an investigation of child abuse. Campaigners are expected to take their campaign for an inquiry to members of the Stormont Executive.

Source: http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2010/0208/1224263954726.html

The Obama administration’s failure to speak out more boldly against human rights abuses is a poor moral and a political choice.

February 7, 2010 Human Rights, Politics No Comments

The Obama administration’s record on human rights has been a major disappointment.

In part because the Bush administration abused the promotion of democracy and human rights to rationalize its militaristic policies in the Middle East and elsewhere, the Obama administration has at times been reluctant to be a forceful advocate for those struggling against oppression. For example, Obama was cautious in supporting the ongoing freedom struggle in Iran, in part because he believes that more overt advocacy could set back what he sees as the more critical issue of curbing Iran’s nuclear ambitions. He is also aware of how the history of U.S. interventionism in that country, overt threats of “regime change” by the previous administration, and the U.S. invasion of two neighboring countries in the name of promoting democracy could lead to a nationalist reaction to such grandstanding. (Despite this caution, however, the Iranian regime has falsely accused Obama of guiding the massive pro-democracy movement that is challenging the increasingly repressive rule in that country.)

Harder to defend is Obama’s continuation of the Bush administration’s policy of arming and training security forces in Saudi Arabia, Oman, Egypt, Jordan and other dictatorial regimes in the region.

During his highly anticipated address in Cairo last June, Obama failed to praise his autocratic host, Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak. He also invited leading critics of the regime, including secular liberals and moderate Islamists, to witness his speech. On the other hand, he refused to criticize the Mubarak regime, acknowledge its autocratic nature, or address any concern over its thousands of political prisoners — even when pushed to do so in a BBC interview. Indeed, Egyptian grassroots pro-democracy group Kefaya chose to boycott the speech, demanding that Obama show his commitment to democracy in deeds, not just words. Obama’s foreign aid budget includes over $1.5 billion in unconditional aid to the Mubarak dictatorship. And Washington didn’t publicly express concern when Egyptian police attacked American human rights activists attempting to deliver relief supplies to the besieged Gaza Strip last month.

Most of the opposition to Obama’s escalation of the war in Afghanistan has been based on cost and the dubious prospects of victory. But there is concern that the government for which Americans are expected to fight and die is a serious abuser of human rights. Not only did U.S.-backed Hamid Karzai steal the most recent presidential election, but his cabinet includes a number of notorious warlords who have engaged in serious crimes against humanity. Furthermore, U.S.-backed Afghan security forces have engaged in gross and systematic human rights violations, and U.S. bomb and missile attacks killed hundreds of civilians in Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan since Obama assumed office.

Similarly, U.S. forces remain in Iraq, and billions of dollars support the sectarian regime despite ongoing violations of human rights by Baghdad’s rulers. The recent dismissal of charges against U.S. Blackwater mercenaries, who massacred 17 unarmed civilians in Baghdad’s Al-Nusur Square, and the Obama administration’s refusal to extradite them to face justice have also raised concerns regarding the U.S. commitment to basic human rights.

Elsewhere in the Middle East, the Obama administration rejected calls by Amnesty International and other human rights groups to suspend military aid to Israel following its use of U.S. weaponry against civilian targets in last year’s war on the Gaza Strip, which resulted in more than 700 civilian deaths, over 300 of whom were children. Even worse, Obama has pledged to increase military aid over and above the more than $10 billion provided to the Israelis by the Bush administration. The Obama administration called on Israel to freeze expansion of its colonization efforts in the occupied West Bank and threatened to cut planned loan guarantees to the Israeli government if it continues to refuse. But Obama still rejects conditioning direct aid and has similarly refused to call on Israel to withdraw from the its illegal settlements, as required under international humanitarian law and confirmed through a series of UN Security Council resolutions.

When the UN Human Rights Council investigation led by Richard Goldstone documented war crimes by both Hamas and the Israeli government — confirming previous investigations by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and others — the Obama administration rejected the commission’s findings, calling them “deeply flawed.”  Rather than challenge the content of the meticulously documented 575-page report, U.S. officials instead issued strong but vague critiques. U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice was particularly critical of the report’s recommendation that Palestinians and Israelis suspected of war crimes should be tried before the International Criminal Court. “Our view is that we need to be focused on the future,” she argued.

The human rights community was initially pleased when Obama appointed Michael Posner, cofounder and director of Human Rights First, as Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights. However, Posner took the lead in quashing the Goldstone Commission report, insisting it “should not be used as a mechanism to add impediments to getting back to the peace process.” Ironically, just weeks earlier, the Obama administration argued during a UN debate on Darfur that war crimes charges should never be sacrificed for political reasons.

The Obama administration has shown a lack of concern for democracy and human rights outside the Middle East as well. Washington initially raised objections to the coup in Honduras that ousted democratically elected president Manuel Zelaya. But then Obama — in opposition to virtually the entire hemisphere — recognized the November elections that took place under a censured media, widespread political repression, and a boycott by pro-democracy forces. The administration also pledged to continue sending over half a billion dollars of aid annually to the Colombian regime, despite its notoriously poor human rights record. It even signed an agreement that allows U.S. forces to be stationed at seven military bases across that country. Though ostensibly the focus is to curb the drug trade, such aid has also been used in broader counterinsurgency efforts that have serious human rights consequences.

Rejecting calls by liberal Democratic members of Congress, leading human rights groups, Pope Benedict XVI, and most of the international community to participate, the Obama administration decided to boycott the UN Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance in Geneva. And most disturbingly, the Obama administration decided to continue the Bush administration’s policy of remaining one of the few nations in the world to refuse to sign the international treaty banning landmines, completing its review process in secret without allowing for any input from human rights organizations.

Despite all this, there have been some gestures in support of individual human rights activists. For example, in an unprecedented move, the White House hosted the 2009 Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Award, with Obama personally honoring this year’s recipients, Women of Zimbabwe Arise, who have been struggling for human rights under the repressive Mugabe regime. The White House also intervened on behalf of the 2008 winner, Western Saharan nonviolent activist Aminatou Haidar, as she verged on death from a hunger strike following expulsion from her country by Moroccan occupation authorities. The Obama administration has failed, however, to demand that Morocco honor a series of UN Security Council resolutions and a World Court ruling allowing the people of Western Sahara the right of self-determination.

To Obama’s credit, there is now a subtle but important shift in the U.S. government’s discourse on human rights. The Bush administration pushed a rather superficial structuralist view of human rights. It focused, for instance, on elections — which can easily be rigged and manipulated in many cases — in order to change certain governments for purposes of expanding U.S. power and influence. Obama has taken more of an agency view of human rights, emphasizing the rights of free expression, particularly the right of protest, and recognizing that human rights reform can only come from below and not through imposed means.

In the short term, however, Obama’s failure to more boldly address human rights concerns have alienated much of Obama’s progressive base of support. The right wing, meanwhile, disingenuously portrays Obama as retreating from his predecessor’s supposed support for democracy and human rights. Although the Bush administration provided even more assistance to governments engaged in human rights abuses and used pro-democracy rhetoric largely as a ruse for empire, Obama’s lukewarm support for human rights has enabled right-wingers to seize the moral high ground. As a result, the perceived weakness of the Obama administration’s human rights record raises important ethical and political questions.

Source: http://www.ips-dc.org/articles/human_rights_c

Human Rights

Women’s shelter reflects on crucial role

February 7, 2010

Lewis House in Eagan was begun 30 years ago as a disbelief about domestic abuse began to fade.

By PETER COX, Special to the Star Tribune

Last summer, a woman in her 20s asked Mary Ajax, who heads the Lewis House women’s shelter in Eagan, to coffee.
The woman had stayed at the shelter when she was 5, [...]

Family First: Minister Of Justice Should Demand Kahui Inquest

February 7, 2010

Family First NZ is calling on the Minister of Justice to demand that the chief coroner ensure that the Kahui inquest happens as soon as possible.
“The twins were murdered in 2006 and we are still waiting on both justice to be delivered and now the inquest to happen,” says Bob McCoskrie, National Director of Family [...]

Berlin archdiocese to set up inquiry into clerical abuse

February 7, 2010

DEREK SCALLY in Berlin
THE CATHOLIC archdiocese of Berlin is to establish a commission to investigate allegations of clerical child abuse after an “avalanche” of claims from victims in recent days.
A week after abuse allegations surfaced at a Jesuit school in Berlin, the number of former victims to come forward there has passed 40. Meanwhile, abuse [...]

Amnesty calls for child abuse inquiry

February 7, 2010

DAN KEENAN
FRINGE MEETING: AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL has called for a judicial inquiry into child abuse in public institutions in Northern Ireland.
Speaking at a packed fringe meeting at the SDLP conference which was attended by victims of abuse, Amnesty’s executive director in Ireland, Colm O’Gorman, said: “Individual cases of child abuse must be investigated and prosecuted through [...]

The Obama administration’s failure to speak out more boldly against human rights abuses is a poor moral and a political choice.

February 7, 2010

The Obama administration’s record on human rights has been a major disappointment.
In part because the Bush administration abused the promotion of democracy and human rights to rationalize its militaristic policies in the Middle East and elsewhere, the Obama administration has at times been reluctant to be a forceful advocate for those struggling against oppression. [...]

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