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OFFICIAL N O R M L National Organization For The Reform Of Marijuana Laws POLICY DISCRIMINALIZATION NORML supports the removal of all criminal and civil penalties for the private possession of marijuana for personal use. The right of possession should include other acts incidental to such possession, including cultivating and transportation for personal use, and the casual, non-profit transfers of small amounts of marijuana. REGULATION NORML advocates a system of marijuana regulation which would include age restrictions, public health and agricultural controls, and a taxation of marijuana sold for profit. A well-planned system of marijuana regulation would discourage abuse, protect public health and safety, reduce crime associated with marijuana's illicit distribution and raise large amounts of new tax revenues. Regulation is the inevitable replacement of prohibition. PERSONAL USE AND POSSESSION Removal of criminal penalties for the individual who uses marijuana in private is consistent with traditional American values of personal choice, individual freedom and the right to privacy. Marijuana reform is not based on the premise that marijuana use is harmless or that it should be encouraged, but rather that such use should ambit of individual choice permitted in a free society. It is a social policy aimed at reducing the harm caused by defining marijuana users as criminals. Marijuana reform reduces the immense human, financial, and social costs of marijuana prohibition by allowing law enforcement efforts to be concentrated on serious crimes. NORML is opposed to arbitrary quantity limitations as the standard for defining what constitutes possession for personal use. Marijuana smokers like wine drinkers and tobacco smokers, often have more marijuana in their possession than can be immediately consumed. Similarly, individual usage and consumption patterns vary greatly. While quantity limitations appear to be a necessary interim statutory approach to marijuana reform, this law should reflect the reality of differences in usage patterns and behavior and should recognize the inherent shortcomings of arbitrary ounce limitations. The right to possess marijuana for personal use includes the right to grow small amounts for personal consumption. Removal of criminal penalties for the private cultivation of marijuana for personal use provides a legal source of supply for marijuana without the establishment of a legal distribution system. NON-PROFIT TRANSFERS The right to possess marijuana should include the right to transfer small amounts of marijuana between adults for insignificant consideration. Most smokers share their marijuana with friends, and often the courtesy is returned. Thus they may purchase more marijuana then they may personally consume, selling some to friends at cost. Such transfers, involving little or no profit, should be treated as incidental to personal use, rather than commercial sale. DISCOURAGING ABUSE NORML fully supports a discouragement policy towards the abuse of all drugs, including alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana. NORML particularly discourages the recreational use of all drugs by children. This policy should be implemented by a public education campaign aimed at warning users and potential users of the risks involved with the use of all drugs. Such warnings should reflect an honest scientific and medical concern. Most importantly, criminal penalties should not apply to those who use such drugs, despite warnings to the contrary. The limits of the criminal sanction must be recognized and not diluted through application to private social conduct which constitutes no direct threat of harm to others. Society should have confidence in the ability of informed individuals to make decisions as to whether they choose to assume whatever personal risks accompany recreational drug use. ADOLESCENT USE NORML is strongly committed to the concept that growing up should be drug-free. NORML desires to help establish meaningful communication within the family based on honest health and social consequences related to all drugs. NORML believes it is popper to restrict the distribution of marijuana to adults only. NORML strongly discourages the driving of automobiles or other vehicles while under the influence of marijuana or any other drug, and recognizes the legitimate public interest in prohibiting such conduct. MEDICAL RESEARCH Fuller coordination of the marijuana research conducted by governmental and private agencies is needed to reduce the narrowness or duplication of effort, assure diversity of new approaches and new objectives, and to provide efficient integration of findings into the available body of knowledge. NORML urges the revision of federal and state laws to make marijuana legally available for those who would benefit from its medical use, and to encourage further research of its medical utility. NORML also urges that a more appropriate federal agency than the National Institute on Drug Abuse be selected to direct efforts on these ends/ MARIJUANA ERADICATION NORML is opposed to the use of paraquat and all other chemical or biological agents intended to destroy or identify marijuana under cultivation in any country. NORML supports the prohibition of the use of herbicides to spray marijuana as consistent with the protection of public health and the environment. ROLE OF MILITARY LAW ENFORCEMENT NORML opposes any use of military in civilian domestic law enforcement. NORML further opposes the use of any military equipment or personnel in the direct or indirect enforcement of marijuana laws in the United States or on the High seas. PUBLIC VERSUS NON-PUBLIC USE NORML recognizes the individual right of non-smokers not to be subjected to discomfort, or whatever health risks may arise from the smoking of any substance in designated non-smoking areas in confined public places. NORML opposes, however, the use of criminal law to regulate such activities. DESTRUCTION OF CRIMINAL RECORDS NORML urges the enactment of legislation to provide for the destruction of the criminal records of persons arrested or convicted of marijuana offenses prior to the enactment of legislation repealing criminal penalties for such offenses. NORML supports the full restoration of all rights and privileges denied or diminished as the result of prior marijuana arrests or convictions. NORML believes that statutory distinctions based on potency are neither desirable nor feasible at the present times. Because of the current usage patterns and the practical problems inherent in controlling potency in an unregulated market, distractions between less potent and more potent varieties are unwarranted, impractical and unfair. UNLAWFUL SALE It must be recognized that where personal use and possession of marijuana are no longer serious crimes, it is both inconsistent and irrational to provide lengthy prison terms for those who distribute marijuana for profit. NORML strongly opposes any increase in the current federal and state penalties pertaining to cultivating, importing or distributing of marijuana. MARIJUANA RESEARCH AND WOMEN NORML urges revision of current FDA policies regarding marijuana research and women. Current regulations severely limit research on women of child-bearing age, despite the fact that most women who do use marijuana are of that age group and the use of marijuana by young women is rapidly approaching parity with males. NORML urges repeal of regulations prohibiting marijuana research on on consenting and fully informed women, reguardless of age. Further, NORML urges the National Institute on Drug Abuse and other appropriate agencies to establish studies on the effects of marijana on woment as a priority issue and to develop contracts to encourage such research. SINGLE CONVENTION THEORY NORML urges the United States government to take appropriate action to remove marijuana from The Single Convention Treaty on Narcotic Drugs of 1961. AMERICANS IMPRISONED ABROAD NORML urges the U.S. Government to work for the protection and the return of it's citizens imprisoned abroad for drug-related offenses. Expansion and improvement of consular services and establishment of prisoner exchange treaties must be considered top priorities in government efforts to safeguard the human rights and welfare of these prisoners. NORML also urges the U.S. Government to curtail the illegal activities of Drug Enforcement Administration agents and other agencies stationed overseas, and to thoroughly re-evaluate its total international narcotics control efforts. Help Fight Back - Support Your Local NORML Chapter! Northcoast Ohio NORML Chapter Contact: John Hartman Phone: +[1]-216-521-WEED