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How does everyone feel about this. I havent spoken to a lot of people about it. The few I have say they are in agreement with Dennis. I'd love to hear more on this issue. I feel I'm on the side of Dennis as well. I'm open to changing my mind. But not totally sure about all of this. All I know is I'm NOT on the side of total fucked up shit-ness! Is Oaksterdam really selling out?
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Re: Dennis Perons being let go from Oaksterdam
Fri, October 30, 2009 - 12:22 PMI dont know anything about it and cant find anything in Google about his release. -
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Re: Dennis Perons being let go from Oaksterdam
Fri, October 30, 2009 - 5:51 PMDennis Peron announced on Tuesday 15 Sep 09 that he returned from Burning Man to
discover he had been fired from Oaksterdamn U because of his opposition to
taxing and regulating medical marijuana.
Oaksterdamn U has announced it intends to spend a million dollars to promote an
initiative that would tax, regulate and control marijuana by city and county, as
well as at the state level.
For Dennis' position on this see his comments in my article of 30 Aug 09: The
tax heard round the world.
Peron has been hailed as the father of the medical marijuana movement and was
the guiding force and co-author of California's Proposition 215.
He became a marijuana dealer after returning from Viet Nam to San Francisco in
1969 and through the 70s he ran the Big Top marijuana supermarket from his home.
In 1978 he organized Proposition W which directed the district attorney to stop
arresting people for possessing, transferring, or growing marijuana. Though it
was passed by 56% of the electorate, it was never implemented by the Feinstein
Administration.
In 1991 he organized Proposition P which made enforcement of laws against
medical marijuana the city's lowest priority. It passed by 79%.
In 1993 he opened the Church Street Compassion Center in San Francisco's Castro
District.
In 1995 he opened the larger San Francisco Cannabis Buyers Club at 1444 Market
Street where the medical marijuana movement was born.
In 1996 he co-authored The Compassionate Use Act of 1996 and organized the
signature drive that put Proposition 215 on the ballot.
www.examiner.com/x-14883-S...ijuana-tax -
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Re: Dennis Perons being let go from Oaksterdam
Fri, October 30, 2009 - 5:53 PMProposition 215 author announces boycott of Blue Sky medical marijua
Dennis Peron has announced he will begin a weekly picket at Coffeeshop Blue Sky
medical marijuana dispensary in Oakland this Friday, 16 Oct 09, from 5 to 7 pm.
Peron owned and managed the first medical marijuana club in San Francisco. He
co-authored The Compassionate Use Act of 1996 (Proposition 215) which legalized
medical marijuana in California and he was the driving force behind its passage.
The argument published in the ballot pamphlet against Proposition 215 ended with
the alarming declaration: "It is marijuana legalization."
Coffeeshop Blue Sky is owned by Richard Lee who, along with Jeff Jones of the
now defunct Oakland Cannabis Buyers Club, is proponent and financial backer of
the Regulate, Control, and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010. In addition to a marijuana
plantation, Richard Lee also owns Oaksterdam U, which takes in over a million a
year providing "students with the highest quality training for the cannabis
industry."
Peron, "one of the most recognized names in the California cannabis legalization
movement", announced 15 Sep 09 that upon returning from Burning Man, he learned
he had been sacked from Oaksterdam U because he spoke out against their tax and
regulate initiative. He believes it "will set us back and keep the police
nipping at our heels".
Subsequently, on 22 Sep 09, Peron issued a public statement declaring his
opposition to 'Damn U's Regulate, Control, and Tax Cannabis initiative and
listing his reasons for this opposition.
As of this writing Mr Peron is still listed on the faculty page for the Oakland
campus of 'Damn U. Under his name are headings "The History of Cannabis",
"Inspirational Speaker", and the following:
Dennis Peron is a marijuana activist and businessman, who was the figurehead for
the legality of cannabis throughout the 1990's, influencing many in California
and thus changing the political debate of marijuana in the United States. He
opened the first medical marijuana dispensary in 1991 in San Francisco (the
Cannabis Buyers Club) and co-authored California's Proposition 215, the first
medical marijuana state-wide legislation. His marijuana business was busted by
authorities in 1978 and 1990, but shortly after the passage of Prop 215 Dennis
won the Appeals Court Peron Decision. Based on that decision, cities like West
Hollywood, San Francisco, Oakland, and Arcata have allowed caregiver- and
patient-run dispensaries to operate within their jurisdictions. Many more cities
followed. The legacy of Dennis Peron lives on through the more than 400
dispensaries in California and the 12 other medical marijuana states that have
passed similar laws to his Prop 215.
Peron has voiced support for decriminalization of all marijuana use as he
believes the herb is medicinal just as food is and thus should be available to
those who want to benefit from it.
The Regulate, Control, and Tax Cannabis 2010 Act (ROT 2010) by 'Damn U is one of
three marijuana legalization initiatives currently gathering signatures to
qualify for the November 2010 California ballot. Additionally, The Jack Herer
Initiative was filed 29 Sep 09 and will begin gathering signatures as soon as
the Attorney General has completed the official title and summary.
Registered voters in California are going to have a difficult time
distinguishing between these first three initiatives based on the official title
and summary that will appear at the top of each petition page. The official
title of the three initiatives currently gathering signatures are: Changes
California Law to Legalize Marijuana and Allow It to Be Regulated and Taxed,
Changes California Law to Legalize, Regulate, and Tax Marijuana, and Changes
California Law to Legalize, Regulate, and Tax Marijuana.
No, you're not seeing double. The title that will appear on each page of the
signature petition for two of the initiatives is exactly the same. Hopefully,
the official title of the Jack Herer initiative will be something a little more
identifiable. Speaking of Jack Herer, he suffered a stroke 3 minutes after
speaking at Hempstalk in Portland on 12 Sep 09. He is now in a nursing home
after spending a month in the hospital.
The California Attorney General's official title and summary of the 'Damn U
initiative (ROT 2010) is as follows:
Allows people 21 years old or older to possess, cultivate, or transport
marijuana for personal use. Permits local governments to regulate and tax
commercial production and sale of marijuana to people 21 years old or older.
Prohibits people from possessing marijuana on school grounds, using it in
public, smoking it while minors are present, or providing it to anyone under 21
years old. Maintains current prohibitions against driving while impaired.
Summary of estimate by Legislative Analyst and Director of Finance of fiscal
impact on state and local governments: Savings of up to several tens of millions
of dollars annually to state and local governments on the costs of incarcerating
and supervising certain marijuana offenders. Unknown but potentially major tax,
fee, and benefit assessment revenues to state and local government related to
the production and sale of marijuana products.
The devil is in the details. And this one is a legal minefield of devilish
details.
Peron claims this is not legalization but "thinly veiled prohibition". The
flyer (prepared by KC Kimber of California Cannabis Inc.) advertising the
boycott lists the following points:
It limits personal possession to one ounce and cultivation to a five-by-five
plot, or 25 square feet. This is guaranteed to keep law enforcement employed
raiding and prosecuting people for marijuana.
It explicitly criminalizes the commercial sale, production, and cultivation of
marijuana in cities and in counties that do not tax and regulate marijuana
"without limitation".
It "sends the wrong message" by placing the age limit the same as alcohol, even
though marijuana is much safer.
It makes public consumption illegal, creates new felonies where there were none
before, and makes it illegal for parents to smoke in front of their own kids.
It will limit competition and create monopolies by preventing ordinary people
from getting into the business.
It should be noted that Oakland has limited the number of medical marijuana
dispensaries that may operate in that city to four, and that they each pay
$30,000 per year for a business license. Further, that these four dispensaries
were the proponents of Measure F, which increased the tax medical marijuana
patients pay in Oakland for medicine from $1.20 per $1,000 to $18 per $1,000; a
total increase of about $350,000 paid in taxes on the cost of medicine by the
sick and dying in Oakland per year. Additionally, they intend to spend $1
million on the signature drive to get their tax and regulate initiative on the
ballot.
www.examiner.com/x-14883-S...dispensary -
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Re: Dennis Perons being let go from Oaksterdam
Fri, October 30, 2009 - 6:10 PMThis makes me miss Brownie Mary. I wonder what she'd be doing if she were still around. I bet she'd be making waves.
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