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San Francisco Obama Protest Against Federal Attack On Medical Cannabis

Tony Aroma

Let's Go - Two Smokes!
Veteran
Just passing this along:

Join the San Francisco ASA in protesting the Dept of Justice's crackdown on medical marijuana when Obama comes to visit San Francisco on Tues, Oct 25th! The President is holding a fund-raising luncheon at the W Hotel
beginning at 11:30 am. At 10 am, there will be a press conference with
Assemblyman Tom Ammiano & other advocates three blocks away at the
Marriott Hotel, 299 Second St., SOMA Room #3. Protesters are invited to stand at the northwest corner of 3rd and Mission St. for the President's visit at 11:30 AM.

When: October 25, 2011 at 11:30 a.m.

Where: Northwest corner of 3rd and Mission St. San Francisco CA.
 

Tony Aroma

Let's Go - Two Smokes!
Veteran
Here's another:

In Los Angeles, there will be a protest at high noon on Monday, October 24 at the Federal Building downtown, 255 East Temple Street. A press conference will be held with Proposition 215 coauthor Anna Boyce, who will be demanding a meeting with President Obama at the U.S. Attorney's Office. (The President will be visiting elsewhere in west L.A., but security will make him inaccessible.)
 

HUGE

Active member
Veteran
Make sure you bring a towwell so that you can dry off after the king pisses in your face.
 

northstate

Member
ICMag Donor
Hell yes! If you are within two hours of SF or LA go down and make your support a reality. Take your extra meds and donate some, bring some chairs or food. We as a whole have the power, its the only way this madness will stop. Good luck everyone and thanks for posting this info. Real time play by play day by day. Cheers,NS
 

vta

Active member
Veteran
Source: East Bay Express (CA)
Author: David Downs

BACKLASH TO CRACKDOWN GROWS

Legal Funds and Protests Are Countering the Federal Demagoguery.

Marijuana activists in California are gearing up this week for a flurry of statewide protests during President Obama's October 25 visit to the Bay Area, and then again for the election in the first week of November. The recent federal crackdown, in other words, is galvanizing the weed community. "We're pushing them back," said Stephen DeAngelo, founder of Harborside Health Center in Oakland. The medical cannabis club has started a legal defense fund to fight a recent $2.5 million IRS bill. "We're already beginning to regain momentum from this outrageous travesty of a federal assault."

Kris Hermes, spokesman for Americans for Safe Access, said new donors are coming out of the woodwork to bankroll the patient lobby group. "For better or worse, the Obama administration is making its own lemonade out of lemons," he said. "Its aggressive tactics are drawing attention to its ridiculously expensive policy on medical marijuana."

"I think this protest on Tuesday [October 25] may be the first unified show of support with a cohesive message," added Matt Cohen, founder of Northstone Organics in Ukiah. "I think [the new crackdown] will backfire."

Cohen knows something about federal overstepping. He's a prominent pot grower and supplier who is supervised by the Mendocino County Sheriff's Office, but the federal Drug Enforcement Administration raided his home on October 13, seizing 99 plants. Cohen was not arrested, but the raid was among the boldest in a series of federal actions that started with a press conference on October 7. Four US attorneys said the medical marijuana industry in California has been hijacked by profiteers and that the government would target exporters, profit-makers, and businesses in close proximity to schools and parks. Dozens of threatening letters have been sent to marijuana business landlords across the state this month, including three in San Francisco and several in Oakland. Sixteen letters also went out to Fresno landlords. The letters threaten property forfeiture for violating federal drug laws.

Taken together, the cluster of actions makes it clear that the federal government is going after major violators of the federal Controlled Substances Act while rattling its saber to everyone else. It's had the effect of putting a halt to dispensary permitting in multiple cities and has terrified operators and growers. It also buttresses local opposition to new dispensary permits, allowing locals to cite federal ire as a reason to delay or stop new clubs from opening.

David Goldman, a leader of Americans for Safe Access San Francisco, said the City of San Francisco may have stopped issuing dispensary permits since the press conference. And permits for 39 clubs in Sacramento are now in limbo, reports state. Oakland attorney Robert Raich said potential landlords for new clubs in the city have also been threatened with forfeiture, discouraging property owners from taking part in Oakland's plan to license four more dispensaries.

But the crackdown also speaks to the desperation of the Department of Justice, which has watched the number of medical marijuana patients in California grow to one million and the number of clubs in the state reach 2,000. Law Enforcement Against Prohibition spokesman Tom Angell paraphrased Gandhi, saying, "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win." "They're fighting us now," he continued. "They're terrified of public acceptance of marijuana."

The entire saga is little more than a rerun of past saber-rattling and it will backfire, Goldman predicted. "Under the Bush administration, Department of Justice sent forfeiture letters to all of California landlords with marijuana businesses and not one forfeiture took place," he said. "But it's effective. Back then about half the clubs in San Francisco closed."

The federal government is clearly trying to make an example of Harborside and Northstone, the two most prominent state-legal stores and growers in California, Goldman said. "They're pretty big. The federal government likes to go after the low-hanging fruit."

Cohen agreed. He does not know if Northstone Organics will re-open, but the raid has scared all the other legal growers in the Mendocino County program. Operators across the state are panicking, too, especially in battleground cities like San Diego, as well as Los Angeles and San Jose. Wherever there is local police opposition to clubs, the federal government is more than happy to pile on.

The industry and patients vastly outnumber law enforcement, however, and the possibility of taking 2,000 clubs to federal jury trials in California is not an option, most say. At worst, the witch hunt delays activist efforts to normalize the herbal remedy. "This is merely intimidation," Hermes said. "It should be obvious after the publicity stunt they pulled last week."

The US attorneys have already begun retreating from statements made earlier in the month. Notably, US Attorney Laura Duffy has started to back-pedal from her threat to go after newspapers that publish medical pot ads, saying that jailing journalists and editors was not a priority and she was speaking only for her own office. The Huffington Post also published statements from US attorneys saying they were acting independently of the White House.

"We're seeing a significant walking back of all this," DeAngelo said. "They overreached. They underestimated the degree of public support and they've been forced to back up."

Complacent activists have also been jolted awake by the events, Goldman said. "It shows you [that] these people don't believe in our Constitution, our Bill of Rights, and they're willing to engage [in] deeply repressive tactics and it gives us the opportunity to point it out."

"It's without a doubt the largest coming together of the medical cannabis movement since Prop 215," DeAngelo added. "It's a time of great peril and time of great promise. The federal government has greatly overstepped where public opinion is. It shows how absurd and counter-productive it is and we've been able to build support for our positions."
 

Tony Aroma

Let's Go - Two Smokes!
Veteran
Does anybody know if any of these protests happened? If so, did anybody notice? I can't find any news about Obama being in CA today.
 

resinryder

Rubbing my glands together
Veteran
Everyone involved in the California mmj program, from dispensaries, growers, and consumers need to band together as a whole and send a clear and concise message to da King. that message being-If you keep on fucking with mmj we as a whole will not vote for you in the upcoming election. You guys have enough people involved in mmj that if banded together you are a substantial voting block that can and will make a difference. He'd bend over backward to kill your collective asses if this was done and would make his minions quit this shit if he sees he's gonna lose the electoral votes at California would otherwise afford him. But hey, getting stoners to vote in a huge block is hard enough.
 

Tony Aroma

Let's Go - Two Smokes!
Veteran
So, apparently no one outside the mmj community noticed.

Hundreds of angry medical marijuana patients and supporters gathered in San Francisco's South of Market Tuesday to greet President Obama as he appeared at a $5,000 a head fundraiser at the W Hotel. They were joined by hundreds of other protestors, mainly Occupy San Francisco members and environmentalists upset with the Keystone pipeline.

PA250072.jpg

Boisterous crowds tried to send the president a message in San Francisco (Image: Phil Smith)

The president never saw the demonstrators -- he entered the building through a back entrance a block away from where protestors had gathered -- but boisterous chants of "DEA, Go Away!" and "Whose State? Our State! Whose Medicine? Our medicine!" echoed through the streets as police watched impassively.

It was the second straight day of medical marijuana protests aimed at the president. He got similar treatment Monday in Los Angeles.
 
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