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Messages - Hamiltonf

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16
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / Psychopathy
« on: April 28, 2007, 05:07:53 PM »
Excellent analysis, Ajax.  might I commend the book  Snakes in Suits for you as I'm sure that will help to refine the analysis even more.  
Interesting that you should have had the misfortune to have had dealings with one years ago.  I was assaulted by one on campus who turned out to have a couple of magnums in his dorm room.  Fortunately he was kicked out of the U before he caused any more harm.  That was 30 years ago, but it was an experience that has served me well since once you know what that sort of personality is capable of, it becomes easier to recognize it.  

Anyway, the book is a good read --- once you've read it there's a lot of people around that you'll be able to profile....

http://www.amazon.com/Snakes-Suits-When ... 0060837721

  ::read::  ::read::

17
News Items / AARC website
« on: April 15, 2007, 12:15:59 AM »
Quote from: ""Guest""
I came across this site and noticed mostly negative comment so I tried to do some investigation into your allegations of AARC's criminal misconduct ajax. I am not for or against just looking for healthy debate of which you do not seem to be prepared to engage in. You seem to have a lot of consuming anger so good luck with that. Your final comments indicate the last vestiges of someone without a strength-based argument...name calling. Won't be back...almost all here aren't interested in making change just venting.


Don't worry Ajax, this post is typical of the sort of thing supporters of AARC will say having "just come across" this site for the umpteenth time.  The condescending tone is evident, They're not going to bother coming back to this site because (they say) it's not worth the bother.  Yet they keep coming back and saying the same thing hoping that their "spin" will discourage critics.  

But hey, " you can fool some of the people ....."etc.  

That they are attempting to spread their pernicious influence into BC is not likely to be very successful.  BC ers are much too smart for their crap.

18
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / Yes Indeed
« on: April 07, 2007, 08:00:36 PM »
A superficial look at the credentials -- looks good.  Even at Harvard University  (not the law school -- Graduate studies in Education -- not nearly as prestigious) .

But who was it said, Lies damned lies and statistics?.
Interestingly, I had Canada's top expert on drug's answer a question about AA.  That they were not impressive at all -- they are so selective in their statistics they will always look good.    

Like the Anchorage Program in Edmonton -- run by the Sally Ann.  Claims 85% success  rate with it's "graduates"  but considerably less than 50% actually graduate.   I read somewhere that if you look at the  success rate of treatment options it's really not much better than no treatment at all.  But try to convince Alberta Judges of that, who continue ordering treatment and random drug testing.
And if my suspicions about AARC are right, graduates may actually be more screwed up after than they were before  -- and that include the demon and the monk guy.

19
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / Ask Ann McCaig if she knows
« on: April 07, 2007, 12:43:48 AM »
Annie, baby you've been conned just like all the other Calgary Glitterati.  
Do you know where the money's gone?

20
News Items / Taking Action
« on: April 01, 2007, 09:32:00 PM »
Way to go Ajax.

Perhaps it would be a step in the right direction if we were to seek FOIPP disclosure about  government funds going to these creeps.  Maybe that can be done through an agency such as the Alberta Civil Liberties Association (Steve Jenuth),  or one of the opposition parties.  
Also we might be able to find out about government funds having been used historically to send kids to such places as Kids of North Jersey.

21
News Items / Doing well, IN SPITE OF the damage done by AARC
« on: March 18, 2007, 10:32:28 AM »
Good to hear from you Rachael.  Congrats on a great life!

22
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / AARC
« on: April 10, 2005, 11:49:00 PM »
Quote
On 2005-04-10 17:04:00, Anonymous wrote:

"My daughter & I spent 10 months at AArc, have no regrets and totally support the program. It has changed our lives for the best."

And I have offered to meet such people before, but somehow it never pans out.  Send me a private e-mail and let's discuss how this miracle works.

23
News Items / looking for...
« on: April 10, 2005, 11:43:00 PM »
Quote
On 2005-04-10 03:18:00, Hamiltonf wrote:

"
Quote

On 2005-04-09 21:31:00, Anonymous wrote:


"When does Dr. Vause get his own Troll?"


Interesting when the abuse starts isn't it?

I hope Brandi gets in touch. ::rocker:: "

OOPS!

I hope Brandi wasn't frightened away though.

24
News Items / looking for...
« on: April 10, 2005, 06:18:00 AM »
Quote
On 2005-04-09 21:31:00, Anonymous wrote:

"When does Dr. Vause get his own Troll?"

Interesting when the abuse starts isn't it?
I hope Brandi gets in touch. ::rocker::

25
News Items / Legalize NOW
« on: March 10, 2005, 05:34:00 PM »
I think it was the drug warriors who were the quickest to jump.  I heartily agree with what Allan Young has to say:

http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n408/a10.html?999

SPOTLIGHT ON GROW-OPS MISPLACED, LAWYER SAYS

From the first word of the fatal shootings of four RCMP officers in rural Alberta last week, the spotlight was turned on marijuana grow-ops -- the dangers they posed, the tougher laws needed to combat them.

Within hours, politicians, police, pot activists and even the father of killer James Roszko pointed both to marijuana itself and the illegal trade in the drug as major players in the deadly chain of events.

RCMP officials said from the outset that their men were killed in a grow-op raid.  William Roszko said his son was never the same after he started smoking "that crazy dope" as a teenager.  The Marijuana Party said the shootings underscored the need to legalize pot and wipe out the black market.

Police and some politicians argued just the opposite, saying the tragedy proved that any move to legalize weed was madness.

It now appears the focus on grow-ups was misplaced.

"It was shameful and disrespectful both on the side of the state and on the side of the activists, who felt they had to respond to the state," said Alan Young, a lawyer and longtime proponent of legalizing marijuana.

"Four police officers were dead and it was alarming to see it turn into a propaganda play right off the bat.  There is really nothing about this case that should cause someone to develop public policy one way or the other.  This case is about how to deal with psychopathic people who have long histories with the law."

Young isn't alone in his distaste.  Letters to newspapers and callers to TV and radio shows buzzed Monday along similar lines.

In a letter to the Edmonton Journal, a reader scoffed at Premier Ralph Klein's appeal to the federal government to drop any plans to decriminalize marijuana in the wake of the incident.

"This idiot would have killed over a littering ticket," Allan Wood wrote, referring to Roszko.  "For Klein to push his agenda on pot this way is ridiculous."

A caller to CBC Newsworld echoed that sentiment: "The issue is about a crazy guy with a gun," he said

26
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / It is ok to relapse
« on: March 10, 2005, 05:17:00 PM »
After reading the last post, take a look at this.
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n410/a03.html?999
Oh people of the lost AARc where are you now?

27
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / It is ok to relapse
« on: March 10, 2005, 05:12:00 PM »
However, see the next thread about how the US exerts pressure around the world.  There is no question that, in Canada at the user level police are not as willing to charge, but are most likely inclined to let off with a warning.  Unfortunately, some politicians seem to want to Kow-Tow to US pressure by  advocating "get tough" policies and minimum sentences for trafficking and cultivation.  
Current Liberal policies ( which I have advocated for as a step in the right direction) of decriminalization of use but increasing sentences for trafficking and cultivation is still based on a wrong premise... that if you cut off supply you reduce use.  This does not make economic sense.  Moreover, merely passing a joint to a friend, by definition is trafficking, so the vilification that  is associated with the word trafficking comes into play.  Even with users acceptance of the  Steppenwolf's sterotype "Goddamn the pusher man" does not reflect the reality that most people at that level are not really such bad people and are often helping out friends.  They are not "pushers"  hoping to get you hooked and into a web of depravity and addiction.  If they were why isn't 50% of our population in treatment?   Major Grow ops of an industrial nature have no doubt "grown" in recent years but busts of this nature only scratch the surface.  If pot were legalised  and people  able to grow their own with sales at a local MJ store as in Amstredam I am convinced it would cut down on the profits that make these so attractive to organised crime.  
I like to think of the war on (some ) drugs as a turf war between Hells Angels and  Pharmaceutical  Comapanies both of which would like to control the market on mind-altering substances.

Unfortunately AARC brings all the ideological baggage of the US into Canada and needs to be confronted for the abject failure that their policies are.

28
News Items / US Ideologues put Millions at risk
« on: March 10, 2005, 04:37:00 PM »
U.S. IDEOLOGUES PUT MILLIONS AT RISK
International Herald-Tribune (04 Mar 2005)

NEW YORK -- Global fanfare accompanies every International AIDS Conference, but an obscure United Nations meeting next week in Vienna may prove more critical to the course of the global HIV epidemic.

Delegates are gathering for the 48th meeting of the Commission on Narcotic Drugs, a largely unpublicized UN entity that sets the international drug control agenda and that this year is focusing on questions of HIV prevention.  If recent events are any gauge, the commission - cowed by American hard-liners - will challenge the efficacy of programs, like needle exchange, proven to reduce HIV transmission among active drug users.

With the world's fastest-growing epidemics now fueled by intravenous drug use, millions of people at risk for HIV, particularly in Asia and the former Soviet Union, will pay the price.

Shown in dozens of studies in America and elsewhere to reduce transmission without increasing drug use, needle exchange is perhaps the most effective of all strategies to prevent the spread of HIV.  Yet in a pattern familiar from debates over sex education, Washington conservatives seem eager to hold up distortions of science as a model for the rest of the world.

At last year's meeting of the Commission on Narcotic Drugs, Europeans and Australians watched in amazement as American delegates declared the evidence for needle exchange "unconvincing."

U.S.  representatives also blasted as a "counsel of despair" the harm-reduction approach, which recognizes that even drug users unable or unwilling to stop using drugs can be helped to avoid the AIDS virus and other problems.

Backed by a coalition of prohibitionists that included Russia, Sweden and Japan, the United States ensured that the resolutions adopted by last year's commission were stripped of every mention of harm reduction.  Any discussion of human rights of drug users was similarly excised.

This year the United States has not waited for a global gathering to force the UN to pledge allegiance to "zero tolerance." American officials have put significant back-channel pressure on the UN Office on Drugs and Crime - the current chair of the UN's joint program on HIV/AIDS - to retreat from needle exchange and other harm-reduction measures.

After a November meeting with Robert Charles, an assistant secretary of state in charge of the U.S.  Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, the director of the Office on Drugs and Crime, Antonio Maria Costa, promised that he would review all of the office's printed and electronic statements to remove references to harm reduction.

Costa also pledged that the office would be "even more vigilant in the future." As a start, a senior staffer directed subordinates to "ensure that references to harm reduction and needle/syringe exchange are avoided in UNODC documents, publications and statements." .  More than semantic sanitation is at stake.  In Russia, where estimated HIV cases now surpass those in all of North America and where 75 percent of new infections are attributable to intravenous drug use, officials have long pointed to the proceedings of the Commission on Narcotic Drugs to justify misgivings about needle exchange and refusal to treat addicts with noninjectable opiate substitutes like methadone.  Last year, Ukrainian officials returned from the commission to announce that they were shelving plans for a methadone pilot program.

In Thailand, government officials claimed that Costa had given his blessing to drug control efforts that included mass arrests, forced internments and more than 2,500 killings of suspected drug dealers.

Costa strenuously denied the claim.

But his office recently suspended a Bangkok-based program dedicated to reducing intravenous drug users' vulnerability to the AIDS virus in East Asia.

Completely dependent on donor contributions - the largest share from the United States - the Office on Drugs and Crime is caught between the rock of American intransigence on drug policy and the hard facts that show needle exchange and other harm-reduction strategies to be effective.

Having removed condom information from federal Web sites and insisting on abstinence-only sex education at home and abroad, the Bush administration is now poised to override the best available evidence in deciding how best to fight HIV related to drug use.  What is needed at this year's Commission on Narcotic Drugs is unanimous commitment to deploying the tools, including needle exchange, known to reduce HIV among drug users, not the American policy of scuttling prevention methods proven to save lives.
MAP posted-by: Beth
Pubdate: Fri, 04 Mar 2005
Source: International Herald-Tribune (International)
Copyright: International Herald Tribune 2005
Contact: http://www.iht.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/212
Author: Aryeh Neier
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)

29
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / It is ok to relapse
« on: March 10, 2005, 06:45:00 AM »
What Ginger is saying, of course is that she doesn't want Canada to go the same way as the US, which seems to be:
The scale of the War on Drugs is immense and the irrationality profound. Surely the War on Drugs is the greatest modern reminder that policy is the product of politics and cultural forces rather than of a rational cost-benefit analysis. For a society to inflict such deep wounds upon itself the political, social and economic forces and their alignment must run deep. Again, over a third of all state prisoners are serving time for drug offenses, while less than a fifth were convicted of violent crimes. The majority of federal prisoners are incarcerated for drugs. Marijuana, a drug far safer than either tobacco or alcohol, heads the list as cause of incarceration. The FBI's Uniform Crime Report estimated 588,963 marijuana arrests in 1995 to achieve over 1.5 million marijuana arrests in the first three years of the Clinton presidency. Criminal justice in America, the fastest growing field of the public sector, is more about forbidden sin than crimes against persons or property. While not reducing drug use, the public sector has shifted funding priorities from all the programs that are meant to help people and build the quality of life to punishment of crimes against cultural sins. Consider these vignettes of the era.

"Drug Hate and the Corruption of American Justice"
David Sudofsky Baggins
Published by Praeger Publishers, Westport Connecticut, 1998

30
News Items / AARC Hockey Team?
« on: March 09, 2005, 06:35:00 PM »
Now, now, that's not very nice.

fag-got n. [ultGr.phakelos, a bundle]a bundle of sticks or twigs , esp. for use as fuel.

Webster's New World Dictionary[ This Message was edited by: Hamiltonf on 2005-03-09 15:35 ]

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