Tea blogging

You may remember that the folks at Kasora special reserved teas had offered to send me some of their tea. Well, they came through and even though I’ve been bribed with tea, I can honestly report that they’ve got some great stuff.

This is not the kind of tea where you put a bag in boiling water and dip it a bunch of times. No, this is tea that inspires ritual attention to detail, and Kasora gives you all the useful suggestions, from the water to use, to the times and temperatures for brewing. I picked up a nice glass teapot with infuser and followed their guidelines.

I started with the Darjeeling Makaibari Silver Tips. Velvety smooth. Mildly rich, but with a delightful kick. Great to share with someone when you want to stay up for a while (No, I didn’t mean it that way.) Next was the Yin Hao Silver Tips Reserve. Subtle and very soft. A late evening – curl up with a book kind of tea. Finally, this evening I brewed the Stone Blossom Bi Luo Chun — a wonderful green tea with an exquisite earthy flavor — probably my favorite.

These are excellent, quality teas, and worth checking out if you’re in the mood for something special.

In related news, the good folks at Nutiva heard my suggestion and sent me some hemp products to try, including hempseed bars, shelled hempseeds, hemp oil, and hemp shake. I’ll report back on those in a few days.

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Lethal?

What absolutely irresponsible reporting!

I thought we had disposed of this nonsense a while ago, but there’s been an arrest in conjunction with the marijuana gumballs, which gave the media the opportunity to spew this:

Howard County police said each gumball contained about one gram of marijuana. The state forensic lab has not determined if the level of THC in the gumballs is lethal, but authorities warned parents to stay on the lookout because the gumballs are dangerous if ingested by kids.

There is not a lethal dose of marijuana. Nobody has ever, ever died from an overdose of marijuana. This is like saying that the state forensic lab has not determined if the level of wheat in a piece of bread is lethal. It may well be true that the lab has not done that, but why would they even bother?

[Thanks, ezrydn]
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Insane people speak

1.

I never knew that the drug traffickers in Afghanistan had an ambassador (or perhaps she’s their girlfriend). What else could explain Ann Coulter’s statement:

COULTER: But as for catching Usama, it’s irrelevant. Things are going swimmingly in Afghanistan.

Obviously, she’s thrilled about the 40 percent increase in opium cultivation.

2.

Katherine Harris (who must be praying for a miracle in her losing Congressional race) said:

“God is the one who chooses our rulers.”

Well I guess there’s no point in bothering with our Voting Guide.

The merely psychotic are confined to mental institutions, while these two are put on television. It’s beyond my understanding.

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ONDCP wasting taxpayer funds

OK, so that’s not really news, but having the GAO remind people shortly when the ONDCP is up for refunding can’t be helping their day.
Adweek: GAO: $1 Bil.+ Anti-Drug Effort Ineffective

WASHINGTON A Government Accountability Office probe of the White House’s anti-drug media campaign has found that the $1 billion-plus spent on the effort so far has not been effective in reducing teen drug use. The report recommends that Congress limit funding until the Office of National Drug Control Policy “provides credible evidence of a media campaign approach that effectively prevents and curtails youth drug use.”

Also in the Washington Post.

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America on Drugs

Pierre Tristam has an outstanding piece: When Admitting Failure Is Forbidden –
America On Drugs
. The whole thing is worth reading and quoting. Here’s a snippet.

The country is addicted to the bureaucracy of the war. It keeps prisons in business. It keeps police departments fattening up their ranks. It lets politicians on the stump freebase on tough-sounding rhetoric, cost-free. It is the law-enforcement establishment’s bottomless welfare plan, with more dire results than social welfare ever caused those on the dole. For all its “welfare queen” myths and admitted failures, social welfare programs had their millions of successes, keeping people out of poverty or helping them through bad patches. The drug war is a legacy of victims. Its only true winners are its enablers and dependents — government and law enforcement — who, experiencing its futility first-hand, should have been leading the charge for reform decades ago. But they’re too addicted to 12-step their way out of it.

Rather, the quagmire worsens, implicating America’s already tattered foreign policy along the way.

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The drug war fills up Illinois prisons

A new report was issued this week about drug incarceration in Illinois, and I got a chance to glance at the actual report last night. Online versions of the report should be available soon. Some really powerful statistics. The Chicago Tribune reports:

After two decades of steadily toughening laws, Illinois now puts more people in prison for drug crimes than any state except California, according to a study released Tuesday by Roosevelt University.
The report also found that more people are being incarcerated for possessing narcotics than for selling them and that the state’s prisons hold about five black inmates convicted of drug offenses for every white inmate–one of the largest racial disparities in the country.
The findings cast doubt on the fairness and effectiveness of Illinois’ long campaign against illegal drugs, said Kathleen Kane-Willis, a researcher at Roosevelt’s Institute for Metropolitan Affairs.
“Just locking folks up is not reducing our drug problems, but it’s sure costing us a lot of money,” she said.

And here’s a pretty revealing statistic:

Illinois incarceration by drug offense:

Sale Possession
1983 264 180
2002 5,761 6,999

Update: Title of post changed to make more sense.

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How prohibition works

[Via Hit and Run]
In my lifetime, I have eaten in restaurants in Chicago thousands of times, yet I don’t remember ever seeing foie gras on the menu. The people of the Windy City are great eaters, and they love their deep dish pizza, polish sausage, italian beef, ribs, and a whole lot more. But Chicago foie gras? You won’t find it at the Taste. Oh, I’m sure there are plenty of places that had it — it’s just that most people don’t go to those places.
That didn’t stop the Chicago city council from deciding to prohibit foie gras. That’s right, a law against goose liver. The ban went into effect yesterday, and the results could have been predicted.

CHICAGO, Aug. 22 — On Tuesday, this city’s lawbreakers were serving foie gras.
The illicit substance could be spotted in places it was rarely seen when it was legal: buried in Chicago’s famed deep-dish pizza, in soul food on the South Side, beside beef downtown.
In one of the more unlikely (and opulent) demonstrations of civil disobedience, a handful of restaurants here that never carry foie gras, the fattened livers of ducks and geese, featured it on the very day that Chicago became the first city in the nation to outlaw sale of the delicacy.
“This ban is embarrassing Chicago,” said Grant DePorter of Harry Caray’s Restaurant, which dreamed up an appetizer of pan-seared foie gras and scallops ($14.95) and a Vesuvio-style entree pairing foie gras and tenderloin ($33.95) just to buck the new ordinance. “We really don’t think the City Council should decide what Chicagoans eat. What’s next? Some other city outlaws brussels sprouts? Another outlaws chicken? Another, green beans?” […]
Jerry Stout, a lunchtime diner at Connie’s Pizza, said city leaders should have more pressing matters to worry about than fattened duck liver. Hardly a foie gras connoisseur — he could not remember whether he had ever tasted it before — Mr. Stout, 54, tried it on his pizza and said he would recommend it because of its mild flavor.

Now I’m not going to take a position on animal raising ethics here, but clearly, if people have a problem with foie gras, they can educate and influence people not to eat it. That might actually work. But prohibition? Just look how people responded to the prohibition of something as irrelevant to them as goose liver!
Prohibition not only has disastrous side effects, but… it doesn’t work. Prohibition not only doesn’t work, but… it can be counter-productive.
Prohibition is… a disease, that infects and corrupts everything it touches.

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Let’s be Frank

(Not the Frank who lost in Alaska.) Via the Transform Drug Policy Foundation blog, I have discovered the UK’s version of our anti-drug websites. It’s Frank!
Of course, whenever I come to a site like this, the first thing I do is check to see whether they are misleading or lying. So I went right to the Cannabis information page and found

Cannabis, like tobacco, has chemical ‘nasties’ which can cause lung disease and cancer with long term or heavy use.

Lying. But I did find interesting that they had “self control tips” like:

  • To reduce the risk of overdoing it, try to space out the days between using cannabis.
  • Don’t buy more than you need thinking you will save some for tomorrow – you probably won’t.

You’d never find such advice on a U.S. anti-drug site.
But here’s the best part. They have a new game you can play on the site — Dope Dash. You have to run to avoid hash boy, bong girl, and skunk zombie who are chasing you and trying to blow pot smoke into your face! Make sure you grab a couple of tasty hot dogs while you’re on the run and watch how the pot blurs your vision and affects your coordination. Eventually, you’ll get too stoned and have to retire to the couch (there’s that damned couch again!)
If you last a couple of minutes or more, you get to be on the leader board, where, if you’ve got no better name to use, you could always give your name as DrugWarRant com and send some visitors this way.

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Murkowski gone

Good news, and a bit of a shocker.
Alaska Governor Frank Murkowski, who has waged a one-man war to re-criminalize the personal possession of small amounts of marijuana in that state (despite the Alaska state constitution and Supreme Court rulings)….
… has lost in the primary!
I don’t know anything about the other candidates for the general election there, but having Frank out of there has got to be great news for us.

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Ophidia – the anti-drug

A timely parody from the DARE Generation

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