
Yeah, yeah, why didn't I read this in High School?
Believe me, you DON'T want to know about my High School experiences.
Wow. What a great ending. It's been a really long time since a book made me cry, or really feel deeply. I was not happy slogging through sixty pages on the battle of Waterloo, I almost gave up there, that was tedious. I'm glad I stuck it out. Fifteen hundred pages (paperback). The last long book I read was on the Arms of Krupp
The great Baker-Hamilton crock: A classic bullshit-cloud in the proud tradition of congressional "studies"Um, the ones that had Lousiana National Guard members in Iraq during Katrina?
Um, yeah those.
Gates' Assets Include Defense Stock



"A shooting war between Saudi Arabia and Iran would certainly make for interesting times in the oil markets... "
Howard Zinn on The Uses of History and the War on Terrorism 
SAN DIEGO: A state judge tentatively rejected San Diego County's challenge of California's decade-old law permitting marijuana use for medical purposes before hearing oral arguments from the county meant to change his mind....
San Diego County sued California and its health services director in February over the state's decade-old law permitting use of the drug with a physician's approval.
Two other California counties, San Bernardino and Merced, joined San Diego as plaintiffs. All three counties have refused to comply with a state requirement that counties issue identification cards for medical marijuana users and maintain a registry of people who apply for the cards....
...California's law allows people suffering AIDS, cancer, anorexia, chronic pain, arthritis and migraine and "any other illness for which marijuana provides relief" to grow or possess small amounts of marijuana with a doctor's recommendation.
Since California voters passed the law with 55 percent approval in 1996, 10 other states have adopted measures protecting qualified patients from prosecution. They are Alaska, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington.
Last week, voters in South Dakota rejected a ballot measure to permit marijuana use for medical purposes.
In 2003, the California Legislature amended the 1996 bill to direct county health departments to issue identification cards to medical marijuana users.
Counties, which did not receive money to fulfill the requirement, have been slow to issue ID cards, but San Diego was the first to refuse on legal grounds.
Yeesh, let's hope the judge doesn't have a pow wow with these dipshits , the will of voters in California won't have a chance if he does.