Monday, May 30, 2011

Pot in Butter

I will never understand why people do things like this. In chemical dependency counseling you hear many weird stories, but whenever I hear ones like this...I just wonder, why? A chemical dependency counselor would think the same as well. Anyways, heres the story of a babysitter who gave pop laced butter to some kids. 

"A woman will stand trial on charges she fed marijuana-laced margarine to a 12-year-old girl she was babysitting, as well as two other children at her home, The Associated Press reported.

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The 12-year-old’s mother called Upper Burrell Township police after discovering the drugs in a tub of I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter in 22-year-old Stevie Hickey’s freezer. The woman told police Hickey spread the substance on two pieces of toast that Hickey gave to the girl, the AP reported.

Police said Hickey told the girl it was “parsley butter” but later acknowledged to police that it was marijuana.

The Valley News Dispatch in Tarentum reported Hickey remained free after waiving her right to a preliminary hearing on marijuana possession and child endangerment charges May 10."

Source: http://www.foxcarolina.com/news/28049537/detail.html

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Friday, May 27, 2011

Butane Honey Oil Labs

This seems like something new to chemical dependency counseling and addiction physiology, but I cant tell. Apperantly, there are these butane honey oil labs that have been growing around the U.S. A new danger is arising though because a chemical dependency counselor has examined the risk that these labs are putting people at. MOre on the story...

"Getting the most bang for their buck is putting some marijuana users at risk. 

The trend of making butane honey oil is growing across the north state, as are the fires and severe burns that often come along with the process. 

This butane honey oil, or as some call it hash oil, combines the leftover remnants of the marijuana leaf and the highly flammable gas, butane. 

These labs are popping up more frequently across the north state, and with the high rate of accidents associated with the process, officials are working to nip this trend in the bud. 

Butte Interagency Narcotics Task Force Commander Carl Sturdy says, “If you combine this with smoking marijuana, it's almost like lighting a stick of dynamite at the same time.” 

An internet sensation, and now a marijuana trend in the north state. 

Manufacturing the plant form of the drug into sticky oil, similar to honey. 

Sturdy says, “We're actually seeing more butane honey oil labs than we are meth labs right now.”

From Paradise to Bangor, the Butte Interagency Narcotics Task Force has broken up several butane honey oil labs in the past few months alone. 

“It's a way to knock off the microscopic tri-combs,” says Sturdy. 

With a few simple products, a schedule one drug becomes a firefighter’s nightmare. 

“Butane is heavier than air so it’ll go to the floor and will leach its way out until it finds an ignition source and once it finds the ignition source, it’ll violently explode; very hot and very fast,” says Sturdy. 

That's how they're often discovered too, after the lab explodes or starts a fire. 

The unsafe practice has taken its toll on experimenters. 

And surprisingly, many are very willing to share their dangerous experiences online. 

One webcaster on YouTube admittedly says, “The moral of the story is butane is flammable and really think twice before your actions. I’m an idiot.” 

In fact the internet is littered with information on butane honey oil and including how-to video clips on the topic. 

So it begs the question, why on earth are people putting themselves and their homes at risk for a little vial of THC? 

According to most of the pages we found online, it's a way to use the entire plant and provides a different type of high. 

But the way law enforcement sees it, no high is worth an explosion or several years in jail. 

Sturdy says, “It's the same punishment as making methamphetamine. There's no exception for making hashish with butane, you can possess it with your medicinal marijuana recommendation, but you can't make it.” 

Once a lab has gone bad, marijuana users have the scars to prove it. 

“Usually people who stop using it are the ones who suffered some kind of injury.” 

Officials hope education will prevent people from even trying this it home, because this is a lesson most people don't want to learn first hand."

Reported by: Britt Carlson 
Last Update: 5/24 10:27 pm

Source: http://www.khsltv.com/content/localn...jxXLD6U2w.cspx

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Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Cartel Rift

In this detailed report from Mexico we can only hope that authorites step things up. For chemical dependency counseling this is a sad story. 219 people have been uncovered since April 11th and found dead from drug cartels. A chemical dependency counselor will have a loud voice in Mexico right now. 

"DURANGO, Mexico (AP) — The vacant car repair lot hardly looks out of place in a vibrant but gritty part of the northern colonial city of Durango, famous as the set for John Wayne westerns.

Only a closer look reveals the secrets hidden at "Servicios Multiples Carita Medina," clues to exactly what kind of "multiple services" were rendered. The freshly turned soil is sprinkled with lime to kill the smell and littered with discarded Latex gloves and an empty cardboard box: "Adult Cadaver Bag. 600 gauge, Long Zipper, For Cadavers of up to 75 inches. 15 pieces."

In the most gruesome find in Mexico's four-year attack on organized crime, police dug up 89 bodies in the repair lot, buried over time in plain sight of homes, schools and stores.

Then, like the killers, authorities left one of Mexico's most puzzling crime scenes completely open and unprotected.

It was the largest of seven graves found in bustling urban areas of the city of almost 600,000, where a total of 219 bodies have been uncovered since April 11.

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Publicly, authorities say they don't know who's inside the graves in a state that was home to Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa, but that today is more synonymous with the country's powerful Sinaloa drug cartel. Officials only say the mass graves probably hold the corpses of executed rivals from other gangs or possibly kidnap victims and even some police.

A new and more detailed account, however, comes from a top federal police official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to The Associated Press because of security reasons. The official said investigations indicate the grave holds rivals of the Sinaloa cartel, and that the once orderly and brutally efficient gang is undergoing a bloody internal power struggle in Durango.

The Sinaloa cartel had seemed immune to the kind of missteps, mindless violence and internal power struggles that have plagued other drug gangs, to the extent that most Mexicans believed the Sinaloa cartel was either exceedingly sophisticated or in cahoots with the government.

But the portrait now emerging from the 219 corpses is of a cartel that is riven by internal cracks, according to the official.

In recent months, at least two local groups sought to break off from Sinaloa and control the drug shipment routes through Durango for themselves, the official said. A third group, known as the "M's," remained loyal to Sinaloa boss Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, who has been named one of the richest and most influential people in the world by Forbes magazine, with a fortune of more than $1 billion.

A leading member of the "M's" and the fourth-highest ranking Sinaloa operator in Durango, Bernabe Monje Silva, was arrested by federal police on March 27 and led police to the grave sites, the police official said.

Jorge Chabat, a Mexican expert on the drug trade, said that while the Sinaloa cartel is one of Mexico's most stable gangs, it has had internal divisions, as witnessed several years ago when the Beltran Leyva brothers broke off to form their own cartel.

Chabat said disputes like the one in Durango "are part of the jockeying that goes on in the world of drug trafficking" and said the split will probably result in increased violence in Durango.

The Sinaloa and Zeta cartels had already been in a dispute for remote territory in Durango long dismissed as narco-land. Cartels grow marijuana and poppies in the secluded mountains, where outsiders don't go without military escorts and rumors have it that Sinaloa boss Guzman himself has been hiding.

In April, the discovery of 183 bodies in 40 graves in the northeastern border state of Tamaulipas caused an international furor, as families from the U.S., Mexico and Central America showed up in search of loved ones who had been reportedly pulled off buses, then vanished in the vast reaches of farmland near San Fernando, the scene of two mass killings in less than a year.

The Mexican government reinforced its troops there and made a sweep of 74 alleged Zetas members and collaborators — including some local police— whom officials say were responsible for the deaths.

The larger discovery in Durango, however, has been met with little more than a shrug and the swearing by neighbors that they never heard or saw anything unusual as assassins buried scores of bodies under city streets.

In fact, it can sometimes seem like the region was written off long ago as narco-controlled territory. Last week, no one was lining up to look for loved ones or to give DNA even as the difficult task of identifying bodies continues.

Some of the corpses in Durango have been in the ground less than six months, buried since the Sinaloa cartel's internal dispute broke out; others have been there for as long as four years.

In some cases, the remains are nearly skeletal after months or years in the desert-like conditions of Durango, whose state symbol is a scorpion.

Working in refrigerated trailers brought in after the sheer number of bodies outstripped the capacity of the city's morgue, experts wearing masks and sterile suits struggled to detect identifying signs, tattoos or fingerprints from the bodies that still retained some skin.

Piles of cadavers in white plastic body-bags were stacked along a wall of the trailer, awaiting examination.

Authorities have only identified one victim so far, a 31-year-old man from the state of Durango. They would not give his name or other details.

Questions remained about how the gunmen could have used the burial ground to dump bodies for so long without being caught.

"The bodies weren't buried all at one time, it was done gradually," said Jorge Antonio Santiago, the spokesman for the Durango State Human Rights Commission. "In the face of that fact, we are also demanding an explanation of why nobody detected this."

Some argue that police in Durango may have turned a blind eye to the grim goings-on in their city, though none have been implicated, unlike in the Tamaulipas killings.

A few nearby homes have a view of the lots, as does a private school, but invariably local residents say they saw nothing.

"I never imagined that something was happening here," said a woman who was walking by one the lots last week. The woman, who would not identify herself for fear of reprisals, said the owner of the lot lived in the United States and rented out the property.

Looking over the sandy soil, the woman expressed the same fear and resignation that has permeated northern Mexico after 4½ years of drug violence that's claimed over 35,000 lives.

"Of course it is disturbing ... but what can you do?" she asked.

A woman selling used clothing near another mass grave three blocks away, where 17 bodies were found, said she had occasionally seen luxury vehicles drive by, but never noticed anything suspicious. She believes the victims were brought in, already dead, and quietly buried at night, protected by darkness and a pervasive cloak of fear.

"If anyone talks," she said, "they might get their head cut off."

Source: http://www.cbs8.com/story/14692932/mexico-mass-graves-of-219-signal-major-car...

 

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Monday, May 23, 2011

New Drug Tests

I think this is great. Chemical dependency counseling and addiction physiology have stepping things up to fight back on these "legal highs" finally! More on the story...

"A new generation of designer drugs, technically legal because they are labelled "not for human consumption", but no less dangerous than their predecessors ecstasy, methamphetamine and cocaine, can now be detected by a newly developed test.

Until now, these substances weren't detectable in routine drug screenings. However, Norchem Corporation has developed a sophisticated lab-based test that confirms the presence of many of these designer drugs in urine samples.

Symptoms such as elevated heart rate, muscle damage, breathing problems, intense anxiety, agitation and seizures have been observed after the consumption of these drugs. Several cases of self-mutilation, paranoid hallucinations and even suicide have been attributed to them.

The test was developed primarily for the criminal justice system, including drug courts, probation, parole and treatment centres, according to a Norchem statement.

"We have a seen dramatic increase in the abuse of these drugs in reports from poison control centres and hospital emergency rooms," Norchem's chief executive officer Bill Gibbs said.

"The cyber-marketplace enables almost anyone with Internet access the ability to purchase these stimulants," he added.

Routine drug screenings and "quick screen cups" do not detect the presence of these designer drugs. This new test follows the successful launch of Norchem's "fake marijuana" (street names Spice or K2) lab-based test introduced late last year.

The new synthetic stimulants, often called "bath salts" or "plant fertilizers," were developed to subvert law enforcement and drug testing agencies and are advertised as "legal" highs. They mimic the stimulant effects of amphetamines, ecstasy and cocaine." 


Mangalorean
May 23, 2011


SOURCE:http://mangalorean.com/news.php?news...&newsid=240290

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Friday, May 20, 2011

Second Chances

Theres always a second chance in chemical dependency counseling. If you become a chemical dependency counselor you can give other that second chance. Heres a news story about a young man who was arrested for two marijuana felonys, but he might get a second chance in his life. 

 — A Whitewater alderman is facing two felony charges after sheriff’s deputies say twice last month he sold marijuana to a confidential informant.

District 2 Councilman Javonni M. Butler, 22, was arrested earlier this month and charged with two counts of delivering THC, less than 200 grams. Walworth County sheriff’s deputies said in a criminal complaint an informant wore a wire and bought marijuana from Butler on March 16 and 28 at Butler’s apartment at 375 North Harmony Lane, Whitewater.

Butler of New Berlin was released on a signature bond, and a criminal complaint was filed Tuesday. Each count carries a maximum fine of $10,000 and up to three years and six months in prison.

Members of the sheriff’s department drug unit said they followed the informant to Butler’s apartment, and both times the informant returned with marijuana, according to the criminal complaint. Tests on the drugs were positive for THC, deputies said.

Butler is a UW-Whitewater student, and his district includes the college campus. He’s the lone student representative on the city council.

Butler was re-elected to his seat this spring after running as a registered write-in. He was appointed in April to serve on the board of review, alcohol licensing committee and parks and recreation board.

It’s unclear whether the charges will affect Butler’s status with the university or the city council. Council President Patrick Singer and City Attorney Wallace McDonell could not be reached for comment."

Source: http://www.gazettextra.com/news/2011/may/18/whitewater-alderman-facing-felony...

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Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Controversial cigarette-making machines

This is a pretty controversal subject within different groups including the chemical dependency counseling community. A chemical dependency counselor will generally agree with the side that these machines are not okay at all and are only acting as an oppossing force in the drug war. According to the article, business in stores with these machines has been "crazy". More on the story...

"Thanks to tax loopholes, savvy smokers can roll their own carton of cigarettes for half the cost of buying from a manufacturer -- and they can do it in eight minutes.

Using pipe tobacco, which is taxed almost three times less than cigarette tobacco, a rolling machine and empty cigarette tubes, the serious smoker can save about $1,500 a year.

The loss of tax revenue has caught the attention of the Michigan Department of the Treasury.

In a notice dated
March 1 sent to smoke shops across the state, the department warns store owners they could face criminal penalties if they allow cigarette rolling machine use to continue.

"...The operation of a machine that is loaded with loose tobacco and rolling tubes for the purpose of producing cigarettes constitutes 'cigarette manufacturing' in Michigan.' ...Exempt from this requirement would be those who meet the exception for self-consumption under federal law," the notice said.

The state has yet to take legal action against a store owner or automated rolling machines.

But with automated rolling machines hitting Michigan smoke shops several years ago, more and more people are rolling their own.

Store owners argue their customers -- such as Kelly Gajowiak of New Baltimore -- fit the "self-consumption" category. Gajowiak was one of 10 people who walked into Let's Roll Tobacco in New Baltimore during the last hour it was open Thursday.

After paying $29.99 plus tax, she selected half a pound of pipe tobacco of her choice and dumped it into the top of a rolling machine. She loaded in a carton's worth of empty tubes, and pushed three buttons. A few whirring noises later, a filled cigarette rolled off a chute and into a waiting container.

"You roll your own, they taste good and there are no chemicals," Gajowiak said, referencing the fire-retardant chemicals found in manufactured cigarettes.

Jerry Thompson of Kimball Township said by rolling his own cigarettes, he's cutting the money he would spend in half.

Thompson has been hand-rolling his own cigarettes for 15 years. Four months ago, when he discovered the RYO Filling Station at Smokers Outlet in Fort Gratiot would do the same thing for the same price he's been paying for years -- only exponentially faster -- Thompson jumped on board.

He visits the store three to four times a month and pays $29.99 for tobacco, empty cigarette tubes and use of the machine.

Thompson said he's renting the machine, not buying cigarettes manufactured by the store.

"I think it's nonsense," Thompson said of the state's warning. "Senseless."

Let's Roll Tobacco owner Henry Vitella opened his store in July 2010. With just one RYO Filling Machine, Vitella said he soon realized the need for two. Each $31,000 machine is capable of turning out a carton of cigarettes in less than 10 minutes.

How's business?

"Crazy," Vitella said, estimating the store gets about two or three new customers every day.

Let's Roll only sells pipe tobacco for use in the automated cigarette roller.

"If they make pipe tobacco the same price as cigarette tobacco, I'm out of business," Vitella said.

He said he disagrees with numerous points of the notice issued by the Michigan Department of Treasury, including statements his store is making cigarettes and selling them to customers.

"They say we're manufacturing the cigarettes, but we're renting the machine to the customer," Vitella said.

Vitella bought his machines from RYO Machine Rental LLC of Girard, Ohio.

The company, owned by Phil Accordino, sued the state of Michigan after the notices were sent to smoke shops. According to Accordino, the state is violating a federal temporary restraining order that barred the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau from regulating the machines for personal use.

Nationwide, the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau reports the amount of pipe tobacco produced increased by 17.3 million pounds from 2008 to 2010, while the amount of roll-your-own cigarette tobacco produced dropped by 14.6 million pounds in that same period.

With increased popularity of pipe tobacco, thanks to the convenience of automated rolling machines, federal regulators also are looking to create tighter distinctions between pipe tobacco and roll-your-own tobacco."

May 14, 2011

Source:http://www.battlecreekenquirer.com/a...sey=nav%7Chead

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Monday, May 16, 2011

Anti-Meth Activists Win a Battle

This is always a great thing to hear in chemical dependency counseling! Anti-Meth activists gathered to help ban the chemical "pseudoephedrine" in Holdenville. It may be a small battle won, but its the little things that make up the big picture. These activists were most likely aided by a chemical dependency counselor as well. More on the story...

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"Staff and wire reports

Editor's note: Associated Press issued a correction to this story early Monday.  The Holdenville city council unanimously passed an ordinance requiring a prescription for the dry tablet form of medicines containing pseudoephedrine. Consumers can still purchase liquid or gel caps without a prescription.

HOLDENVILLE, Oklahoma -- A Claremore anti-meth activist has won a victory.  David Starkey has convinced the small Oklahoma town of Holdenville to ban the sale of pseudoephedrine, a key ingredient in the production of meth.

Starkey says he wants the drug banned as a way to protect innocent victims harmed by meth addiction. He says he hopes other cities also enact the ban.

Starkey says he can lobby individual communities to pass similar bans, a step the Legislature hasn't taken in its own effort to combat methamphetamine.

Starkey has the backing of the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, which says the ban will slow meth production.

Source: http://www.newson6.com/story/14649237/claremore-anti-meth-activist-wins-victo...

The Associated Press contributed to this report."

 

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Friday, May 13, 2011

Ron Paul Legalizing Hemp

This is a very controversal subject within the chemical dependency counseling community, but we generally maintain the choice to not legalize marijuana growing at home. I want to simply present this bill that Ron Paul has just recently introduced to legalize marijuana. Whether you disagree or not, here...

**********Ron Paul Introducing the Bill***********

"Mr. Speaker, I rise to introduce the Industrial Hemp Farming Act. The Industrial Hemp Farming Act requires the federal government to respect state laws allowing the growing of industrial hemp.

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Nine States--Hawaii, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, Vermont, and West Virginia--allow industrial hemp production or research in accord with state laws. However, federal law is standing in the way of farmers in these states growing what may be a very profitable crop. Because of current federal law, all hemp included in products sold in the United States must be imported instead of being grown by American farmers.

Since 1970, the federal Controlled Substances Act's inclusion of industrial hemp in the schedule one definition of marijuana has prohibited American farmers from growing industrial hemp despite the fact that industrial hemp has such a low content of THC (the psychoactive chemical in the related marijuana plant) that nobody can be psychologically affected by consuming hemp. Federal law concedes the safety of industrial hemp by allowing it to be legally imported for use as food.

The United States is the only industrialized nation that prohibits industrial hemp cultivation. The Congressional Research Service has noted that hemp is grown as an established agricultural commodity in approximately 30 nations in Europe, Asia, North America, and South America. The Industrial Hemp Farming Act will relieve this unique restriction on American farmers and allow them to grow industrial hemp in accord with state law.

Industrial hemp is a crop that was grown legally throughout the United States for most of our nation's history. In fact, during World War II, the federal government actively encouraged American farmers to grow industrial hemp to help the war effort. The Department of Agriculture even produced a film "Hemp for Victory'' encouraging the plant's cultivation.

In recent years, the hemp plant has been put to many popular uses in foods and in industry. Grocery stores sell hemp seeds and oil as well as food products containing oil and seeds from the hemp plant. Industrial hemp is also included in consumer products such as paper, cloths, cosmetics, carpet, and door frames of cars. Hemp has even been used in alternative automobile fuel.

It is unfortunate that the federal government has stood in the way of American farmers competing in the global industrial hemp market. Indeed, the founders of our nation, some of whom grew hemp, would surely find that federal restrictions on farmers growing a safe and profitable crop on their own land are inconsistent with the constitutional guarantee of a limited, restrained federal government. Therefore, I urge my colleagues to stand up for American farmers and cosponsor the Industrial Hemp Farming Act."

Read more: http://www.drugs-forum.com/forum/showthread.php?t=160078#ixzz1MGbzQYN1

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Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Real Bath Salt Makers are Upset

Recently there has been a growing threat in the chemical dependency counseling and addiction physiology community. That threat is Bath Salts. I've done articles on them in the past and their aweful effects, but now they are starting to effect real Bath Salt creators! The real Bath Salt creators are upset because they are now looked at as some banned "legal highs"! More on the story...

"Salem, MO - Bath Salts have been in the news lately. Overdoses and deaths from the synthetic designer drug have recently prompted Alton, Granite City and St. Charles County to ban bath salts.

State lawmakers and those with a counselor degree, in both Missouri and illinois are proposing to outlaw them. The city of Salem, Missouri is talking about it as well. But one Salem man says there's a lot of confusion about bath salts that's hurting his business.

In the heart of Salem, Missouri is a store with a sign that reads, "The coolest shop around." Crossroads Corner owner, John Watson, takes pride in his products.

"Oils, fragrance oils, you got your bath salts, incense," Watson said. But wait, did Watson say bath salts?

He makes his own bath salts too. His product line is called Astral Sea, sold in 100 stores nationwide and on the Internet. His are the kind you bathe in. That's the only use.

So imagine his surprise when the City of Salem wanted to ban bath salts.

"It's been an unusual experience," Watson said.

Nowadays, there are two bath salts. One variety claims to be, but is not. It's a designer synthetic drug marketed as bath salts. The powder has effects similar to cocaine and meth and priced about the same.

Then there are your old fashioned bath salts. But with all the negative press lately, Watson's sales took a dive. He points out proposed state legislation making "bath salts" Illegal.

"They're just saying bath salts and that's scaring people," Watson said.

Watson says he knows his bath salts can't possibly be banned, but he says it almost happened because the drug's name confused people in the City of Salem too.

"One of the alderman was kind enough to admit that originally that's what they thought," he said.

Salem Mayor Gary Brown says the city has no comment about the proposed bath salt ban, except to say that it's on hold until the city sees what the state does.

People from all around have heard Watson sells bath salts, they've asked for them, but they came in looking for the drug.

"I look at them and say I don't carry that. What I carry is bath salts, the kind grandmother uses, the stuff mom had in a jar, that's the stuff I carry," said Watson.

Watson's bath salts are made with all natural salts and oils, with added fragrances. The street bath salts contains MDPV, a potent psychoactive drug."

Source: http://www.ksdk.com/news/article/258...bath-salts-ban

If you are interested in getting your counselor degree extremely fast to become a chemical dependency counselor, then feel FREE to visit CentaurUniversity.com!

 

Monday, May 9, 2011

New Border Posts

These are the kinds of things that a chemical dependency counselor likes to see. Better security from drug importations and more posts on the border to make that happen. The article below has some interesting stories and gives more insight to the new secuity being put into play. Also at the bootom of the article remember to check out chemical dependency counseling and addiction physiology on our website!

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"LAREDO, Texas (AP) — Federal authorities on Friday opened seven new inspection booths for commercial traffic heading north to the U.S. from Mexico, nearly doubling capacity at the bridge that's the busiest commercial port on America's southwestern border — and a prime smuggling corridor for drug gangs.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection says the new posts will ease wait times on Laredo's World Trade International Bridge, where more than 4,800 18-wheelers rumble into American territory daily, or one about every 18 seconds.

The $5.4 million project also bolsters inspection of big-rigs that smugglers can cram with loads of cocaine, marijuana or amphetamines hidden among regular cargo. It includes two additional new lanes for "secondary inspection," an area with sniffer dogs where customs agents can provide extra screening.

"Laredo is about tractor-trailers, it's about commercial vehicles, so that's the environment the smuggler's going to try to work within," said Jerry Robinette, special agent in charge of U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement's San Antonio office, which oversee all of South Texas.

Laredo Mayor Raul Salinas joined his cross-border counterpart from Nuevo Laredo, Benjamin Galvan Gomez, and a gaggle of federal, state and local officials, who stood in front of the new blue-and-white inspection booths and cut a dark ribbon stretched symbolically across lanes marked "Fast 2" and "Fast 3." All around, thunderous and pungent lines of trucks waited to pass through the border.

Less than a minute later, a truck hauling water heaters rolled forward, the first to go through one of the new booths. Its driver, wearing a cap with a script "NY" on it, held out his passport in one hand and a copy of his cargo manifest in the other. He was taken aback when a half dozen of the grinning dignitaries reached up to shake his hand.

The bridge links top Mexican cities, including the northern industrial hub of Monterrey, with U.S. Interstate 35, a key artery for a highway system stretching across America. The expansion that broke ground in November 2009 is the bridge's first major upgrade since it opened in 2000 and increases its commercial inspection stations from eight to 15.

Laredo handles more commercial traffic than any other crossing point along the roughly 2,000-mile Mexico-U.S. border. The U.S. Department of Transportation says 60 percent of all truck traffic between Texas and Mexico passes through this city alone.

Exclusively for commercial vehicles, the World Trade bridge is Laredo's top commercial gateway, although two other local bridges handle some commercial traffic. Most of the 18-wheelers using it travel short distances between warehouses in Laredo and those across the Rio Grande in Nuevo Laredo. Long-haul trucks in Mexico and the U.S. head to the holding areas and drop off their cargo for the short hop across the border.

The bridge is so congested that customs can fully screen only a fraction of the trucks rolling through. That makes it a coveted drug-smuggling route, one so valuable that Laredo is at the center of a years-long turf war between the Gulf Cartel, which has traditionally controlled the area, and the Zetas, founded by Mexican military deserters who once served as Gulf Cartel enforcers but now run their own syndicate.

David Aguilar, deputy commissioner of Customs and Border Protection, traveled from Washington for Friday's ceremony. He said processing trucks faster won't make it easier for drugs to slip over the border but instead will streamline the process to better spot illegal loads.

"What we're looking for is that less than 1 percent that will take advantage of this type of flow for illicit activities," he said.

A brutal drug war has killed more than 34,600 people in Mexico since President Felipe Calderon announced a major offensive against traffickers when he took office in December 2006.

Monica Weisberg Stewart, chairwoman of immigration and land ports of entry for the Texas Border Coalition, said violence in Mexico has reduced traffic to and from that country in some border areas, but that wait times remain high because U.S. agents have responded to less-crowded crossings by reducing staffing. Her group represents border city mayors, county judges and economic development commissions.

"Congestion is huge," said Weisberg Stewart, who owns a business in McAllen, in the Rio Grande Valley southeast of Laredo. "It doesn't make any sense. If you have less people coming over, you should have less congestion."

Customs has not announced immediate staffing increases to ensure the new Laredo booths are fully occupied — but plans to add agents over time.

"It's similar to a Wal-Mart," Weisberg Stewart said. "You can have all these lanes. But the most frustrating part is you only have one or two open and there's all these lines backing up.""

Source: http://www.ktvb.com/news/business/121373624.html

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Thursday, May 5, 2011

Healthy/Balanced Lifestyle

A chemical dependency counselor will not only help you find an addiction cure, but will also provide tips to live healthier all together. Below I have listed a couple tips that Mayo Clinic have found to be very effective at providing a healthy lifestyle :)...

"Eat fruit daily: Fruit offers a great source of antioxidants, which may help prevent cancer, cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer's disease and macular degeneration. The berry family — blueberries, blackberries, raspberries, strawberries and cranberries — are good sources of antioxidants. So are cherries, oranges, and prunes.

Make high-fiber foods a staple: Whole grains, beans, fruits and vegetables are good sources, as is cereal with psyllium, which may help reduce low-density lipoprotein (LDL), also known as "bad'' cholesterol.

Take a brisk walk: Brisk walking improves cardiovascular and bone health, according to addiction physiology. Try to walk at least 30 minutes a day at a moderately intense level.

Make stretching and strength building a habit: Regular stretching and strengthening can enhance mobility and help prevent falls.

Pursue yoga and tai chi: These gentle mind-body practices combine five important types of exercise — aerobic, strength training, core stability, flexibility and balance. Research suggests they help reduce blood pressure, reduce stress and improve mood and sleep.

Be optimistic: Research indicates that positive thinkers are more likely to feel better and live longer.

Develop an attitude of gratitude: Be thankful for every experience — good and bad — and recognize each is an opportunity to learn and grow.

Try volunteering: Research shows meaningful volunteer activities promote emotional and mental well-being.

Enjoy a pet: A small but growing body of research suggests pet ownership benefits health in several ways. One study found that among those who had a heart attack, dog owners were significantly more likely to be alive a year later than were those without a dog. Dog owners benefit from regularly walking Fido, too. They are less likely to be obese than non-dog owners.

Improve relationships: Take conscious steps to forgive those closest to you — and yourself. Forgiveness is associated with improved mood and lower stress."

Source:http://www.mayoclinic.org/news2011-mchi/6263.html?rss-feedid=1

If you are interested in getting your counselor degree extremely fast to become a chemical dependency counselor, then feel FREE to visit CentaurUniversity.com!

 

 

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Undiscussed on the Drug War

Chemical dependency counseling and a chemical dependency counselor could confirm you that the drug was either has failed or is failing at the moment in America. The article below is an interesting one about the racial effects of the drug war and the nightmare it has created. There are some biases in the article, but non the less it is interesting and relevant...

"The Failed Drug War Has Created a Human Rights Nightmare -- How Can This Happen in Our Country and Go Virtually Undiscussed?

So much about our racial reality today is little more than a mirage. The promised land of racial equality wavers, quivers just out of our reach in the barren desert of our new, "colorblind" political landscape. It looks so good from a distance: Barack Obama, our nation's first black president, standing in the Rose Garden behind a podium looking handsome, dignified, and in charge. Flip the channel and there's Michelle Obama, a brown-skinned woman, digging a garden in the backyard of the White House -- not as a servant or a maid -- but as the first lady, schooling the nation on better health and the need to be good stewards of our planet. Flip the channel again and there's the whole Obama family exiting Air Force One, waving to the crowd, descending the flight of stairs -- a gorgeous black family living in the White House, ruling America, cheered by the world.

Drive a few blocks from the White House and you find the Other America. You find you're still in the desert, dying of thirst, wondering what wrong turn was made, and how you managed to miss the promised land, though you reached for it with all your might.

A vast new racial undercaste now exists in America, though their plight is rarely mentioned on the evening news. Obama won't mention it; the Tea Party won't mention it; media pundits would rather talk about anything else. The members of the undercaste are largely invisible to those of us who have jobs, live in decent neighborhoods, and zoom around on freeways, passing by the virtual and literal prisons in which they live.

But here are the facts. There are more African American adults under correctional control today -- in prison or jail, on probation or parole -- than were enslaved in 1850, a decade before the Civil War began. In major urban areas, like Chicago -- Obama's hometown -- the majority of working-age African American men have criminal records are thus subject to legalized discrimination for the rest of their lives. Millions of people in the United States, primarily poor people of color, are denied the very rights supposedly won in the Civil Rights Movement: the right to vote, the right to serve on juries, and the right to be free from discrimination in employment, housing, access to education, and public benefits. They have been branded "criminals" and "felons" and now find themselves relegated to a permanent, second-class status for the rest of their lives. They live in a parallel social universe, the Other America.

We, as a nation, are in deep denial about how this came to pass. On the rare occasions when the existence of "them" -- the others, the ghetto dwellers, those locked up and locked out -- is publicly acknowledged, standard excuses are trotted out for their condition. We're told black culture, bad schools, poverty, and broken homes are to blame. Almost no one admits: We declared war. We declared a war on them. We declared a war on the most vulnerable people in our society and then blamed them for the wreckage.

And yet that is precisely what we did. We declared a war known as the War on Drugs. The war has driven the quintupling of our prison population in a few short decades. The vast majority of the startling increase in incarceration in America is traceable to the arrest and imprisonment of poor people of color for non-violent, drug-related offenses. Families have been torn apart, young lives shattered, as parents grieve the loss of loved ones to the system, often hiding their grief under a cloak of shame. Politicians claim that the enemy in this war in is a thing -- "drugs" -- not a group of people, but the facts prove otherwise.

African Americans have been admitted to prison on drug charges at a rate up to 57 times higher than whites. In some states, 80 to 90 percent of all drug offenders sent to prison have been African American. The rate of Latino imprisonment has been staggering as well. Although the majority of illegal drug users and dealers are white, three-fourths of all people imprisoned for drug offenses have been black and Latino.

Studies have consistently shown that people of all colors use and sell drugs at remarkably similar rates, yet this war has been waged almost exclusively in poor, ghetto communities. For those who are tempted to imagine that the goal of the war has been to root out violent offenders or drug kingpins, think again. Federal funding flows to those state and local law enforcement agencies that boost dramatically the sheer volume of drug arrests; it's a numbers game. Agencies don't get rewarded for bringing down drug bosses or arresting violent offenders. They're rewarded in cash for arresting people en masse. Ghetto communities are swept for the "low hanging fruit" -- which generally means young people hanging out the street corner, walking to school or the subway, or driving around with their friends. They're stopped and searched for any reason or no reason at all. In 2005, for example, 4 out of 5 drug arrests were for possession; only one of five for sales. And in the 1990's -- the period of the most drastic expansion of the drug war -- nearly 80 percent of the increase in drug arrests were for marijuana possession, a drug less harmful than alcohol and tobacco and at least as prevalent in middle class white communities and on college campuses, as it is in poor communities of color.

The drug war, though, has been waged almost exclusively in poor, ghetto communities. It is here, in the poverty-stricken, racially segregated ghettos, where the War on Poverty has been abandoned and factory jobs have disappeared, that the drug war has been waged with the greatest ferocity. SWAT teams are deployed here; buy-bust operations are concentrated here; drug raids of schools and housing projects occur here; stop-and-frisk operations are conducted on the streets. If the tactics of the drug war were employed in middle class white neighborhoods or college campuses there would be public outrage; the war would end overnight. But here in the ghetto, the stops, searches, sweeps, and mass arrests are treated like an accepted fact of life, like the separate water fountains of an earlier era. By the millions, people are arrested, marched into courtrooms in shackles, and when released, they're stripped of their right to vote and their right to serve on juries. Discrimination against them is officially legal. Barred from public housing and denied even food stamps, millions find they are deemed unworthy of the nation's care or concern. Jobless, hungry, without shelter, and riddled with shame, they're trapped in the desert wasteland. The majority of those released from prison return within months of their release, unable to make it on the outside. The racial mirage wavers in the distance, mockingly.

It is impossible to imagine anything like this happening if the enemy in the drug war were white. Economist Glenn Loury made this observation in his book The Anatomy of Racial Inequality. He noted that it is nearly impossible to imagine anything remotely similar to mass incarceration happening to young white men. Can we envision a system that would enforce drug laws almost exclusively against young white men and largely ignore drug crime among young black men? Can we imagine large majorities of young white men being rounded up for minor drug offenses, placed under the control of the criminal justice system, labeled felons, and then subjected to a lifetime of discrimination, scorn and exclusion? Can we imagine this happening while most black men landed decent jobs or trotted off to college? No, we cannot. If such a thing occurred, it would occasion a most profound reflection about what had gone wrong, not with them, but us -- all of us. It would never be dismissed with the thought that white men were simply reaping what they have sown. The large-scale criminalization of white men would disturb us to the core.

So the critical questions become: What disturbs us? What upsets us? What seems anomalous? What is contrary to expectation? Or more to the point: Whom do we care about?

An answer to the last question may be found by considering the drastically different manner that we, as a nation, responded to drunk driving in the mid-1980s, as compared to crack cocaine. During the 1980s, at the same time the "crack epidemic" was making headlines, a broad-based grassroots movement was under way to address the widespread and sometimes fatal problem of drunk driving. Unlike the drug war, which was initiated by political elites long before ordinary people identified drug crime as an issue of extraordinary concern, the movement to crack down on drunk drivers was a bottom-up movement, led most notably by mothers whose families were shattered by deaths caused by drunk driving.

Media coverage of the movement peaked in 1988, when a drunk driver traveling the wrong way on Interstate 71 in Kentucky caused a head-on collision with a school bus. Twenty-seven people died and dozens more were injured in the ensuing fire. The tragic accident, known as the Carrollton bus disaster, was one of the worst in U.S. history. In the aftermath, several parents of the victims became actively involved in Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), and one became its national president. Throughout the 1980s, drunk driving was a regular topic in the media, and the term "designated driver" became part of the American lexicon.

At the close of the decade, dunk drivers were responsible for approximately 22,000 deaths annually, while overall alcohol-related deaths were close to 100,000 a year. By contrast, during the same time period, there were no prevalence statistics at all on crack, much less crack-related deaths. In fact, the number of deaths related to all illegal drugs combined was tiny compared to the number of deaths caused by drunk drivers. The total of all drug-related deaths due to AIDS, drug overdose, or the violence associated with the illegal drug trade, was estimated at 21,000 annually -- less than the number of deaths directly caused by drunk drivers, and a small fraction of the number of alcohol-related deaths that occur every year.

In response to growing concern -- fueled by advocacy groups such as MADD and by the media coverage of drunk-driving fatalities -- most states adopted tougher laws to punish drunk driving. Numerous states now have some type of mandatory sentencing for this offense -- typically two days in jail for a first offense and two to ten days for a second offense. New laws governing crack cocaine were passed at the same time as legislatures were "getting tough" on drunk drivers. But notice the contrast: While drunk driving results in a few days in prison, possession of a tiny amount of crack carries a mandatory minimum sentence of five years in federal prison. In fact, some people are serving life sentences for minor drug offenses. In Harmelin v. Michigan, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a sentence of life imprisonment for a defendant with no prior convictions who tried to sell 23 ounces of crack cocaine. The Court concluded that life imprisonment was not "cruel and unusual punishment" in violation of the Eighth Amendment, despite the fact that no other developed country in the world imposes life imprisonment for a first time drug offense.

The vastly different sentences afforded drunk drivers and drug offenders speaks volumes regarding who is viewed as disposable -- someone to be purged from the body politic -- and who is not. Drunk drivers are predominately white and male. White men comprised 78 percent of the arrests for drunk driving when new mandatory minimums for the offense were being adopted. They are generally charged with misdemeanors and typically receive sentences involving fines, license suspension, and community service. Although drunk driving carriers are far greater risk of violent death than the use or sale of illegal drugs, the societal response to drunk drivers has generally emphasized keeping the person functional and in society, while attempting to respond to the dangerous behavior through treatment and counseling. People charged with drug offenses, though, are disproportionately poor people of color. They are typically charged with felonies and sentenced to prison. If and when they're released, they become members of the undercaste, no longer locked up, but locked out -- for the rest of their lives.

This is not a problem begging merely for policy reform. Much more is required of us. If we fail, as a nation, to awaken to the basic humanity of all those cycling in and out of prison today, and if we fail to commit ourselves to ending mass incarceration, future generations will judge us harshly. A human rights nightmare is occurring on our watch.

We must do more than bring water to those stranded in the desert. We must act with courage and tell the truth about what is happening in the Other America. In the words of Cornell West, "justice is what love looks like in public." If we aim to show love, we must be willing to work for justice."

Michelle Alexander, 
Sojourners
April 28, 2011

Michelle Alexander is the author of The New Jim Crow.

Source: http://www.alternet.org/story/150785

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If you are interested in getting your counselor degree extremely fast to become a chemical dependency counselor, then feel FREE to visit CentaurUniversity.com!

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Pot Cupcakes at School

All I can say is....Why? 

Chemical dependency counseling or a chemical dependency counselor will rarely see things like this. It's strange and almost sick, the extent that Dealers will go to, to get people addicted or "wanting to find out more" about marijuana...especially in a highschool! Heres more on the story..

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"Police have arrested a drug dealer they say baked marijuana into cupcakes and sold them at Miami high schools.


The baker's identity was not released. Police said the chocolate cupcakes were wrapped in foil. The baker was buying more than $2,000 worth of pot a week, though not all of it was used in the cupcakes.

Police Chief Orlando Martinez de Castro said the cupcakes are an easier way to disguise drugs from police because the only way to tell is by eating them.

Friday's arrest was part of a city-wide drug sweep that netted 11 suspects."

Source: http://goerie.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20110501/APN/110501056

If you are interested in getting your counselor degree extremely fast to become a chemical dependency counselor, then feel FREE to visit CentaurUniversity.com!