NORML is the pioneer, the grand patron and founder of the marijuana
policy reform movement in America. We are still here and by your side,
and we are needed now, more than ever.
Some have said that as our nation moves towards medicalization,
decriminalization, or legalization, our tasks will be diminished, our
duties lessened, our essence threatened.
The truth is that it is just the opposite.
Now, with cannabis reforms about to blossom in city after city, from
small communities to large counties, our nation needs a respected
consumer advocacy group more than ever.
Our nation needs a lobby such as the new NORML, firmly planted, and
nationally respected, which will protect the rights of cannabis
consumers, as no one else has in the past or can in the future.
Our nation needs a new NORML, which ensures that the distribution of
cannabis to anyone is universally safe, readily accessible and fairly
affordable to everyone.
Our nation needs a new NORML that ensures that the laws which
legislatures pass favor freedom and fairness, not moneymakers or
mercenaries.
Our nation needs a new NORML that ensures patients have access to
safe medicine, consumers acquire healthy products, and distribution
mechanisms protect gender, age, and race, available not just to
corporate conglomerates but individual entrepreneurs.
The new NORML today contains a NORML Women’s Alliance representing
the power of feminism and professionalism, bringing passion and gender
diversity to the cause of personal freedom and individual choice.
The new NORML brings vast youth advocacy to the table, with hundreds
of chapters in 50 states, young men and women fighting with their heart
and soul to ensure scholarships are not revoked, driving privileges are
not taken away, and jobs are not lost because they make legal decisions
to use cannabis responsibly.
The new NORML will bring activists and academicians, economists and
entrepreneurs, to political forums, explaining how justly taxing
cannabis legally today can stop the bleeding of state, city and village
budgets tomorrow.
The new NORML will still need and provide the national canvas with a
network of criminal defense attorneys to represent clients who are
wrongly arrested and unjustly prosecuted, from patients with medical
conditions to adult drivers illegally stopped.
The new NORML needs to remind Americans that decriminalization in 18
states means we still have a ways to go in 32 others, where nearly a
million Americans a year still go to jail for consuming cannabis.
Thus, the new NORML needs to remind everyone that apathy and inertia
has no room for intrusion; that our advocacy must still be engaged, that
our voices still be heard.
The new NORML thus needs to blend innovative social media tools to
drive activists with initiatives from coast to coast and in community
after community. With hundreds of thousands of followers on Facebook,
and millions of cannabis consumers living and supporting our cause all
across America, our word must be spread on the web and throughout the
country.
We must remind Americans everywhere that it is unjust and
unfair for adults consuming cannabis privately and personally to get
arrested anywhere, anytime, or in any place.
The new NORML needs to be advocates not just for patients who want
access to safe medicine and fair distribution systems, but adults who
demand the right to responsible use along with just access for
righteous, recreational use, needing no apologies for exercising their
individual sovereignty openly and freely.
The new NORML also needs to be advocates who rectify the injustices
of past decades, for individuals whose futures were destroyed by a drug
war that failed to do anything but ruin good lives with bad laws.
The new NORML needs to marshal public policy so that the laws are
changed everywhere not in the next few decades, but in the next few
years. To achieve national reform, we need to harness the energy and
network of drug policy reform organizations throughout this country. We
need to speak with a common voice and universal message.
The message to be shared and the story to be told is not just that
prohibition was wrong all along, or that the drug war has been a
financial and moral failure. That is a past we have learned all too
well.
The message for the new NORML is to state that Americans citizens
have always come to support equal civil liberties for all, from women to
African Americans, to our friends in the gay and lesbian community.
After decades of pain, that morning has come for cannabis consumers. The
new NORML will celebrate the future, not condemn the past.
For 40 years, NORML has been on the side of those who embraced
individual choice and the responsible use of cannabis, as an extension
of personal freedom.
Now, more than ever, the new NORML will remain by your side in order
to ensure that as cannabis is distributed and disseminated to consumers
from state to state, or coast to coast, it becomes readily accessible,
equitably affordable and universally safe.
Thank you,
Chair, NORML Board of Directors
NORML Blog
-
A Vision for a New NORML
February 28, 2013 A Message from the Chair of NORML’s Board of Directors, Norm Kent:
NORML is the pioneer, the grand patron and founder of the marijuana policy reform movement in America. We are still here and by your side, and we are needed now, more than ever.
Some have said that as our nation moves towards medicalization, decriminalization, or legalization, our tasks will be diminished, our duties lessened, our essence threatened.
The truth is that it is just the opposite.
Now, with cannabis reforms about to blossom in city after city, from small communities to large counties, our nation needs a respected consumer advocacy group more than ever.
Our nation needs a lobby such as the new NORML, firmly planted, and nationally respected, which will protect the rights of cannabis consumers, as no one else has in the past or can in the future.
Our nation needs a new NORML, which ensures that the distribution of cannabis to anyone is universally safe, readily accessible and fairly affordable to everyone.
Our nation needs a new NORML that ensures that the laws which legislatures pass favor freedom and fairness, not moneymakers or mercenaries.
Our nation needs a new NORML that ensures patients have access to safe medicine, consumers acquire healthy products, and distribution mechanisms protect gender, age, and race, available not just to corporate conglomerates but individual entrepreneurs.
The new NORML today contains a NORML Women’s Alliance representing the power of feminism and professionalism, bringing passion and gender diversity to the cause of personal freedom and individual choice.
The new NORML brings vast youth advocacy to the table, with hundreds of chapters in 50 states, young men and women fighting with their heart and soul to ensure scholarships are not revoked, driving privileges are not taken away, and jobs are not lost because they make legal decisions to use cannabis responsibly.
The new NORML will bring activists and academicians, economists and entrepreneurs, to political forums, explaining how justly taxing cannabis legally today can stop the bleeding of state, city and village budgets tomorrow.
The new NORML will still need and provide the national canvas with a network of criminal defense attorneys to represent clients who are wrongly arrested and unjustly prosecuted, from patients with medical conditions to adult drivers illegally stopped.
The new NORML needs to remind Americans that decriminalization in 18 states means we still have a ways to go in 32 others, where nearly a million Americans a year still go to jail for consuming cannabis.
Thus, the new NORML needs to remind everyone that apathy and inertia has no room for intrusion; that our advocacy must still be engaged, that our voices still be heard.
The new NORML thus needs to blend innovative social media tools to drive activists with initiatives from coast to coast and in community after community. With hundreds of thousands of followers on Facebook, and millions of cannabis consumers living and supporting our cause all across America, our word must be spread on the web and throughout the country. We must remind Americans everywhere that it is unjust and unfair for adults consuming cannabis privately and personally to get arrested anywhere, anytime, or in any place.
The new NORML needs to be advocates not just for patients who want access to safe medicine and fair distribution systems, but adults who demand the right to responsible use along with just access for righteous, recreational use, needing no apologies for exercising their individual sovereignty openly and freely.
The new NORML also needs to be advocates who rectify the injustices of past decades, for individuals whose futures were destroyed by a drug war that failed to do anything but ruin good lives with bad laws.
The new NORML needs to marshal public policy so that the laws are changed everywhere not in the next few decades, but in the next few years. To achieve national reform, we need to harness the energy and network of drug policy reform organizations throughout this country. We need to speak with a common voice and universal message.
The message to be shared and the story to be told is not just that prohibition was wrong all along, or that the drug war has been a financial and moral failure. That is a past we have learned all too well.
The message for the new NORML is to state that Americans citizens have always come to support equal civil liberties for all, from women to African Americans, to our friends in the gay and lesbian community. After decades of pain, that morning has come for cannabis consumers. The new NORML will celebrate the future, not condemn the past.
For 40 years, NORML has been on the side of those who embraced individual choice and the responsible use of cannabis, as an extension of personal freedom.
Now, more than ever, the new NORML will remain by your side in order to ensure that as cannabis is distributed and disseminated to consumers from state to state, or coast to coast, it becomes readily accessible, equitably affordable and universally safe.
Thank you,
Norm Kent
Chair, NORML Board of Directors
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