By the advocacy of legalising drugs I will assume that you are talking about marijuana. Here in California those who wish to carry or otherwise purchase marijuana must also have a permit. In this case it is a medical 'card' signifying legality of usage. Growers must also keep detailed records of their business.
quoted from: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/ga te/archive/2003/05/22/worldviews.DTL
.
.
"It's one thing to rename french fries "freedom fries" in the dining halls of the U.S. Congress, but accusing France of having issued passports to officials of Saddam Hussein's regime so that they could leave Iraq is simply "unacceptable," French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin has warned. (Le Monde, http://www.lemonde.fr/article/0,5987,3222--320256-,00.html)
The passports allegation surfaced in The Washington Times earlier this month. Paris took it as another shot in a "disinformation campaign aimed at sullying France's image and misleading the public" as retribution for the Chirac government's opposition to Bush's Iraq policy. Now, Jean-David Levitte, France's ambassador to the United States, has sent a letter to the White House, the Pentagon, members of Congress and American newspaper and television-news editors asking them not to take part in a smear campaign that he believes can be traced to officials in the Bush administration."
By the advocacy of legalising drugs I will assume that you are talking about marijuana. Here in California those who wish to carry or otherwise purchase marijuana must also have a permit. In this case it is a medical 'card' signifying legality of usage. Growers must also keep detailed records of their business.
quoted from: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/ga te/archive/2003/05/22/worldviews.DTL
.
.
"It's one thing to rename french fries "freedom fries" in the dining halls of the U.S. Congress, but accusing France of having issued passports to officials of Saddam Hussein's regime so that they could leave Iraq is simply "unacceptable," French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin has warned. (Le Monde, http://www.lemonde.fr/article/0,5987,3222--320256- ,00.html)
The passports allegation surfaced in The Washington Times earlier this month. Paris took it as another shot in a "disinformation campaign aimed at sullying France's image and misleading the public" as retribution for the Chirac government's opposition to Bush's Iraq policy. Now, Jean-David Levitte, France's ambassador to the United States, has sent a letter to the White House, the Pentagon, members of Congress and American newspaper and television-news editors asking them not to take part in a smear campaign that he believes can be traced to officials in the Bush administration."