Tuesday, April 7, 2015


The Fix: Addiction and Recovery, Straight Up
Best of the Week:
March 28–April 3
COMING UP IN THE FIX// 10 Drug Myths, Busted * Drugs and Comics—My adventures at Comic-Con * Oxytocin as Addiction Treatment * Interview with Comedian Craig Gass * Leaving My Husband * Don't Tell Me When the Next Meeting Is * 10 Reasons Sober People Are Attractive * PLUS: Other incisive articles
REAL TV// Baltimore: The Heroin Capital of the U.S.
The gritty city that was the real star of The Wire is now being plagued anew.
By Julia Beatty
CRIMINAL REHAB// Doors Stay Open on Family Rehab Empire Indicted for Fraud
Narco Freedom was indicted by the New York State Attorney's Office last year for milking approximately $40 million from Medicaid. But they're still open.
By Neville Elder
EXCLUSIVE// Starship to Sobriety
An exclusive interview with Grace Slick and her daughter China Isler, on the old days of active addiction, recovery, and the fact that they both have 17 years sober.
By Matthew Greenwald
TRANSFORMATION// Beyond Drug Busts and Binges
Once a "hopeless case," now a recovery coach helping struggling clients.
By Graeme Alford
CHILL PILLS// Are Painless Painkillers Possible?
There are about a dozen drugs being developed to replace addictive painkillers.
By Jeanene Swanson
 
BEST OF THE QUICK FIX
Christie: Marijuana Taxes Are 'Blood Money'
Country Singer Willie Nelson To Launch Marijuana Brand
Petco Pulls Dubious Dog 'Calming' Medicine With 13% Alcohol
Obama Commutes Sentences Of 22 Nonviolent Drug Offenders
NYPD Officer Admits to Attempted $200,000 Drug Deal
First Church Of Cannabis Flicks Off Indiana's Religious Freedom Law
COMMENT OF THE WEEK
Bad Business
This week, Neville Elder asked why Narco Freedom, a company indicted for milking $40 million from Medicaid, isstill open. Readers shared in Elder's outrage:
Yep, and whose pockets are being lined on the backs of the down and out people who could really use assistance? Homeless and newly released convicts who exist in extreme poverty, and are some of the most stigmatized people of this country? They haven't a fighting chance. Wow. Come on, there's not an ounce of empathy, let alone a conscience in this organization.

-JustAcat

Thursday, April 2, 2015



Obama Decision Frees 22 Drug Offenders From Federal Prison

/BY JOIN TOGETHER STAFF

April 1st, 2015

Twenty-two drug offenders serving time in federal prison will be freed, the White House announced Tuesday. President Obama’s decision to commute the prisoners’ sentences builds on “his commitment to address instances of unfairness in sentencing,” White House Counsel Neil Eggelston said.




Eight of the inmates had received life sentences, Bloomberg reports. Many of the 22 inmates would have already served their time under current drug laws and sentencing policies, Eggleston noted in a blog post.




In a letter sent this week to those receiving commutations, President Obama wrote that he believed in their abilities “to prove the doubters wrong.”




“Remember that you have the capacity to make good choices,” Obama wrote. “By doing so, you will affect not only your own life, but those close to you. You will also influence, through your example, the possibility that others in your circumstances get their own second chance in the future.”




The movement toward drug sentencing reform has gained bipartisan support.




In April 2014, the U.S. Sentencing Commission voted to reduce the base offense for criminals caught with various amounts of drugs. Last June, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said the new sentencing guidelines will make the federal prison system more fair to minorities, and will reduce taxpayer costs.




In July, the commission voted to reduce terms for low-level drug traffickers who are already incarcerated. The vote would allow more than 46,000 drug offenders to be eligible for early release from prison.
 Women for Sobriety, Inc.
Sobering Thoughts, January 2015 Edition

Hello WFS Friends,
Please find attached to this email the electronic version on a PDF of the January 2015 Edition of Sobering Thoughts newsletter.  The attachment is located at the bottom of the email.  (It's been a long winter... it still feels like January!)

We would welcome your financial support for our free e-newsletter.  Please visit our catalog site to make a contribution in support of all the great articles that are made available: http://www.wfscatalog.org/Donations_c16.htm

Thank you for all your continued support!

Warm regards,
Becky Fenner, WFS Director

Email:  newlife@nni.com   *   Tel215-536-8026   *   Fax:  215-538-9026
http://www.womenforsobriety.org   *   http://www.wfscatalog.org
Moms!
Lorelei will be discussing the subjects of helping vs. enabling
17 years ago Lorelie Rozzano took the most difficult walk of her life – through the doors of a local treatment centre. She found in recovery what she’d been searching for in alcohol and drugs. Growing up in an alcoholic home she understands first-hand, the importance of a healthy family system. Lorelie is an author, mother, wife, daughter, grandmother, foster parent, counselor, sister and friend. Lorelie works at the Edgewood Treatment Center in Nanaimo, BC and is a guest blogger for Addiction Campuses and The Addicts Mom. She has written a series of books on addiction – Jagged Little Edges, Jagged Little Lies and Gracie’s Secret (A book for children who are growing up with addiction) Her passion is to help others recover from the effects of Substance Use Disorder. She hopes the honesty found in her books and on her blog, will inspire addicts and their families to reach out for the help they so desperately need, and deserve. Lorelie wants people to know there is hope and she is telling...on addiction!
For more information on Lorelie Rozzano visit her blog atwww.jaggedlittleedges.com or find her on Face Book or Twitter.
In The Rooms Meeting Thursday 7pm ET. Meetings cannot be accessed via phone or tablet. Must use Firefox or Google Chrome as your browser. Please join us! 
   

Tuesday, March 31, 2015


The Fix: Addiction and Recovery, Straight Up
Best of the Week:
March 20–27
COMING UP IN THE FIX// Drug Treatment Moguls * Oxycontin * Peace, Love and Heroin in Upstate New York * Dance Therapy * 8 Drug Myths Busted * Eric Clapton *The Big Bang * Pro Voices * PLUS: Other incisive articles
REPARATIONS// The Long-Term Damage of the War on Drugs
You can't talk about ending the drug war without talking about restoring communities. But nobody is.
By Josiah M. Hesse
HOPELESS// The Myth of the Demon Drug
How findings from a big plywood box shaped our understanding of addiction.
By Dr. Bruce Alexander
BEEN THERE// From Homeless Drug Addict Inmate to Family Man
Stephen Sutler went from homelessness, drug addiction and prison to success as a spiritual, working and family man in recovery.
By Seth Ferranti
Q&A// "The Addict's Mom:" What Do You Do When Your Child Is an Addict?
The Fix Q&A with Barbara Theodosiou, founder of "The Addict's Mom," on how to take action when faced with every mother’s nightmare.
By John Lavitt
NO GOOD TREATMENT// The Hangover Club
All of these "morning-after instant Dr. Feelgood IV cures" remove what generations of evolution built in for our own good: consequences. 
By Jodi Sh. Doff
 
BEST OF THE QUICK FIX
Study Finds Zero-Tolerance Drug Policies In School Cause More Harm Than Good
More Russians Turning to Cheap, Dangerous Alcohol Alternatives
Death by Pot Candy: Multiple Fatalities in Colorado Linked to Marijuana Edibles
Three Drinks a Day Could Cause Liver Cancer
“F--- It” Reporter’s Pot Club Searched by Alaskan Police
Jon Hamm Checks Out of Rehab for Alcoholism
COMMENT OF THE WEEK
Collateral Damage
This week, Josiah M. Hesse questioned why we aren'tdoing more to repair the damage done by the drug war.Readers agreed with Hesse's gripes:
They tried prohibition against alcohol. People broke the law. Everyday citizens became criminals. Binge drinking increased. Then they tried to prohibit an intoxicating weed much less damaging than booze. Everyday citizens became criminals. People still smoked. What did we learn from the prohibition era? Nothing. It seems until the last few years. Go figure.

-Bob B.


The seminar you have all been waiting for is April 27th from 3-4:30pm at The Council of Southeast Pa. (Unit 12 Bailiwick Office Complex). Seating is limited, so email your reservations now. See attached flyer for details.

CAN I EXPUNGE MY CRIMINAL RECORDS?

Rick
Rick Petrolawicz, CRS
Volunteer Coordinator
The Council of Southeast Pennsylvania, Inc.
252 West Swamp Road, Unit 12
Doylestown, Pennsylvania 18901
(800) 221-6333 - 24 Hour Information Line


Prevention, Intervention & Addiction Recovery Solutions

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