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Grey’s Anatomy Season 6 Episode 18: Suicide is Painless [Online Video]

Grey’s Anatomy Season 6 Episode 18 is entitled “Suicide is Painless”. The 18th installment of this series was aired at 9:00PM on ABC. Watching an episode online pales in comparison to watching it on a big screen tv. But what can you do when you are on the run? Or in the office during lunch break? Yes, you do not have any choice but to watch online. Fortunately for you, we have taken the liberty to provide you with a link (above and below) where you can watch the episode mentioned. Additionally, you can also find video links to former episodes of this series by doing a search at the top right corner of this website. If you have any encounter any problems doing so, simply contact us via the contact link above and we will do our best to help you out. Now without further ado, please check out the show and episode summary below. Grey’s Anatomy is a hospital drama that focuses on Meredith Grey (Ellen Pompeo), one of several first-year surgical interns, (now third year residents) at a Seattle, Wash., hospital. Along with her colleagues, Meredith struggles to maintain relationships while staying sharp at her new job. The� More professional roles and real lives of a diverse group of surgeons collide unexpectedly in this Golden Globe-winning ABC television drama. Here is the summary of the episode: Grey’s Anatomy Season 6 Episode 18 – Suicide is Painless Teddy’s patient seeks to end treatment and her life, she turns to Owen for help but it triggers memories of him at war and relationship with her. Callie and Arizona have a difference in opinion on what their future holds. Richard tries to adjust to his role as a surgeon. Watch Grey’s Anatomy Season 6 Episode 18 . If you found this post useful or you simply liked what you read, please subscribe via the subscription field below for free! The DWB team does its best to provide you with the latest information possible found in the internet. Whether be it sports, world or simply just the latest news buzz, we will provide it to you. However, sites that we link to are not our own so please use your discretion when visiting those sites. Nevertheless, we have checked them firsthand to make sure they are working fine. Grey’s Anatomy Season 6 Episode 18: Suicide is Painless [Online Video] is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

The Sarah Palin Pregnancy. What are the odds?

One of the arguments that I hear all of the time against the idea that Sarah faked her pregnancy is this one, “What are the odds that

The Dark Side of Katherine Heigl

Controversial, frequently absent Grey’s Anatomy cast member Katherine Heigl may be returning

UW Looking For Marijuana ‘Addicts’; Will Pay $150

Ever known someone who wanted help quitting pot? Me neither. ​ By Steve Elliott at Toke of the Town They might have an easier time finding unicorns. The University of Washington says it is looking for people who want to quit pot. The UW School of Social Work’s Innovative Programs Research Group is looking for 70 “marijuana-dependent adults” in the Puget Sound area to participate in a clinical research trial testing approaches for people who want to stop using cannabis, reports KING5.com. The university says research has shown that nearly 3.6 million Americans use pot on a daily basis. Unfortunately, UW then puts its reputation as a center of higher learning in serious danger by absurdly claiming that “between one-third and one-half of those are dependent.” I’d love to know where the University of Washington got those numbers, but since they seem to have only the most tenuous of connections to shared reality, I’m guessing they’re from the “pull fake statistics out your ass” school of thought, sub-variety “I’ll say anything to get one of those fat government NIDA grants.” “When people smoke marijuana they don’t intend to become dependent on it, but marijuana becomes pervasive over time,” said Cynthia Shaw, project director of what they’re calling the “Marijuana Counseling Project.” “People work hard in treatment programs, and many stop or reduce their marijuana use while in treatment but lose ground quickly once they leave treatment,” said Shaw, who obviously has very little real-world experience with — or, apparently, even casual knowledge of! — marijuana. What Shaw didn’t mention — and I’m sure it was just an “oversight,” umm hmm — was that nearly all those people in rehab programs “working so hard” to quit marijuana were forced into those programs under threat of being thrown in jail. The judge says “Go to Narcotics Anonymous and tell them you’re a pot addict, or else go to jail.” Bingo! Instant marijuana addicts! Works like a charm. In any event, the Marijuana Counseling Project will test two nine-session counseling “proven treatments” (is your bullshit detector going off? I know mine is going crazy), “a blend of motivational enhancement therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy.” Participants will be offered additional counseling sessions “as needed,” and half will be randomly assigned to receive post-counseling “checkups,” which may well be a synonym for “piss tests.” To be eligible, volunteers must be at least 18, “want help in stopping marijuana use,” and be willing to travel to Seattle’s University District for “counseling.” Oh, and if you need a little additional “motivation” to claim you “want help in stopping marijuana use,” they’ll pay you to say so. Participants will receive $50 for each of two post-counseling interviews, and an additional $50 incentive if they complete both. Let’s see, that $150 would get me half an ounce… If you are interested in fleecing these poor credulous academics by participating in their sham “study,” or if you have questions about it, call Cynthia Shaw at (206) 616-3235 between 9 and 7 Monday-Thursday or 9-5 Friday, or email mcpsvcs@uw.edu .

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UW Looking For Marijuana ‘Addicts’; Will Pay $150

Washington Legislature Drops The Ball (Again) On Marijuana Decrim

Never mind what the people of Washington want. The Legislature thinks pot is just too scary. ​By Steve Elliott at Toke of the Town ​Cowardly career politicians, out of touch with their own constituents and terrified of being branded “soft on drugs,” have once again dropped the ball on decriminalizing marijuana. Senate Bill 5615, which would have freed up Washington’s criminal justice resources by making adult possession of small amounts of marijuana an infraction carrying a fine, rather than a misdemeanor carrying mandatory jail time, failed to get a vote in the Washington State Senate Tuesday. “This means efforts to address adult marijuana use through a civil, public health approach, rather than a failed criminalization approach, have died for the 2010 legislative session,” said Alison Holcomb, drug policy director, ACLU of Washington . “The ACLU of Washington is disappointed by the Legislature’s failure to pass this bill despite strong and consistent public support for it,” Holcomb said. “An overwhelming majority of Washington voters support the modest change proposed by SB 5615 — a change already made in 13 other states, 11 of them as long ago as the 1970s, with no adverse impact,” Holcomb said. According to Holcomb, studies in those states demonstrate no increase in marijuana use among adults or youth, results echoed in jurisdictions like Seattle, where adult marijuana possession has been the lowest law enforcement priority since 2003. “In 2008, police and prosecutors filed 12,428 cases involving misdemeanor marijuana possession by adults in Washington courts — using funds that would be far better spent addressing other priorities, including violent crime,” Holcomb pointed out. “The Washington State Office of Financial Management estimated that SB 5615 and its companion HB 1177 would have made approximately $15-16 million in scarce public safety dollars available to combat true public safety threats, and would have directed significant resources to sorely needed, state-funded treatment and protection services,” Holcomb said. “We applaud Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, prime sponsor of SB 5615, for her tireless efforts to advocate for sensible reforms grounded in reason, science, and fiscal responsibility,” Holcomb said. “And we hope our Legislature will get the electorate’s message in 2011 and pass marijuana decriminalization legislation.” “It’s time to stop wasting money on arresting and jailing adults for marijuana use and invest instead in proven prevention and treatment programs,” Holcomb said.

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Washington Legislature Drops The Ball (Again) On Marijuana Decrim

WA Corrections Head Covers Up For Misbehaving Anti-Pot Officers

Graphic: thefreshscent.com OK, quick: You’re head of the Department of Corrections. Officers under you misbehave and improperly arrest a medical marijuana patient. What do you do? Lie and cover up for them, if you’re Eldon Vail of the Washington DOC. By Steve Elliott in Toke of the Town The head of the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC), Eldon Vail, seems to put a lot more effort into covering up the lousy job his subordinates are doing, than in actually doing his own job. The Washington DOC, following the example of the not-cool Attorney General Rob McKenna , is already notorious for its extremely hard line against the use of medical marijuana for individuals on probation. Now, newly revealed documents show that Vail and the DOC have been involved in misconduct, cover-ups, and possibly outright law-breaking, reports Lee Rosenberg at the highly recommended Seattle political blog, Horses Ass . Photo: Joel Sanders Lee Rosenberg broke the story at Seattle political blog Horses Ass ​Kathy Parkins, a medical marijuana patient from Washington who has fibromyalgia, spent some time visiting in Southern California in 2007. She decided to make a trip into Arizona to visit a friend before heading back up to Washington for Thanksgiving. Along the way, on November 14, 2007, she was stopped at a Border Patrol checkpoint just after crossing the Arizona state line. Arizona is not a medical marijuana state (it passed a law by voter initiative in 1996, but the law requires federal approval before it takes effect), so Parkins was arrested and faced three marijuana charges after a drug-sniffing dog located less than a quarter-ounce she had in her possession. Parkins didn’t make it home for Thanksgiving. Instead, she spent more than three weeks in an Arizona jail before finally being released in January 2008. She had to return to Arizona several times, and at considerable expense, for court appearances. Parkins was eventually sentenced to probation by an Arizona judge. In order for Parkins to spend her probationary period at home back in Washington, an Interstate Compact was required. These are agreements between states to have someone on probation move from one state’s supervision to another, and I can tell you from personal experience they are a real bureaucratic pain in the ass. What neither Parkins nor her Arizona probation officer realized was how the Washington DOC was trying to fight its own battle against medical marijuana users and the law passed by Washington’s voters in 1998. When she was allowed to return to Washington, Parkins moved in with a fellow medical marijuana patient named Carla Cole, who had heard about Parkins’ predicament and volunteered to help. Improper Arrest In May 2008, hours after Parkins got an updated medical marijuana authorization from Dr. Bethany Rolfe, Community Corrections Officer (CCO) Jeremy Praven, along with another officer, conducted a “home inspection” at Cole’s West Seattle residence and discovered Cole’s small legal garden of nine cannabis plants. Praven then contacted Seattle Police. When the cops arrived, they determined Cole’s small grow operation was completely legal, apologized to Cole for bothering her, and took no action other than filing a routine report. Then a third Corrections officer, Michael Schemnitzer, arrived at Cole’s residence. “While the CCOs were in my home, one very young man said to me, a retiree in my 60s, and poor Kathy who is visibly pained and stressed, ‘I don’t care about her and I don’t care about her problems and I don’t care about you and I don’t care about your problems,” Cole wrote in a complaint email to the DOC the day after the arrest. Cole’s email complaint continued: Then your guys came back with a new guy who chose to speak to Kathy SO RUDELY and with such contempt I just had to add “Please” to his command for her to descend the stairs. This was in my home, and I naturally feel a right to ask people to behave in a civil way there. Then, he said that because I said “please” he was going to take her in, which he did. I told him his cruelty does not become him and I’m telling you the cruelty of your staff does not become you. To make me feel like I sent my friend to prison because I asked her to be treated with kindness in my home – someone who has committed no real crime at all – is just so mean I’m speechless. After being arrested by Schemnitzer, Parkins spent a week in King County Jail with no charges and no hearing. Her health continued to deteriorate as she tried, unsuccessfully, to get information about her case. All week long, her friend and housemate Cole sent frantic emails to elected officials and DOC employees, trying to find out what has happening. Six days after the arrest, on the evening of May 27, Cole sent emails to several people in the media. The very next day, DOC officials began looking into the situation, and on May 28, Parkins was finally released from custody. DOC Field Administrator Donta Harper admitted in an internal email, obtained by the Cannabis Defense Coalition under a Freedom Of Information request, than the CCOs had no authority to detain Parkins in the first place, because at the time she was still under the supervision of Arizona probation officials. Harper followed up the next day by sending a letter to Washington Governor Chris Gregoire, admitting fault in the arrest. A few days later, after several attempts to follow up with officials in both Arizona and Washington, Parkins discovered a nationwide arrest warrant had been posted for her from Arizona, based upon a denial of the Interstate Compact agreement filled out by Officer Praven. Falsified Paperwork When an Arizona official, in June 2009, read Parkins the paperwork Officer Praven had filled out after her arrest and sent to Arizona, she discovered it contained a number of inaccuracies and outright falsehoods. That same day, the Washington DOC notified Arizona probation officials to cancel the nationwide warrant. They were now rescinding their initial denial of the Interstate Compact, they said; Parkins could now stay in Washington and apply to use medical marijuana while on probation. Despite repeated attempts, Parkins was unable to obtain a copy of the Interstate Compact denial filled out by Officer Praven. She said DOC officials claimed it was lost. She had still never seen the document until a few weeks ago, when CDC obtained the document as part of their information request. And when she finally saw Officer Praven’s paperwork, she realized it contained many falsehoods. Ms. Parkins has no family ties in Washington. She stated that she wanted to live in Washington because of the marijuana laws. Parkins was in fact born and reared in Washington, has two grown children in the state, and a grandchild born while she was in an Arizona courtroom. And she says she never said anything about “wanting to live in Washington because of the marijuana laws.” Ms. Parkins was living with individuals from the Marijuana Growers Association of Washington. Neither Cole nor Parkins has any idea how Officer Praven came up with this claim. No such organization exists, according to everyone else involved. ‘Open Hostility’ To Medical Marijuana Law So what we’re left with is this: On May 21, 2008, CCOs Jeremy Praven and Michael Schemnitzer improperly arrested Parkins; Praven then filed a report with both falsehoods and intentionally misleading statements, attempting to have her sent back to Arizona, a state where she has no family and has never lived. Parkins still held out hope that once her doctor filed the necessary paperwork, she’d be allowed to use medical pot. But only July 23, 2008, two months after her arrest, the DOC denied her request to use the medicine that she’d been legally using for years before they had her improperly arrested. Lee Rosenberg sums it up best at Horses Ass : The entire situation had become surreal. A person who broke a law in Arizona — for something that’s completely legal here [in Washington] — was now being harassed for engaging in that legal activity, despite the fact that even the officials in Arizona seemed indifferent to her medical marijuana use while she was back in Washington… At this point, it’s clear that the DOC was denying medical marijuana use based on an open hostility towards the voter-approved law… Cole demanded the CCOs involved in Parkins’ arrest be reprimanded for their behavior during and after the bust. After several failed attempts, she sent a letter directly to the head of the Washington DOC, Eldon Vail. This past May a recent tenant and friendly acquaintance who, like me, is authorized in Washington to use marijuana medicinally, was visited here by your Community Corrections Officers. The friend, [Kathy Parkins] is on an interstate compact probation from Arizona, which she thought was also a medical marijuana state, but isn’t. She was roughly and unfairly removed from my home to the county jail downtown where she spent a truly miserable week with no contact from you whatsoever. The paperwork was filled with inaccuracies, and further moves by her CCO, Jeremy Praven in West Seattle, seem also to be filled with fabrications and are utterly unworthy of any decent government. The Cover-Up Photo: The Associated Press Eldon Vail “leads” the WA DOC by lying and covering up the misdeeds of his subordinates ​When Vail finally responded — nearly three months later, on February 20, 2009 — the DOC was still refusing to release the falsified document to Parkins, and, as revealed by Rosenberg’s investigative reporting, Vail attempted to cover up what his officer had done : A review of jail records and discussion with staff indicates that Ms. Merry-Perkins [sic] was booked into King County Jail without any appearance of physical injury. Through a review of her field file, discussion with the assigned CCO and the unit supervisor, there is no evidence to support your statements that the CCOs inaccurately filled out paperwork or fabricated her supervision paperwork from Arizona. Ten months later, in December 2009, due to the CDC’s information request, the document the DOC had been trying to hide finally came to light — and it proves that Vail lied to cover up for the actions of CCO Jeremy Praven. Parkins was finally authorized, in January 2009, to use medical marijuana while on probation — one of only two patients in the state allowed to do so. ……. Documents Available for Public Inspection The Cannabis Defense Coalition has uploaded for public inspection all the documents obtained from the Department of Corrections. The complete PDF files are rather large — 45 megabytes for installment one, 23 megs for installment two, and 19 megs for installment three. The documents are also split into smaller files for easier download. All of the PDF files are searchable.

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WA Corrections Head Covers Up For Misbehaving Anti-Pot Officers

My LOST life

I never understood why people love watching television. When someone would tell me about the previous night’s Law & Order, I’d wonder why they wasted so much time with television.

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My LOST life

WA Supremes: No Matter If You’re A Marijuana Patient, Cops Can Search And Arrest

By Steve Elliott in Toke of The Town Graphic: thefreshscent.com ​ If you’re a legal medical marijuana patient in Washington and you thought your doctor’s recommendation protected you from search or arrest, you’re wrong. According to a new court ruling, you can be arrested and hauled into court every time an officer smells pot at your home — even if you are complying with the law. In a sharply divided decision, the Washington Supreme Court Thursday ruled against a patient arrested for possessing marijuana — despite the fact that the patient had a doctor’s recommendation for medicinal pot. Incredibly, the court found that police had probable cause to search the patient’s home, even after he presented what both he and the police believed to be a valid medical marijuana authorization form under Washington’s medical marijuana law. “Possession of marijuana, even in small amounts, is still a crime in the state of Washington,” Justice James Johnson wrote in the lead opinion. “A police officer would have probable cause to believe Fry committed a crime when the officer smelled marijuana emanating from the Frys’ residence.” Justice Richard Sanders dissented on that point, saying such an analysis would neuter the state’s compassionate use law, passed by voters in 1998, reports Gene Johnson of The Seattle Times . While the law does create a defense against marijuana charges to be used at trial, he said, it also states that qualifying patients “shall not be penalized in any manner, or denied any right or privilege” for using marijuana under the act. Under the court’s ruling, a patient could be searched, arrested and hauled to court every time an officer smells marijuana at his or her home, even if they were complying with the medical marijuana law, Sanders argued. Photo: NORML Alison Holcomb, ACLU: “This ruling is disappointing, as the citizens of Washington have clearly expressed support for the rights of patients who are suffering to use marijuana for medicinal purposes” ​ “This ruling is disappointing, as the citizens of Washington have clearly expressed support for the right of patients who are suffering to use marijuana for medicinal purposes,” said Alison Holcomb, ACLU of Washington drug policy director. “This ruling shows that police may search and arrest a patient even though he has his doctor’s authorization for the medical use of marijuana,” Holcomb said. “As interpreted by the court, all Washington’s medical marijuana law provides is a defense patients can raise at trial — after having been subjected to the stress and stigma of arrest and criminal charges,” Holcomb said. “Patients acting in good faith on their doctor’s advice should not have to fear arrest.” Wednesday’s ruling arose from the case of patient Jason Fry, a resident of Stevens County. In December 2004, members of the sheriff’s department went to Fry’s home with what they called “suspicion” that he was growing marijuana. Upon their arrival, the deputies smelled marijuana, but were denied entry into the home after Mrs. Fry showed them her husband’s medical marijuana authorization form. The officers then obtained a search warrant. After the search, Fry was arrested and charged for marijuana possession. A trial court did not allow him to raise the defense that he possessed marijuana under Washington’s Medical Use of Marijuana Act. The court capriciously ruled that Fry was not a qualifying patient and found him guilty of possessing marijuana; an appeals court unaccountably upheld the conviction. Even after Fry was subjected to prosecution, the trial court refused to allow him to raise the medical marijuana defense because his doctor had mistakenly authorized the medical use of marijuana for a condition not listed in the law. In other words, the patient was punished for the doctor’s mistake. The court unfortunately did not address the issue of whether Fry should have been allowed to present the jury with a defense that he reasonably relied on his physician’s authorization for the use of medical marijuana. The court was highly divided, with only four justices signing the majority opinion . In a concurring opinion , four justices asserted that patients should, in general, be able to present a medical marijuana defense at trial. Justice Sanders wrote a dissenting opinion . Washington’s Medical Use of Marijuana Act was adopted by voter initiative in 1998.

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WA Supremes: No Matter If You’re A Marijuana Patient, Cops Can Search And Arrest

Kim Raver Joins Cast of Grey’s Anatomy

The Grey’s Anatomy cast just keeps getting bigger.

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Kim Raver Joins Cast of Grey’s Anatomy

Christmas Vigil In Seattle Protests Marijuana Laws; Smug Yuppies Object

KING5 “Anti-drug advocate”/ obnoxiously smug yuppie Steve Danishek spouts ignorance and intolerance on cue for reporter Eric Schudiske ​For the past nine years on Christmas Day, 5th Avenue and James Street in Seattle has been at the crossroads of the controversy over marijuana legalization. As they’ve done every year in the 21st Century, protesters outside King County Jail held a pro-marijuana vigil, maintaining non-violent drug offenders should be home for the holidays, reports Eric Schudiske of King 5 News . “We just think that otherwise law-abiding Americans should find alternatives to incarceration for marijuana use,” said Vivian McPeak, organizer of the vigil. Nevertheless, vigil organizer McPeak remains optimistic about the prospects for positive change. “We believe very strongly that we’re in the last decade of marijuana criminalization,” McPeak said. Reporter Schudiske, in an apparent attempt to bring “balance” to his story, was predictably able to find some obnoxious anti-drug zealots who defended the practice of locking people up for smoking pot. (Really not too surprising, since Schudiske has been known to smooch a few cop heinies in the past.) Steve Danishek, some yuppie moron living in the Seattle waterfront, expressed little sympathy for those damn scofflaw pot-smokers. “They broke the law, they knew the law, they’re in jail,” a smug Danishek, who seemed offended that protesting hippies were even allowed in his high-rent district, said. “I’m sorry; that’s just a choice they made.” So, how does that compare with the “choice” Danishek made to be a highly visible public advocate for the kind of sickening, heartless barbarity that locks people in cages for choosing to use an herb? You make the call. Danishek, 63, and another well-do-do Seattle waterfront resident at 2000 Alaskan Way, Dee Tezelli, whined about how “marijuana abuse divides their family” and how Seattle’s annual Hempfest “disrupts their neighborhood.” Good idea, Steve and Dee. Maybe they should pass a law where only shallow, judgmental assholes like yourselves — who’d throw someone out of the family, even at Christmas, for smoking pot — should even be allowed in your part of town. (Steve and Dee seem to be a couple, and Holy God, do they ever richly deserve each other.) Those who oppose jailing cannabis users should be sure never to use Danishek’s travel agency, TMA Inc., located at 4626 NE 174th Place in Seattle. And they definitely shouldn’t call Danishek at (206) 363-2523 to make any reservations. Read the original story at Toke of the Town

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Christmas Vigil In Seattle Protests Marijuana Laws; Smug Yuppies Object