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Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
901.www.imf.au.dk21200
902.www.dfn.de20900
903.www.irb-cisr.gc.ca20900
904.www.gazettelabo.fr20900
905.www.newscientisttech.com20800
906.www.biosicherheit.de20600
907.www.sze.hu20600
908.www.onlineconversion.com20500
909.www.mncn.csic.es20400
910.www.spectrum.ieee.org20200
911.www.dkrz.de20200
912.www.fee.uva.nl20000
913.www.force.dk20000
914.www.miktex.org19900
915.www.archaeology.nsc.ru19900
916.www.bura.hu19900
917.www.watergeo.ru19800
918.www.urania.be19700
919.www.asm.org19500
920.www.logoi.com19500
921.www.sindioses.org19500
922.www.conaf.cl19400
923.www.humaniora.sdu.dk19400
924.www.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp19300
925.www.falw.vu.nl19300
926.www.inpi.fr19200
927.www.accademiadellacrusca.it19200
928.www.mi.uib.no19200
929.www.natur-lexikon.com19100
930.www.vito.be19000
931.www.retsinfo.dk19000
932.www.metoffice.com18900
933.www.dfu.min.dk18900
934.astrofili.org18800
935.www.techcentralstation.com18700
936.www.gsc.riken.go.jp18400
937.www.bwl.tu-darmstadt.de18200
938.www.inta.es18100
939.www.astronomynow.com18000
940.www.enst-bretagne.fr18000
941.www.wiwi.hu-berlin.de17800
942.www.arpa.piemonte.it17800
943.www.exponenta.ru17700
944.www.medioambiente.gov.ar17600
945.www.yukawa.kyoto-u.ac.jp17600
946.www.sondasespaciales.com17500
947.www.politstudies.ru17500
948.www.barrameda.com.ar17400
949.www.statistikbanken.dk17300
950.www.chemedia.com17100
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916. www.bura.hu

Rating: 19900 points*
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Letters: Not for Men Only (1 Letter)
Letters to the editor.
feeds.nytimes.com
A chance for a scientific drugs policy
There's a growing recognition that Labour's incoherent drugs policy has failed. Let's build a science-based replacementLast week Professor Roger Pertwee called for cannabis to be licensed for sale, and now Tim Hollis, the Association of Chief Police Officers' lead officer on drugs, has said the current criminalisation-based approach to policing cannabis use should be reviewed. Pertwee and Hollis are bringing a welcome breath of fresh air to the debate about drugs and the harm they do.The government now has the chance to take a genuinely science-based approach to drugs policy. Labour took an extremely distorted and punitive view of cannabis. It rejected both scientific evidence and public opinion that its harms were relatively modest and reclassified it to Class B status under the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act so that possession for personal use can now result in up to five years in prison. Worse, Labour also instigated a policy of pursuing users with an almost religious fervour with police sniffer dogs assisting in interventions at tube stations and other places where users might be easily sequestered and searched.Why was this done? It appears that Labour believed that cannabis was very harmful to mental health; especially that it caused schizophrenia. Yet as the advisory body the ACMD pointed out in its 2008 cannabis review, to stop one case of schizophrenia more than 5,000 young men would have to be prevented from ever using cannabis. This statistic negates any meaningful value in controlling cannabis to improve mental health.Labour also held the view that punishment would reduce use and hence harms. There is no meaningful evidence in favour of this view. The evidence we do have – for example, from the experiences with decriminalisation in the Netherlands and some Australian states – is that decriminalisation leads to a reduction in harms.Science cannot determine alone what the framework for drugs regulation should be. But if policy is not grounded in the science it can easily collapse into prejudice, moralism and authoritarianism. The chaos earlier this year over the "legal high" mephedrone raised very significant issues of evidence in relation to new drugs of unknown harm. Alcohol is legal yet is producing growing levels of damage which are well detailed in government reports but recommendations for harm reduction are not acted upon. A recent scientific review of drug harms, originally published in The Lancet, found that many class A drugs are in fact less harmful than alcohol. This raises further questions over the coherence of current drugs laws.In the face of a rising tide of dissatisfaction with the intellectual rationale for the current drugs laws, the coalition should seize the opportunity to establish a genuinely science-based approach to drugs policy.Drugs policyDrugsHealth policyHealthDavid NuttDrugsScience policyDavid Nuttguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Delegates told to ID achievable goals on climate
By TINI TRAN 2010-10-04T16:30:46ZTIANJIN, China (AP) -- The U.N. climate chief urged countries Monday to search faster for common ground on battling climate change so that a year-end meeting in Mexico can produce results in that fight....
hosted.ap.org
Dead animals are Exhibit A in Gulf investigation
By PHUONG LE 2010-10-14T21:38:33ZNEW ORLEANS (AP) -- Dead birds are wrapped in foil or paper, then sealed in plastic bags to avoid cross contamination. Dolphin tissue samples and dead sea turtles are kept in locked freezers. Field notebooks are collected and secured....
hosted.ap.org
Wind up?
In Texas, they farm wind - but don't mention 'climate'...
bbc.co.uk