The Cannabis Corner
Posted: Wed Apr 20, 2016 5:39 pm
A Pittsburgh Penguins Hockey Message Board
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/won ... hers-find/"In general, our findings showed that cannabis use over 20 years was unrelated to health problems in early midlife," the study, published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry, found. "Across several domains of health (periodontal health, lung function, systemic inflammation, and metabolic health), clear evidence of an adverse association with cannabis use was apparent for only one domain, namely, periodontal health."
In some domains, marijuana use was associated with better health outcomes: "Findings showed that cannabis use was associated with slightly better metabolic health (smaller waist circumference, lower body mass index, better lipid profiles, and improved glucose control)," the study determined.
Yuge. Do you know how many military PTSD patients don't/won't use cannabis (a proven PTSD treatment) because if they do they will lose their benefits? This is big big news....if it's true."Whatever the law may be in California, Arizona or Utah or any other State, because of Federal preemption this will have the effect of making THC products legal with a prescription, in all 50 states," the DEA attorney told the Observer. Federal Preemption is a legal doctrine that where the US Government regulates a particular field, State and local laws are overridden and of no effect.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/danalexande ... 3df77938cfFrustrated with the flatlining business, Hagedorn fired more than half his management, shook up his board and gambled heavily on pot growers.
That controversial decision was made one day in 2013 in Yakima, Wash., when Hagedorn wandered into a garden center. The store had hardly any Scotts merchandise, but there was a massive row of equipment for hydroponics, a method of growing that allows people to cultivate cannabis (or any other plant, for that matter) indoors, using targeted lighting and liquid solutions spiked with nutrients. Hagedorn asked to see the store owner, and out walked a short guy with wild hair and a lazy eye. He told Hagedorn that everyone called him an idiot when he first started selling hydroponics equipment, but the stuff was flying off the shelves, with an average receipt of $400–straight cash. It was a starkly different scene from what he’d just witnessed at a Home Depot across town, which had plenty of Scotts Miracle-Gro products but no hydroponics equipment. “Two worlds, same town. I came back, and I told everyone ‘We’re doing it,’ ” Hagedorn recalls. “ If you don’t like it, leave. We’re doing it. It’s beyond stopping. And we’re not getting into pot growing. We’re talking dirt, fertilizer, pesticides, growing systems, lights. You know it’s a multibillion-dollar business, and we’ve got no growth in our core. Are you guys stupid?”
Well, Washington (and tourists and neighbors from border states), you've gone and consumed more than $1 billion worth of marijuana since the legal market began in July 2014.
So far, the great destruction of our society has not occurred ... or if it is ongoing, it's slow and sneaky. What has happened, however, is that more than $250 million has been generated in excise tax to the state.
Time to call my DO and ask if he will be on board. If he is, then I have to make sure that said scrip will exempt me from testing positive for THC on our random tests at this job.
Source of the post then I have to make sure that said scrip will exempt me from testing positive for THC on our random tests at this job.
The Democratic Party endorsed a "reasoned pathway to future legalization" of marijuana and called for the drug to be downgraded in the Controlled Substances Act, in a tense and unexpected victory for supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders.
Going into the platform committee meeting, Sanders's campaign had no new language about marijuana. The senator from Vermont had favored state-to-state legalization efforts, and the language approved by the drafting committee called for "policies that will allow more research on marijuana, as well as reforming our laws to allow legal marijuana businesses to exist without uncertainty."
But on Saturday afternoon, the committee brought up an amendment that would have removed marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act. David King, a lawyer and Sanders delegate from Tennessee, argued that marijuana was added to the act — giving the drug the same legal classification as heroin — during a "craze" to hurt "hippies and blacks." The amendment, however, was headed for defeat, with some committee members worrying that it went too far and undermined state-by-state efforts to study decriminalization.
Arguments stopped when committee members proposed swapping in the language of a rival amendment — one that merely downgraded marijuana from Schedule 1 of the Controlled Substance Act and included the undefined "pathway" to legal status.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/pos ... galizationThe text of the marijuana amendment:
Because of conflicting laws concerning marijuana, both on the federal and state levels, we encourage the federal government to remove marijuana from its list as a Class 1 Federal Controlled Substance, providing a reasoned pathway for future legalization
Oh lord...that's gold#1 thread on r/all, MY ENTIRE FAMILY JUST ATE MY CANNABUTTER WHAT DO I DO?
https://www.reddit.com/r/trees/comments ... h=27036b55
There aren't many states left with ballot initiative processes. So if these 5 all pass on Election Day, I think we'll only see a small handful legalize for a long while. State legislatures have aren't gonna be much help.Been hearing a bit about PA's preparations to roll out medical marijuana in the news lately. While it's a welcome development, it also feels well behind the times. In a couple years, we'll finally have medical marijuana, but by that point, half the country might have fully legalized it.
I suppose it's like being happy when we could finally buy 6-packs at Giant Eagle...a nice development, but other states are laughing at our backwardness.