Cannabis News

Gunky

Well-Known Member
I live not too far from Harborside and went there to buy seeds and clones. It's a fine shop, a model of what a current dispensary ought to be. Somebody needs to give Melinda Haag the message to back off.
 

Magic9

Plant Enthusiast
^^Is that from the Harvey family story?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/01/16/larry-harvey-cancer_n_6487932.html

"In 2014, a federal judge ruled that the family cannot defend themselves against the charges by arguing their cannabis plants were for medical purposes and legal under state law.

Because the federal government considers cannabis to be illegal, federal courts generally don't allow evidence that the drug may have been used for medical purposes, even when medical marijuana is legal under a state's law."

They're going to kill that guy. It's fucking absurd.
 

His_Highness

In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king
When I read or hear about a federal encroachment I think:
- I feel for the folks who thought they were out of the weeds (Pun intended)
- The legalization train is picking up speed and adding cars and whenever one of these feds gets froggy they are just making the train move faster.
 
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howie105

Well-Known Member
If there is enough mileage to be had promoting legalization then candidates will go there, conversely if more is to be gained through opposition they will take that path. If there is no political advantage one way or the other neither neither party will likely touch it just because it is the right thing to do. Elections are about selling a package, not about doing what should be done.
 

His_Highness

In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king
What happens if we elect a bible-thumping republican on a moral crusade for president in 2016 :huh:

I'd like to believe the genie is out of the bottle regardless of which party is in charge. Granted the bible-thumping repubs could slow things down but I believe I've seen enough to feel confident that, as the song says, There ain't no stoppin us now, we're on the move. Florida missed their chance even though they had 58% voter approval but needed 60%. If a repub state like Florida could rally a majority.....
 

Toastface_Killah

Well-Known Member
Recently released National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Study finds no clear link between cannabis use and impaired driving accidents:
http://reason.com/blog/2015/02/09/landmark-study-finds-marijuana-is-not-li

and another link,

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...-safer-than-drunk-ones-new-federal-data-show/


While I don't advocate driving impaired under any substance, this seems pretty significant that the NHSTA releases something not depicting cannabis use as equal to Alcohol or many other legal intoxicants in regards to the effects it has on an individual's driving.
 

olivianewtonjohn

Well-Known Member
Recently released National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Study finds no clear link between cannabis use and impaired driving accidents:
http://reason.com/blog/2015/02/09/landmark-study-finds-marijuana-is-not-li

and another link,

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...-safer-than-drunk-ones-new-federal-data-show/


While I don't advocate driving impaired under any substance, this seems pretty significant that the NHSTA releases something not depicting cannabis use as equal to Alcohol or many other legal intoxicants in regards to the effects it has on an individual's driving.
That is not what the study is saying.

More discussion here:
http://www.reddit.com/r/trees/comments/2vbc2e/stoned_drivers_are_a_lot_safer_than_drunk_ones/

"The study's findings underscore an important point: that the measurable presence of THC (marijuana's primary active ingredient) in a person's system doesn't correlate with impairment in the same way that blood alcohol concentration does."

They arent testing people who are actively high, merely testing after the fact. Obviously someone with a measurable presence of THC would not compare to someone with measurable BAC
 

Wahiker

Well-Known Member
They arent testing people who are actively high, merely testing after the fact. Obviously someone with a measurable presence of THC would not compare to someone with measurable BAC

True. That's what makes this an apples to oranges comparison. THC remains in the blood long after any intoxicating effects are gone. Unfortunately, they don't yet have a practical way to identify someone who's stoned at the time of the test.
 

grokit

well-worn member
That's such a bullshit sobriety test. Most people can't do this when they're sober... Including me.
I can't either, but I did it perfectly when I was drunk as hell one night! I think I was 20 (still underage) and had both full and empty containers in the v, passed both that and the walk the line tests (cocaine & paranoia can be a powerful combo). Got a break and was just written up for possession under 21 rather than open container. Went to early morning court and lied my ass off, cop didn't show judge threw it out.

That was the night I 'didn't get popped', the night I did I didn't deserve it so things even out :tup:
 

z9

Well-Known Member
I can't either, but I did it perfectly when I was drunk as hell one night! I think I was 20 (still underage) and had both full and empty containers in the v, passed both that and the walk the line tests (cocaine & paranoia can be a powerful combo). Got a break and was just written up for possession under 21 rather than open container. Went to early morning court and lied my ass off, cop didn't show judge threw it out.

That was the night I 'didn't get popped', the night I did I didn't deserve it so things even out :tup:

Jesus you recited the alphabet backwards... What comes after X? :hmm:

Rick James wasn't kidding when he said...
 
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Wahiker

Well-Known Member
Judge Weighs Whether U.S. Marijuana Law Is Unconstitutional

This is from conservative Time magazine:
"A decision about the constitutionality of a federal marijuana ban could heat up national debate


A federal judge hearing a case of nine men charged with illegally growing marijuana on federal land in California said Wednesday she was considering arguments that the federal government has improperly labelled marijuana as one of the most dangerous drugs."
http://time.com/3706996/marijuana-pot-schedule-one-drug/

[Edit] Better link: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2015/02/...issing-marijuana-charges-as-unconstitutional/
 
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cybrguy

Putin is a War Criminal
Actually, this approach appeals (P) to me. There has never been any evidence for the sched 1 designation. It was ALWAYS a political ploy. And now that MJ has been well established as medicine for MANY maladies, several very quantifiable (i.e. seizure reduction), I think this approach could well be the quickest and most effective way forward. The ONLY support for most anti MJ laws is the sched 1 classification. Remove that and the laws have no "legitimate" support and states can more easily do what they want. And MOST will want the tax revenue.
 

howie105

Well-Known Member
What happens if we elect a bible-thumping republican on a moral crusade for president in 2016 :huh:

I would expect that the national Republican leadership would calculate the heat they would take if they went for a roll back, let the process continue or just threw the whole thing back to the states to stall. Regardless of who is in the chair their agenda is always secondary to the needs and health of their party. Presidents come and go the party machine is always there behind the chair.

Actually, this approach appeals (P) to me. There has never been any evidence for the sched 1 designation. It was ALWAYS a political ploy. And now that MJ has been well established as medicine for MANY maladies, several very quantifiable (i.e. seizure reduction), I think this approach could well be the quickest and most effective way forward. The ONLY support for most anti MJ laws is the sched 1 classification. Remove that and the laws have no "legitimate" support and states can more easily do what they want. And MOST will want the tax revenue.

With respect Cyberguy, I disagree using the tax incentive as a selling point. I suspect at some point it would become something like the casino bubble and pop. But not until control of production and distribution were totally in the hands of the state and we know how well that works. I am in favour of the Fed just walking away and taking their rules and regs with them. Once all the folks with the inclination and skills are no longer faced with imprisonment and ruin they will more then able to meet the needs of the consumers and at a cheaper price then a state run cash cow version legalization. However this is just my opinion and I am...umm...mwdicated.:leaf:

Had to edit because I can't spell today.
 
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cybrguy

Putin is a War Criminal
I think there has to be incentive for nearly ANY state to change their laws, and money is a MUCH better incentive than "doing the right thing". I HAVE to put that in quotes because the "right thing" is as variable as the weather. And if doing TRT were all that was necessary for change we would live in a very different world. It is sad for me to say that, but we all know it to be true.
 
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grokit

well-worn member
5 Amazing New Discoveries About the Potential of Marijuana That You Won't Hear in the Corporate Media
Five new cannabis-centric studies warrant major attention.

Scientific discoveries are published almost daily in regard to the healing properties of the cannabis. But most of these findings appear solely in subscription-only peer-reviewed journals and, therefore, go largely unnoticed by the mainstream media and by the public. Here are five just-published cannabis-centric studies that warrant attention.

Is cannabis use protective against the development of certain types of cancer? The findings of a just released study in the journal Urology imply that it might be.

Investigators at the Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center, Department of Neurology assessed the association of cannabis use and tobacco smoking on the risk of bladder cancer in a multiethnic cohort of more than 80,000 men aged 45 to 69 years old over an 11-year period. The results? While men who smoked cigarettes possessed a 1.5-fold increased risk of cancer, those who only smoked pot possessed a 45 percent reduced risk of being diagnosed with the disease.

“After adjusting for age, race or ethnicity, and body mass index, using tobacco only was associated with an increased risk of bladder cancer (hazard regression 1.52) whereas cannabis use was only associated with a 45 percent reduction in bladder cancer incidence (HR 0.55),” investigators reported.

The study is not the first time that researchers have identified an inverse association between marijuana use and the development of cancer. In 2009, Brown University researchers similarly reported that the moderate long-term use of marijuana was associated with a reduced risk of head and neck cancers in a multi-center cohort involving over 1,000 subjects. In addition, the largest case-controlled study ever to investigate the respiratory effects of marijuana smoking found no positive association between inhaling pot and lung cancer risk. “We hypothesized that there would be a positive association between marijuana use and lung cancer, and that the association would be more positive with heavier use,” pulmonologist Dr. Donald Tashkin, Professor Emeritus at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA told The Washington Post. “What we found instead was no association at all, and even a suggestion of some protective effect.

Long-Term Pot Exposure Isn't Damaging to Lung Health

All smoke is not created equal.

Unlike tobacco smoking, the inhalation of marijuana cigarettes – even long-term -- is not associated with significant adverse changes in pulmonary health, according to data published online in December in the journal Annals of the American Thoracic Society.

Investigators at Emory University in Atlanta assessed marijuana smoke exposure and lung health in a large representative sample of US adults age 18 to 59. Researchers reported that cannabis exposure was not associated with FEV1 (forced expiratory volume) decline or deleterious change in spirometric values of small airways disease. They further reported that marijuana smoke exposure may be associated with some protective lung effects among long-term smokers of tobacco, acknowledging, "[T]he pattern of marijuana's effects seems to be distinctly different when compared to that of tobacco use."

Their findings are similar to those of a 2013 literature review, published in the same journal, which concluded: "[H]abitual use of marijuana alone does not appear to lead to significant abnormalities in lung function. Findings from a limited number of well-designed epidemiological studies do not suggest an increased risk of either lung or upper airway cancer from light or moderate use. ... Overall, the risks of pulmonary complications of regular use of marijuana appear to be relatively small and far lower than those of tobacco smoking."

Alcohol, Not Pot, Alters the Brain

It was less than a year ago when the mainstream media was chock-full of headlines like this one: ‘Brain changes associated with casual marijuana use in young adults, study finds.’ But a funny thing happened when a team of scientists from the University of Colorado and the University of Kentucky tried to replicate these results in a larger, more well-controlled cohort of subjects.

They couldn’t.

“We acquired high-resolution MRI scans, and investigated group differences in gray matter using voxel-based morphometry, surface-based morphometry, and shape analysis in structures suggested to be associated with marijuana use, as follows: the nucleus accumbens, amygdala, hippocampus, and cerebellum,” researchers summarized in the January 28 edition of The Journal of Neuroscience. “No statistically significant differences were found between daily users and nonusers on volume or shape in the regions of interest. Effect sizes suggest that the failure to find differences was not due to a lack of statistical power, but rather was due to the lack of even a modest effect.”

They concluded, “In sum, the results indicate that, when carefully controlling for alcohol use, gender, age, and other variables, there is no association between marijuana use and standard volumetric or shape measurements of subcortical structures. … t seems unlikely that marijuana use has the same level of long-term deleterious effects on brain morphology as other drugs like alcohol.”

Marijuana Use Doesn’t Lead to Depression

“Regular use of marijuana has also been linked to depression, anxiety, and a loss of drive or motivation.” So says the online publication, ‘Marijuana: Facts for Teens,’ published by the US National Institute on Drug Abuse. But is this claim true? No, according to longitudinal data published online ahead of print in the Journal of Affective Disorders, which reports that future incidences of major depression are not higher among cannabis users compared to nonusers.

Investigators concluded, "Our results do not support a longitudinal association between cannabis use and increased incidence of MDD (major depressive disorder); rather, they indicate an inverse relationship between the two, which may be attributed to self-medication factors."

Previous studies have similarly dismissed the notion that pot use is associated with increased suicide risk. Specifically, a 2013 study published in the American Journal of Public Health reported a drop in suicide rates in states that had legalized marijuana compared to those that had not, finding: “Suicides among men aged 20 through 39 years fell after medical marijuana legalization compared with those in states that did not legalize. The negative relationship between legalization and suicides among young men is consistent with the hypothesis that marijuana can be used to cope with stressful life events.”

Marijuana Possesses a Unique Margin of Safety Compared to Other legal and Illegal Drugs

Despite the US federal government’s ongoing insistence that pot is one of the most dangerous substances known to man, an objective review of the plant’s safety profile finds that it is comparably safer than most other drugs, particularly alcohol.

Writing in Nature.com this past January, an international team of German and Canadian researchers published a comparative risk assessment of the toxicity of tobacco, alcohol, and cannabis. Their evaluation concluded that the risks of cannabis have likely been “overestimated” while the dangers associated with booze “have been commonly underestimated.”

They concluded: “[Our] results point to risk management prioritization toward alcohol and tobacco rather than illicit drugs. … [and] suggest a strict legal regulatory approach [for cannabis] rather than the current prohibition approach.”

Paul Armentano is the Deputy Director of NORML — the National Organization for the reform of Marijuana Laws — and also serves as a senior policy advisor for Freedom Leaf, Inc. He is the co-author of the book, Marijuana Is Safer: So Why Are We Driving People to Drink? (Chelsea Green, 2013).

http://www.alternet.org/drugs/lates...1073898.G7--wX&rd=1&src=newsletter1031853&t=7
 

CarolKing

Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
Man sentenced for shipping high-grade marijuana
Associated Press1:42 p.m. CST February 16, 2015
South Dakota authorities intercepted a vehicle with pot, heroin and guns
3TWEETLINKEDINCOMMENTEMAILMORE
PIERRE — A Washington state man who authorities say shipped high-grade marijuana across the country has been sentenced in South Dakota.

Forty-seven-year-old Bruce Cole recently pleaded guilty in federal court in South Dakota to a drug conspiracy charge and was sentenced to five years in custody. U.S. Attorney Brendan Johnson says the sentence will run at the same time as sentences imposed in federal court in Nevada and in state court in New Hampshire.

Johnson says South Dakota authorities in May 2009 intercepted a vehicle belonging to Cole that contained marijuana, heroin and two guns.

Cole will be on supervised release for two years following his prison time.

Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Laws are pretty absurd in this country still.
Cannabis should be legal. What a nightmare
For this person.

Our FC friend that got picked up in another state
got a slap on the hands, I think she had 3 oz. She
didn't have guns, heroin or any other drug. Just
cannabis. I am so glad for her, you never know
what the courts will do.
CK


 
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