25 Kickass and Interesting Facts About Marijuana

1-5 Interesting Facts About MarijuanaSmokingCannabis_thumb

1. Research has found that smoking cannabis/pot in your teens can lead to a decline in I.Q., but similar effects were not seen in those who started smoking as adults. – Source

2. In 2008, a British man was sentenced to four years in jail in Dubai after Customs officers found 0.003 grams (0.0001 ounces) of cannabis in a cigarette stub stuck on the sole of one his shoes. – Source

3. Cannabis is the largest cash crop in the U.S., exceeding corn and wheat combined – Source

4. Although cannabis is illegal in Australia, there’s a town in New South Wales revolving almost only around weed selling and weed tourism where cannabis is both sold and grown openly. – Source

5. In North Korea, distribution, possession and consumption of cannabis is very legal, and is recommended as a healthier alternative to tobacco. “Visitors tell stories of marijuana plants growing freely by roadsides.” – Source

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Feds nearing a decision on whether pot has medical potential

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A finding that it does would remove marijuana from U.S. list of most dangerous drugs

Agency has missed its deadline to make a decision

Rescheduling could lead to more medical research and pharmacies filling prescriptions

 

When President Richard Nixon signed the Controlled Substances Act in 1970, the federal government put marijuana in the category of the nation’s most dangerous drugs, along with LSD, heroin and mescaline.

In legal parlance, pot is a Schedule 1 drug, with a high potential for abuse and no medical purpose.

Forty-six years later, the law could change, as the Obama administration prepares to make what could be its biggest decision yet on marijuana.

Suspense is mounting after the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration missed its self-imposed June 30 deadline to decide whether to reschedule the drug and recognize its potential therapeutic value. Twenty-six states already have legalized its medical use.

For Chris Gregoire, the former Democratic governor of Washington, a decision has been a long time coming.

In 2011, she and then-Gov. Lincoln Chafee, a Republican from Rhode Island, filed a 106-page petition with the DEA, arguing that the categorization of marijuana was “fundamentally wrong and should be changed.”

In an interview, Gregoire said she “naively had such high expectations” that the DEA would act long before now, but she predicted the agency will approve the rescheduling.

“To be honest with you, I’d be shocked if they didn’t,” Gregoire said. “Frankly, in five years the entire world has changed in Washington state. Today we have recreational marijuana, and the Justice Department’s nowhere to be found.”

Voters in Washington state and Colorado became the first in the nation to legalize recreational marijuana in 2012, a year after the governors filed their petition.

With the Obama administration adopting a policy to “just look the other way” in states with recreational marijuana, Gregoire said it would be hard for the DEA to justify keeping marijuana on the Schedule 1 list.

Opinions differ on what exactly might happen when the DEA responds to the petition, but a move to reschedule marijuana would be a major milestone in the decades-long push to legalize pot.

Among other things, it could pave the way for pharmacies to fill marijuana prescriptions and allow universities and others to conduct more medical research.

Many pot entrepreneurs hope that Congress would respond by helping marijuana businesses, allowing them to deduct their expenses from their federal taxes and giving them access to banks so they can phase out their all-cash operations.

Some predict rescheduling could make it easier for marijuana users to challenge policies that allow employers to fire them for a positive drug test.

Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said the DEA’s decision will be “remarkably consequential,” adding: “It will really cast the direction one way or the other.”

To be sure, there are plenty of skeptics who doubt the DEA will change anything at all.

“I’ll believe it when I see it,” said Gregory Carter, medical director of St. Luke’s Rehabilitation Institute in Spokane, who helped write the petition.

The DEA has given no indication of how it might rule, and Obama has said that any decision to reschedule marijuana should be left to Congress.

Kevin Sabet, president of the anti-legalization group Smart Approaches to Marijuana, said the chances of the DEA rescheduling the drug are “close to zero,” adding that there’s no scientific basis for doing so.

“The effects would be almost purely symbolic, and legalizers would use the move to further obfuscate the facts,” Sabet said.

Even if marijuana does get demoted to Schedule 2, it would be a highly controlled drug, in the same category as cocaine. And with marijuana still illegal under federal law, a decision to reschedule would leave pot businesses running in the same gray area they do now.

That would mean continued risk for anyone growing, selling or buying the drug in the four states — Washington, Colorado, Alaska and Oregon — that have legalized the drug and those that have approved its use for medical purposes.

The Obama administration decided to let the states sell marijuana as long as they do a good job of policing themselves, a policy that both major presidential candidates, Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump, have said they’d follow.

Under pressure from members of Congress to reschedule marijuana, the DEA promised in April that a decision would come “in the first half of 2016.” DEA Acting Administrator Chuck Rosenberg and two other top administration officials, Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell and drug czar Michael Botticelli, made the promise in a letter to Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and other senators who have been pressing the issue. In the letter, administration officials said they consulted with the Food and Drug Administration, which would oversee any pharmaceutical sales of marijuana.

Many who use the drug as medicine, and who have come to rely on dispensaries, fear a move to reschedule the drug could allow big pharmaceutical companies to take over the industry.

“It’s kind of scary to think that you’re going to have to go to a pharmacy and purchase a pre-prepared compound that you don’t know if it’s going to work,” said Kari Boiter, 36, who uses medical marijuana to treat her Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, a genetic disorder that affects skin, joints and blood-vessel walls.

Boiter, the former Washington coordinator for the pro-legalization group Americans for Safe Access and now a Montana resident, said she worries pharmaceutical companies might not offer a wide variety of marijuana products, including the pot-infused lotions, salves and bath salts that she uses.

“It’s not a one-size-fits-all approach — what works for my migraines doesn’t work for my nausea, doesn’t work for my joint pain,” she said.

In the long run, many say, the best solution is not to reschedule marijuana, but to “deschedule” the drug, putting it in the same category as tobacco and alcohol.

In May, Washington Democratic Rep. Denny Heck of Olympia joined 13 other House members in urging Obama to consider descheduling the drug in the last few months of his presidency, telling him he has “a rare opportunity to move the country forward.”

Last month, Heck complained when the House rejected his plan to ban federal regulators from penalizing banks that work with state-approved marijuana dispensaries, saying they’ve become inviting targets for thieves. He said his “worst fears were realized” in June when a security guard was killed during an armed robbery at a marijuana dispensary in Aurora, Colorado.

As the DEA prepares to act, the man in the hot seat is its acting administrator, Rosenberg, who infuriated pot advocates last year by dismissing the idea that smoking marijuana has any medical value.

“We can have an intellectually honest debate about whether we should legalize something that is bad and dangerous, but don’t call it medicine — that is a joke,” he told reporters at a briefing.

But as more states vote to legalize medical or recreational marijuana, the issue is winning more support on Capitol Hill. Senators will debate the potential medical benefits and risks of marijuana Wednesday when the Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Terrorism takes up the issue.

When Rosenberg appeared before the full Senate Judiciary Committee last month, North Carolina Republican Sen. Thom Tillis urged him to back his bill that would make it easier to research the medical effectiveness and safety of marijuana. Tillis said he’s particularly interested in more study of cannabidiol, or CBD, a form of cannabis oil that has been shown to reduce seizures

“I’ve said over and over, if it turns out that we find something in that plant that helps kids with epilepsy, I promise you, I will be at the front of the parade, leading the band,” Rosenberg replied.

Whenever Rosenberg announces the decision on rescheduling, pot activists plan to gather in front of the White House for a “smoke-in,” either to celebrate or protest. They’ll assemble at 4:20 p.m., in honor of 420, the popular code for marijuana.

It could be a big day for Gregoire, who laughed at the notion of playing a role in getting marijuana off the list of Schedule 1 drugs and helping change a Nixon-era law. “You know I grew up in those times — I remember those times, the ’60s,” she said.

She said she first saw the value of medical marijuana in the late 1970s, when her legal secretary was diagnosed with cancer and found help by using marijuana.

Now, Gregoire said, rescheduling the drug would allow safe access to medical marijuana for more patients in states where it has not been approved, while clearing the way for more much-needed research.

“That was my whole intent,” Gregoire said. “Let’s not knee-jerk react to some yesterday’s ’60s proclivity against marijuana.”

Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/politics-government/article88680812.html#storylink=cpy

 

Marijuana Can Be Sold at Uruguay Pharmacies, But Few Want To

MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) — Rossana Rilla could sell marijuana under Uruguay’s pioneering law that lets pharmacies distribute pot. But she says there is no way she will.

In her 28 years as a pharmacist, she has been beaten, dragged across the floor and threatened by thieves at gunpoint and with a grenade. She fears that selling marijuana would only make her store a bigger target for robbers and burglars.

You see their faces and you can tell right away that they are not consumers who are here just to buy” marijuana, Rilla said about the “suspicious people” who have recently been coming into her Montevideo pharmacy asking if she sells pot.

She isn’t alone in avoiding the government’s marijuana program. Most of the country’s pharmacists haven’t signed on, citing security concerns and complaining of paperwork, cost increases or opposition from customers to selling legalized pot.

Uruguay legalized the cultivation and sale of marijuana in 2013 in a bid to create the world’s first government-regulated national marketplace for pot. The goal was to fight rising homicide and crime rates associated with drug trafficking in the South American country.

But while the government wants to start selling marijuana at pharmacies in the coming weeks, so far only 50 out of 1,200 pharmacies are registered, stoking a debate over how the drug should be distributed.

“I don’t see the need to get into a conflict with people who are already selling weed in the neighborhoods,” said Marcelo Trujillo, who owns three pharmacies in Montevideo’s Cerro neighborhood.

“I just don’t want to expose myself or my employees,” he said. Next to him, a worker repaired a glass that was shattered during a recent robbery attempt.

The law allows for the growing of pot by licensed individuals, the formation of growers and users clubs, and the sale by pharmacies of 40 grams of marijuana a month to registered users. While the plan has been widely applauded globally and seen as going beyond marijuana legislation in the U.S. states of Colorado and Washington, most Uruguayans oppose it.

“My customers generally don’t agree with the plan,” said Isabel Regent, head of the Association of Interior Pharmacies, which represents businesses outside the capital, Montevideo. “Besides the fear of robberies, enrolling in the system means a hike in costs and having to be up to date with all the paperwork demanded by the health ministry, and not all pharmacies are in a condition to do this.”

Regent owns a pharmacy in Punta del Este, an exclusive seaside resort where tens of thousands of tourists from neighboring Argentina come to vacation each year. But she decided not to enroll in the government plan. She wouldn’t be able to sell pot to foreign tourists because the law only allows sales to Uruguayan citizens and legal residents over age 18.

Pharmacies in three of the four Uruguayan states bordering Brazil have also declined to enroll in the plan.

No studies have been conducted to see if pharmacists would face extra risks from selling pot, but most feel it’s just not worth the risk.

“I don’t have the security conditions to sell marijuana,” said Mariana Etchessarry, from a pharmacy in Montevideo’s Cerro neighborhood. “I don’t understand why they can’t sell it at police stations. They’re located in every neighborhood and have 24-hour security.”

During a recent meeting with government officials, a union leader claimed that some pharmacists have been threatened by drug dealers, said Gonzalo Miranda, a spokesman for the Uruguayan Chamber of Pharmacies, an umbrella group for large pharmacy chains.

Fernando Gil of the Interior Ministry’s communications office said that no pharmacists had reported any threats to police.

Some pharmacists say their lack of interest in participating goes beyond security concerns.

“I oppose as a matter of principles,” said Julio Gadea. “I’ve been a pharmacist for 40 years. Pharmacies were created to sell medicines, not drugs.”

Experts say delays in the marijuana initiative stem from the fact that no other country has attempted such an ambitious endeavor and that authorities still lack detailed plans and rules for regulating the market.

“We sell all legal drugs and if marijuana is now legal, there’s no reason not to sell it,” said a pharmacist who has enrolled in the government’s marijuana plan. He insisted on not being quoted by name because he did not want to upset his clients, who mostly oppose legalizing pot.

“I signed up but I still don’t know if I’ll sell it,” the pharmacist said. “I’m missing a lot of information. They haven’t explained anything to us about the information program that will be used or how the drug will be sold or how profitable it will be.”

Several of the pharmacists interviewed said they hadn’t ruled out signing on later if the program is successful.

The planting of cannabis in Uruguay has begun and it’s expected to be ready by late July, two government officials told The Associated Press. They also asked to remain anonymous because they were not authorized by the government to comment. The officials said that having only 50 pharmacies enrolled might work in the government’s favor because it will be easier to control.

“We’re not ruling out using other networks or even vending machines in the future,” one official said, adding that marijuana will be sold by mid to late July.

 

http://www.hightimes.com/read/marijuana-can-be-sold-uruguay-pharmacies-few-want

Rio Drug Dealers Selling Marijuana Branded With Olympic Logo

Denver marijuana delivery

Denver marijuana delivery

With the Olympic Games set to get underway in another month, it seems that drug dealers in Rio de Janerio are working to capitalize on the “Faster – Higher – Stronger” motto by branding packages of marijuana with the logo specially designed for the Rio 2016 event.

According to a report published earlier this week by the AFP, police recently discovered that marijuana is being distributed in some of the most downtrodden areas of the Brazilian state, labeled with the swirling rendition of the Olympics logo that was designed by the game’s organizing committee.

Law enforcement officers are said to have found a number of packages of the cleverly marketed pot product some time last week in the Nova Holanda district. The force’s leading narcotics agent Felipe Curi told reporters that the herb “had the Olympic Games logo stuck to the packets,” which are believed to be connected to the cartel activity that has ramped up ahead of the games scheduled to begin the first week of August.

Despite the illusion that Rio de Janerio’s police officers are working to crackdown on the illegal drug trade during the first ever Olympic event to take place in South America, some of the latest reports indicate that law enforcement officers across the state have simply thrown their hands up against crime because they claim the Rio state government has not paid them in months. In fact, police are now warning tourists that they will not be protected from the violence that is currently plaguing the area.

“Welcome to Hell,” read the headline of a sign being held by state police officers earlier this week outside Rio’s main airport. “Police and firefighters don’t get paid, whoever comes to Rio de Janeiro will not be safe.”

While it is true that Rio has transformed into a veritable thunderdome over the course of the past few months, it appears the state’s police force is responsible for the majority of the mayhem.

A report from Al Jazeera reveals that nearly 80 children were trapped in a NGO building last week while police scoured the area searching for fugitive drug trafficker Nicolas Labre Pereira. These types of anti-drug operations have reportedly led to more civilian deaths at the hands of police officers than ever before – 40 more people were gunned down in May than in the same month last year, according to the Institute of Public Security.

Amidst the soaring death toll, a judge recently stepped in to suspend all nighttime police searches for the escaped drug lord, who goes by the nickname “Fat Family,” because she believes these operations are a blatant risk to public safety.

“It is unacceptable that the police in the twenty-first century do not find a way to address crime without exposing the law-abiding citizen,” Judge Angelica dos Santos Costa wrote in her decision. “It is often said that during the Olympics, Rio de Janeiro will be safe, however, society needs public security before, during and after that event.”

Although the judge admits that it is necessary to put fugitives like Fat Family back behind bars, she doesn’t believe this should be done at the expense of Rio’s citizens.

“The local population cannot be held hostage by unplanned and hasty operations, much less the police justify them with the flimsy argument of catching criminals. This is not the police that society needs and wants,” she wrote.

An executive order was issued last week allotting $850 million in bailout funds to pay police officers the compensation they are owed. The order was issued after acting Governor Francisco Dornelles expressed concerns that the 2016 Olympics could be an enormous failure without proper security and transportation. However, the funds have yet to be received.

Rio’s mayor Eduardo Paes recently told CNN that crime is “the most serious issue in Rio and the state is doing a terrible, horrible job” at regaining order.

Perhaps it is time for Rio to consider a fully legal cannabis market. A taxed and regulated system could easily diminish drug cartel violence, stimulate the economy, as well as generate millions in tax dollars that could then be used to pay the state’s police force.

Who has or would try Willie strain?

downloadWillie Nelson is also looking to cash in on the new cannabis market by opening stores in legal states and branding them Willie’s Reserve.” The stores will carry marijuana approved by Willie Nelson along with new strains that have been grown to meet the specifications of the great one himself. The strains are looking to hit the market next year, so we should all prepare to have our minds blown.

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