Cannabis & Drug Laws (incldg. Biden's Pardon)

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Either pot is removed from the culture, or we become - and remain - Idiocracy.
"Pot" has been a part of the culture for longer than either of us has been alive. The only dif now, is that in some States it is now visible. Whereas before it was mostly hidden, but still there just the same. Does having it hidden from view, really change anything? People were high in public for years and hardly anyone noticed until attention was drawn to it due to the legalization efforts.
 
"Pot" has been a part of the culture for longer than either of us has been alive.
No.

It was not part of Western culture. Yes, it was used, by fringe subcultures. And those who used it, were lower-class, and mostly stayed lower-class.

You can trot out "musicians." Well, I hate to say it...jazz musicians are not that far advanced from drum-circle noisemakers. Some make a living. Some are even pleasant to listen to. But before we could support jazz musicians, who dug the mellow all day and oriented around anonymous sex, pot and other gratifications...before we advanced to where there was wealth to pay for such parasites, we had to build steel mills, canals, mines and bridges.

Cultures where pot or ghanga were commonly used, were tribal bush societies, in tropical climates where there was little need to plan for survival. Like...say...Africa or the Caribbean islands.
 



what option did they/who offer?
 
The point I was getting at is that the same people smoking the stuff now, were smoking it before it was legal. They just kept it secret. Now, it's out in the open where it can be seen by all. It was always there.
 
It always will be, now.

There's no putting the genii back in the bottle.

There IS, however, a way - in theory - to take the impaired off the roads, out of dangerous jobs, and out of the DemocRat Party and various protest riots.

We just lack the will to do that. So...we'll devolve. Europe started doing it in the early 1960s; it took us about 25 years longer for us to hit critical mass; but where they are, we're going; and we're both going to end up like Zimbabwe. Or like Kabul. Or like a blend.
 
what option did they/who offer?
None.

Take ibuprofen, or aspirin, or Tylenol; or take these prescription painkillers.

The opioids were after neck fusion surgery. The codeine was long ago, for an at-work injury. I was young and callow and found that #4 Codeine tablets went GREAT with about four beers.

I could have easily become an abuser, but lining up a supply, and paying for it, was just too much like work. So, I had my fun for a time.

I got NO similar pleasure off MM.
 

FBI Says Medical Marijuana Cultivators And Caregivers Can Own Guns, But Patients Cannot​

December 11, 2023 11:21 AM

My medicine or my gun?

This is a question medical marijuana patients who are also gun owners in the 38 legal MMJ states want answered.

What does the law say?

According to a 2019 FBI memo, that remained under the radar but was recently highlighted by the New York Times, medical marijuana (MMJ) growers and caregivers are permitted to own guns, but MMJ patients are not. It is still unclear if the memo has been updated over the last four years, wrote Marijuana Moment, which reached out to the agency, but did not receive a comment as yet.

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N.J. cannabis industry faces showdown between regulators and Big Weed. Top Dem is unhappy.​

New Jersey cannabis regulators last week once again fined a large cannabis operator and chastised others for alleged union violations, while legislative sources say the president of the state Senate has been unhappy with those moves by the Cannabis Regulatory Commission and may seek to change how it’s structured.

State Senate President Nick Scutari, D-Union, has mulled pushing a bill to revamp parts of the commission — including possibly making it part-time — during the state Legislature’s current lame-duck session, according to two legislative sources with direct knowledge of the situation who were granted anonymity to speak candidly about the issue.

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Bipartisan Effort Seeks Legal Cannabis For Veterans Through VA: Doctors Should Decide What's Best For Each Patient​

December 18, 2023

Bipartisan lawmakers sent a letter Friday to House appropriators urging them to maintain protections (contained in a spending bill) enabling physicians with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to recommend medical marijuana to veterans in states with legal cannabis programs, reported Marijuana Moment.

The letter, signed by Earl Blumenauer (D), Brian Mast (R), Dina Titus (D) and Lori Chavez-DeRemer (R), was addressed to honorable Kay Granger (R) and honorable Rosa DeLaurochair (D), chair and ranking member of House Committee on Appropriations, respectively.

“We write to urge you to maintain the protections included in both the House and Senate Fiscal Year (FY) 2024 Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies Appropriations bills to prevent the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) from prohibiting or penalizing physicians for recommending medical marijuana to any patient requesting its use in a state where such activities are legal,” the congressional lawmakers wrote.

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From the link:

Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro (D) signed Senate Bill 773 last week allowing medical marijuana growers in the state to sell directly to patients. The news comes some six weeks after the Pennsylvania House Health Committee approved it and sent it to the full House.

Two days before the governor signed the measure, the bill was amended and gained final approval in the Senate. Amendments were included to allow cultivation licenses to independent dispensaries, reported Marijuana Moment.

 


Not so sure about that. I read a detailed account of an Englishman who was exploring Achin (now known as Aceh, an Indonesian province) in 1689. He accurately described the natives as using what was undoubtedly marijuana as a medicinal herb. Since these were not seafaring people at that time, I can only assume that the plant was growing there naturally.
 

 


CJ , the medical benefits of cannabis are empirical




 
That's not empirical.

That's testimonials.

Let me see a double-blind test, in controlled settings with neutral oversight.
 
That's not empirical.

That's testimonials.

Let me see a double-blind test, in controlled settings with neutral oversight.



even if I showed you proof , double blind and all that , , what are my odds that you will agree that cannabis is a legitimate medicine?

like I said before , the odds that I change your mind , at this stage of your life , are very very low , like less than 1%.

but here ya go anyway

do some research on your own..there are dozens of PubMed Abstracts on cannabis as a medicine

and yes , you are correct , it is those god awful side affects , like happy , hungry , and sleepy that will bring this society down


A Phase Ib, Double Blind, Randomized Study of Cannabis Oil for Pain in Parkinson's Disease​





Effects of Cannabis in Parkinson's Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis​



please educate yourself by reading a dozen or so of these Abstracts



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  • Meta-Analysis

  • Systematic Review

MeSH terms​

  • Analgesics

  • Cannabis*

  • Humans

  • Medical Marijuana* / therapeutic use

  • Parkinson Disease* / drug therapy

  • Quality of Life

  • Tremor

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  • Analgesics

  • Medical Marijuana

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LinkOut - more resources​


all the best

cracker



 
even if I showed you proof , double blind and all that , , what are my odds that you will agree that cannabis is a legitimate medicine?
Slim. Slim because there's no inhibition, anymore, about deceitful, skewed "tests." Everything from these Jabs to all the Weird Cures that pop-ups offer.

It's not at all like I don't have experience. My own and watching regular users - as a high-school student, as a welfare caseworker, other cases.

The side-effects include illogical thought, replacing logic with emotion (the hysteria I see on The View reminds me of potheads in difficult settings) and poor judgments. Like, quitting a job. Or borrowing money that can't easily be repaid, for expensive consumer crap.

Unca Walt can tell you - we went round over the years, from when we were on a current-events board, over Gold and abolition of the Federal Reserve. What he said didn't change my mind, and he said his piece and left it.

Except I didn't ignore it. I considered it. For months; for years.

So too, here. Except I had no experience with gold, back then, or Austrian Economics. Here, I DO have experience with pot and pot users. It will take a lot to change my mind.

And, hate to say it, but advocates' work is always suspect. For obvious reasons - a substance-abuser always believes his intoxicant of choice is "medicine." I've had alcoholics tell me that absinthe, the real stuff from Italy (which is actually toxic) was medicine. That, or other mixes. Or that beer is good for you.

Sorry. Life has taught me skepticism.
 
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden is making thousands of people who were convicted of use and simple possession of marijuana on federal lands and in the District of Columbia eligible for pardons, the White House said Friday, in his latest round of executive clemencies meant to rectify racial disparities in the justice system.

 
It's SO easy to buy the votes of people whose whole world revolves around drug use....

That is part of why people who use drugs should be excluded from the voter rolls.

Only a pothead would think that the man who erased the borders and gave billions to the Taliban (and by sale, to China) in military hardware and $cash...and who is busily printing up money for 98 Flavors of Woke...only a narrow-focused, mind-altered low-performance type would think this dazed drooler with full diapers, is even worth CONSIDERING as a political leader.
 
Here's something you don't hear about too often.

Want to volunteer? These Delaware community events give you weed in exchange for help​

When it came time to present the pot, grant the ganja or bestow the bud ― however you want to say it ― the organizers of Delaware's first "Joints for Junk" decided to hand out the promised pre-rolls at the start of the two-hour trash clean up in Millsboro this fall.

While the Delaware Cannabis Advocacy Network has been organizing community events ever since its founding in 2013, this was the first time it was doing one since marijuana was legalized in Delaware eight months ago.

So the nonprofit advocacy group brainstormed a new way to attract volunteers: give out grass. And they didn't even wait until the volunteers put in the work first.

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LA Times

Editorial: Biden's marijuana pardons are welcome, but federal drug laws must catch up with reality​


President Biden on Friday demonstrated the proper use of presidential clemency power when he pardoned thousands of people who had been convicted of various nonviolent marijuana violations on federal land.

The reasons he cited included addressing racial disparities in drug prosecution and sentencing, and that's an important point. Criminal laws in theory cover all Americans equally, but in practice, laws punishing possession or use of small amounts of cannabis have been enforced over the years disproportionately against Black people. Unequal enforcement can render a colorblind law racist and an instrument of injustice. Clemency is a tool that, when wielded properly, can remediate flaws in the administration of criminal law.

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political question my arse

more like Big Pharma flexing its gangster muscles

to much money in Tylenol
 

Gillibrand, Nadler call on AG Garland, DEA to scrap federal laws targeting weed​

US Senator Kirsten Gillibrand called on the Biden administration to ease up the federal prohibition on weed Sunday – arguing the current laws dating back to the 1970s have “torn apart” too many lives.

The New York Democrat, along with Rep. Jerry Nadler and several state lawmakers, urged Attorney General Merrick Garland and the Drug Enforcement Administration to deschedule cannabis on a national level, pointing out that the drug is right now in the same classification as heroin and is in a more dangerous category than fentanyl and cocaine.

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Searched for a medical marijuana thread but couldn't find one.

How One Cannabis Blunt Changed This Man's Life: From Monthly Seizures And Depression To A Holistic Lifestyle​

  • At 15, Michael Kerwin, a marketing director for Native Sun Cannabis, was diagnosed complex partial left temporal lobe epilepsy.
  • With cannabis, Kerwin had successful results treating his seizures and was soon back playing sports.
  • Kerwin joined the industry to help others and spread the word about the benefits of cannabis.
"Nature is the source of all true knowledge." Leonardo da Vinci (1452 – 1519)

Did you know that some 50 million people around the world suffer from epilepsy?

Estimates say that up to 70% of people living with this neurological disease could live seizure-free if properly diagnosed and treated. For some people, an effective treatment can be found in nature.

One such person is Michael Kerwin, marketing director for Native Sun Cannabis, a family cannabis company vertically integrated in Massachusetts. Kerwin's professional acumen was fueled by his diagnosis and research. Benzinga wanted to learn more, so we reached out to Kerwin who was more than happy to share his story to help others.

At the age of 15, Kerwin was diagnosed with complex partial left temporal lobe epilepsy.

"I was experiencing monthly episodes of seizures where I was either still aware but unable to communicate cognitively or I was thoroughly unconscious with tightened muscles," he shared with Benzinga. "Amongst that adversity while being a student-athlete in high school, I was receiving adverse side effects of anger and depression via my anti-convulsant pharmaceuticals, Keppra, Depakote, & Lamictal. At this point, I was interested in any alternative."

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Weed does not necessarily affect how one processes information. It might slow it down, but it's not going to change your core values if you have any.
 

SAF FILES BRIEF SUPPORTING MOTION FOR PI IN MEDICAL MARIJUANA 2A BAN​

BELLEVUE, Wash. — March 19, 2024 — Attorneys representing the Second Amendment Foundation and two individual plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit challenging the federal ban on gun ownership by medical marijuana users have filed a brief supporting their motion for a preliminary injunction in the case.

The brief was filed in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania. SAF is joined by Warren County, Pa., District Attorney Robert Greene, who has served in that office since 2013 and currently possesses a medical marijuana ID card under Pennsylvania law and James Irey, a veteran who was recommended medical marijuana but has refrained from obtaining a card as it would deny his ability to exercise his Second Amendment rights. They are represented by attorneys Adam Kraut, who serves as SAF’s executive director, and Joshua Prince of Bechtelsville, Pa. Defendants are Attorney General Merrick Garland, FBI Director Christopher Wray and ATF Director Steven Dettelbach, and the U.S. Government.

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SAF has a good track record in the courts. I'm definitely interested to see what happens with this case.
 
There is a wing of the GOP that does not understand the importance of individual liberty, They are happy to weild the weapon of government for their pet causes (usually some religious adjacent issue).
 
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