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Law The Cannabis Chronicles - Misc Cannabis News

“For the second year, Pete Sessions has shown that he does not care about the health and well-being of our veterans—who are speaking out across the country. All they want is fair and equal treatment, and the ability to consult with their own physician on all treatment options. By blocking this vote, Chairman Sessions has turned his back on our wounded warriors, commonsense, and the will of the American people. He should be ashamed.”

The bigger travesty is Pete Sessions turning his back on democracy and using his committee chair position to single-handedly bottle up the legislative agenda. For all those on both sides of the isle calling for a return to regular order.....THIS is the result of fucking regular order.





Republican Rules Committee Blocks Veterans Medical Marijuana Amendments (Again)


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WASHINGTON, DC — For the second year in a row, the House Rules Committee, led by prohibitionist Representative Pete Sessions (R-TX), blocked multiple amendments related to marijuana from receiving consideration by the full House, thus ending their consideration and silencing the ability for the lower chamber to offer either legal protections or expanded access to veterans who use cannabis for therapeutic purposes.

Among the amendments offered, the most critical one is known as Veterans Equal Access, which would allow VA doctors to fill out the authorizing forms needed for veterans to obtain state-legal medical marijuana.

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Congressman Earl Blumenauer (D-OR), author of the amendment and legislation by the same name, stated “For the second year, Pete Sessions has shown that he does not care about the health and well-being of our veterans—who are speaking out across the country. All they want is fair and equal treatment, and the ability to consult with their own physician on all treatment options. By blocking this vote, Chairman Sessions has turned his back on our wounded warriors, commonsense, and the will of the American people. He should be ashamed.”

Another amendment pertaining to veterans who work for the Veterans Affairs Department would have provided protections to veterans consume marijuana legally under state statute from losing their job as a result of a positive suspicionless drug test. This amendment was authored by Congressman Charlie Crist (D-FL).

For context, last year the American Legion conducted a poll that found one in five veterans self-reported using marijuana to alleviate a medical or physical condition. It is cruel and unreasonable to have veterans live in fear of having to choose between their job and their medication.

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It is expected that the Senate Appropriations Committee will hear the Veterans Equal Access language later today introduced by Senator Steve Daines (R-MT) and pass it as it has for the last few years, yet will likely be stripped out, as it has the last few years.
 
McConnell Inserts Hemp Legalization Into Farm Bill
U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) is following through on a promise to use large-scale agriculture and food policy legislation as a vehicle to legalize hemp.

The GOP leader announced on Friday that he successfully inserted hemp provisions into the Farm Bill, which is expected to move through committee next week.

“Securing the Hemp Farming Act as part of the 2018 Farm Bill has been a top priority of mine,” McConnell said in a press release. “As a result of the hemp pilot program, which I secured in the 2014 Farm Bill, Kentucky’s farmers, processors, and manufacturers have begun to show the potential for this versatile crop. Today’s announcement will build upon that progress to help the Commonwealth enhance its standing at the forefront of hemp’s return to American agriculture. I look forward to continuing to work with my Senate colleagues and my partners in Kentucky – including Kentucky Commissioner of Agriculture Ryan Quarles — to grow hemp’s bright future.”

The announcement comes three days after McConnell swiftly moved a resolution through the Senate acknowledging hemp’s “economic potential” and “historical relevance.” It was adopted without objection from any senator.

And on Wednesday, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) brought two huge baskets of non-psychoactive cannabis products onto the Senate floor to commemorate Hemp History Week.


“Hemp has proven itself as a job-creating growth industry with far-reaching economic potential. It’s just common sense that farmers in Oregon and across our country should be allowed to cultivate this cash crop,” Wyden said in McConnell’s new press release. “Our bipartisan legislation strikes America’s outdated anti-hemp laws from the books so American consumers can buy products made with hemp grown in America. I’m grateful to Sen. McConnell for his leadership in getting the Hemp Farming Act into the Senate Farm Bill and I’m proud to keep working with our bipartisan cosponsors – Senators Merkley and Paul – to pass our bill into law.”

In April, McConnell introduced a standalone bill to legalize hemp, and it already has nearly a third of senators signed on as cosponsors. He later announced plans to attach its provisions to the larger Farm Bill, a pledge he is making good on with Friday’s announcement.

When Congress last revised the Farm Bill, in 2014, McConnell was able to insert language shielding state industrial hemp research programs from federal interference. He and other supporters have included similar protections in annual spending bills as well.

While hemp products such as food, clothing and other consumer goods are legal to sell in the U.S., cultivation of the plant is banned outside of the limited exemption for state research programs, so manufacturers must in many cases import the raw materials from other countries that do no prohibit hemp farming.

That would change if the hemp provisions of the new Farm Bill make it to President Trump’s desk and are signed into law. In addition to removing hemp from the federal definition of marijuana, the Farm Bill provisions would make it eligible for federal crop insurance.

Last month, House Republicans blocked floor votes on several hemp-related amendments to that chamber’s version of the Farm Bill. But if the provisions get past the Senate, McConnell’s leadership and passion for the issue means they stand a good chance of being included in the final legislation that will be crafted by a House-Senate conference committee for delivery to the president.

Despite McConnell’s work on hemp, he does not support legalizing its psychoactive cannabis cousin marijuana, however. Despite the fact that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) has joined McConnell’s hemp bill as a cosponsor, the GOP leader said he won’t be backing his Democratic counterpart’s forthcoming bill to remove marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act.

“These are two entirely separate plants,” McConnell said. “There is a lot of confusion about what hemp is. It has an illicit cousin, which I choose not to embrace.”
 
So here is my problem with this article...hint: its in the title. And I have been seeing this type of thing in the news media constantly in the last couple of years. I am NOT, and DO NOT want to, get into a political discussion but to me this headline is the definition of fake news and I'm seeing it on the front page of the NY Times, Washington Post, and other media outlets that have been highly respected in the past.

And the issue is that the title of this article is not news...its pure speculation. "President Trump MAY Well Flip-Flop". Yeah, that MAY happen along with an infinite number of other events including the sun going nova tomorrow. Doubtful, but it MAY.

Now this is not about Trump. I'm see front page articles on a wide range of topics and the only thing they have as substance is "may", "might", "possibly", "conceivably" and every other related synonym. If you have news, report it. If you have opinion, put it in the editorials, if you have just idel speculation...keep it to yourself.

Ok, rant over. Much better now. LOL


Why President Trump May Well Flip-Flop on Marijuana Legalization

On Friday, President Donald Trump said he would “probably” support a new bipartisan bill that would return decision-making on marijuana laws to individual states. The bill would be a massive boon to the nascent marijuana industry, but even Trump’s support can’t guarantee its passage over opposition from many Republican leaders. And the risk that marijuana reform could be seen as a win for Democrats could lead Trump himself, never exactly steadfast in his positions, to waver.

The new bill is cosponsored by Sen. Cory Gardner, a Republican from Colorado, where recreational pot is legal. Among its most important effects, it would give marijuana growers and sellers better access to the formal financial system, which is reluctant to deal with businesses at risk of Federal prosecution. That would be a huge step forward for marijuana, which has huge potential as an industry, given the right legal environment.

Both that business case, and the idea that drug laws impinge on personal liberty, make marijuana reform a compelling cause for Gardner’s libertarian wing of the Republican party. That faction, pioneered by former Texas congressman Ron Paul, could gain traction with the marijuana issue in particular. As of late 2017, a thin majority of Republicans said they supported marijuana legalization. But Gardner’s wing of the party has frequently clashed with Trump, including when Sen. Rand Paul (Ron Paul’s son) fought the President’s signature tax cuts. Gardner himself blocked Trump Administration Justice Department nominations to extract preliminary concessions on marijuana enforcement from Trump.

Moreover, Gardner’s partner on the bill is Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a far-left Democrat who has clashed with Trump on numerous personal and policy issues, including the gutting of the Warren-created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Even Gardner’s openness to bipartisan collaboration, which he proudly touts, makes him an unlikely Trump ally.

Meanwhile, despite broad support from Republican voters, many leaders within the party are dead-set against marijuana legalization. Most prominently, that includes Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who last month refused to back Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer’s own proposed bill to decriminalize marijuana, which Schumer announced in April. Lack of support from other Republican legislators, according to Vox, likely means no reform bill can get the votes needed to pass.

That opposition reflects longstanding Republican stances on the negative impact of marijuana on society. Trump’s own embattled Attorney General, Jeff Sessions, has recited those views, equating marijuana to heroin and saying it causes violence. In January, Sessions ended Obama-era protections for state-level legalization.

Because they have taken earlier and broader stances in favor of both marijuana legalization and drug-related criminal justice reform, Democrats could claim any federal overhaul as a win for the party. In particular, it could be a rallying cry for minority voters, who have been disproportionately harmed by harsh drug laws and have recently formed the backbone of the Democratic electorate. It could also help energize young voters, who are more likely to favor reform. Republican congressional leaders could pressure Trump to refuse support for the Gardner-Warren bill ahead of the November midterm elections, both to block what could be seen as a Democratic win, and to mute the appearance of divisions among Republicans. Highlighting Warren’s role in the new bill might be enough to turn Trump against it, given his frequent tendency to act out of personal motives rather than firm principle.

Such a reversal would end momentum for reform, further dampening the marijuana industry – and possibly harming Trump’s own supporters. Trump owes his 2016 electoral college victory to thin margins in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. His appeal to coal miners in West Virginia was also important to his broader campaign message. All of those states, according to the Centers for Disease Control, have very high rates of drug overdose mortality, mostly stemming from the opioid crisis. A recent study found evidence that legalized medical marijuana reduced opioid-related hospitalizations. Michigan, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania have already legalized medical marijuana, moves that the Warren-Gardner bill would protect.

Opioid harm reduction is just one of the potential positive impacts that would make marijuana reform a much-needed example of productive bipartisan cooperation in Washington. But at least for now, it might not be a win Republicans are willing to take.
 
This is sad, disgusting, and suprising. I think the sad and disgusting part are obvious. What's surprising is that, in my mind, the English have always been rather rational about things...particularly when compared to us in the USA. This CBD thing I just don't get, however. Well, or the UK's overall MJ policies for that matter.


British Mother Pleads for Return of Epileptic Son’s Cannabis Oil


LONDON (AP) — A British mother who says her son needs cannabis oil to prevent dangerous epileptic seizures is pleading with British officials to return the supply she recently obtained in Canada.

Charlotte Caldwell said border officials seized the marijuana-infused oil when she tried to enter the country Monday, June 11, 2018, with her autistic 12-year-old son.

Caldwell said at a news conference: “I will just go back to Canada and get more and I will bring it back again, because my son has a right to have his anti-epileptic medication in his country, in his own home.”

Caldwell planned to meet with Home Office officials Monday, June 11, 2018, about getting back the oil, which is banned in England.
 
https://www.marijuanamoment.net/senators-approve-medical-marijuana-for-military-veterans/
Senators Approve Medical Marijuana For Military Veterans

A key U.S. Senate panel voted on Thursday to allow doctors with the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to issue medical marijuana recommendations to military veterans.

The Senate Appropriations Committee approved the amendment, offered by Sen. Steve Daines (R-MT) and Jeff Merkley (D-OR), on a voice vote.

The measure “simply allows veterans to discuss that option [medical cannabis] with their VA doc or physician,” Daines said during a brief debate.

Merkley added that it is an “incredible inconvenience for veterans to be told they have to seek out a whole new medical system” to get cannabis recommendations.

The move comes one day after the House Rules Committee blocked floor votes on several amendments concerning medical cannabis access for veterans.

In past years, previous versions of the cannabis recommendation measure have been approved by the full House and Senate, but have never been enacted into law. The new amendment approved by senators also protects veterans from being denied VA services as a result of their participation in a state medical marijuana program.

Under current VA internal policy, government physicians are barred from filling out medical cannabis recommendations for veterans, even in states where it is legal.

If the measure approved by senators on Thursday is included in final Fiscal Year 2019 spending legislation for the VA, the department would no longer be able to enforce its ban on medical marijuana recommendations.

In a press release about the Appropriations Committee vote, Daines said, “Veterans should not be discriminated against when they seek care at the VA. They deserve access to the treatment that best suits their medical needs, just like they would receive at a non-VA clinic.”

Read the full text of the veterans cannabis amendment:

SEC. 249. None of the funds appropriated or otherwise made available to the Department of Veterans Affairs in this Act may be used in a manner that would—

(1) interfere with the ability of a veteran to participate in a medicinal marijuana program approved by a State;

(2) deny any services from the Department to a veteran who is participating in such a program; or

(3) limit or interfere with the ability of a health care provider of the Department to make appropriate recommendations, fill out forms, or take steps to comply with such a program.
 
"as did Democrats Andrew Cuomo from New York"
Only because of the political consideration named Cynthia Nixon. Otherwise, he wouldn't have done squat.

"The Republican represents the fairly liberal state of Maryland, and his support of the letter may help him gain some support from moderate Democrats who could help him stay in office."
This may indeed be just a political consideration for Hogan, but he has governed from the center and is very popular across the state and across party lines. Rather like Hogan and while not a supporter, he didn't impede the implementation of our medical program at all that I can tell.



12 Governors call on congress to pass bill protecting legalized marijuana states


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Last week, Senators Cory Gardner and Elizabeth Warren introduced a bill, called the STATES Act, that would protect states with legalized marijuana from federal government interference, writes Joseph Misulonas.

And now the leaders of those states are calling on Congress to pass it.

12 governors signed a letter written to leaders of Congress calling for the passage of the STATES Act. They noted that their states did not pass these laws without thoughtful and careful consideration, and also noted that they were supported by the citizens of their states. They asked that Congress pass the bill and allow their citizens to enjoy the laws they supported. Unsurprising, the list of governors included the leaders of states who have already legalized recreational marijuana (California, Oregon, Colorado, Alaska, Nevada, Washington and Massachusetts).

But the letter also included signatures from non-legalized states. Governor Phil Murphy from New Jersey, who has advocated for legalized recreational marijuana in his state, signed the letter, as did Democrats Andrew Cuomo from New York and Tom Wolfe from Pennsylvania, neither of whom support recreational marijuana legalization but have stated they oppose federal intervention in states' cannabis laws.

Perhaps somewhat surprising is that two Republican governors, Governor Doug Burgum from North Dakota and Larry Hogan from Maryland, from non-legal states also signed the letter. Hogan's signature could be explained by his upcoming re-election campaign.

The Republican represents the fairly liberal state of Maryland, and his support of the letter may help him gain some support from moderate Democrats who could help him stay in office.

But Burgum's support doesn't have the same electoral motivation, considering he's not up for re-election until 2020 and won his previous election with 75 percent of the vote.

So will Republicans actually support states' rights, like they claim they do. Or will they continue advocated old-fashioned policies?
 
This is big. Both chambers have it in the appropriations bill so no worries about it being dropped during reconciliation discussions and this means that we aren't counting on an amendment getting through committee and added on to continuing resolutions and the like as with Rohrabacher–Blumenauer.

Dey' just sticking to ole' Jefferson at every turn. That boy just didn't know when to hold them and when to fold them. He picked an unnecessary fight against MJ and is gettting his ass handed to him. Love it.




U.S. Senate links Department of Justice funding with medical marijuana protections


For the first time ever, the U.S. Senate will link funding of the Department of Justice with a provision that protects states with legalized medical marijuana, writes Joseph Misulonas.

The Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies approved a bill funding the Department of Justice for 2019 with a provision that none of the funding can be used to go after medical marijuana businesses in states where it is legal.

Right now, the DOJ is prevented from doing so thanks to the Rohrabacher-Blumenauer amendment that was originally passed in 2014 and continues to receive renewal with every new budget for the federal government.

But this new provision would be the first time DOJ funding was directly linked to protections for medical marijuana, and it also means Congress would not need to pass the Rohrabacher-Blumenauer amendment again when it expires wit the current federal government budget.

The House Appropriations Committee also inserted the medical marijuana protections into their bill funding the DOJ as well, which all but ensures the protections will end up in the bill that's sent to President Donald Trump's desk later this year.

The protections passed by the House and the Senate only concern medical marijuana. There are no protections currently in place for recreational cannabis, although there are several proposals currently pending in Congress.
 
And this is from that bastion of conservatism, The National Review. So, aside from Sessions and a few octogenarian Asian, who is left opposing legalization...hmmm?

"As more states legalize marijuana, the need for a reconciliation between the federal prohibition and the will of the people will come into sharper relief."

THIS ^^

Leave Marijuana Policy to the States
By Theodore Kupfer

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A customer shops for marijuana at the MedMen store in West Hollywood, Calif., January 2, 2018.


A new bill would reconcile federal law with reality on the ground.

In the nine states where recreational marijuana is legal, industrial-scale growers distribute huge quantities of weed to product manufacturers, dispensaries are as common as banks in strip malls, and anyone over 21 can buy weed in all sorts of forms — edibles, CBD oils, cookies that contain ten milligrams of THC apiece, a good old-fashioned joint.

And everyone involved is breaking federal law. The possession, manufacture, and distribution of marijuana violates the Controlled Substances Act, which defines the drug as a Schedule I substance, the most severe level of classification. The prohibition doesn’t even allow an exception for medical use, which another 20 states have legalized.

With the Marijuana STATES Act, a bill that amends the Controlled Substances Act so that it applies only when state law applies as well, lawmakers are trying to change that.

Thus far, legal weed has flourished only because federal law hasn’t been enforced. The medical-marijuana business, still small, been protected for years by a rider to appropriations bills that bars federal money from funding their prosecution. Recreational-pot businesses, meanwhile, are protected mainly by the executive branch’s unwillingness to treat them as though they were Mexican cartels.

Under the Obama administration, Department of Justice policy was defined by the “Cole Memo,” which directed federal prosecutors to deprioritize marijuana in states where it was legal. That represented an attempt to change the law by executive fiat, and the Trump DOJ, led by unreconstructed drug warrior Jeff Sessions, rescinded the memo on those grounds. But while Sessions made noise early on about ramping up enforcement, legal-weed states have yet to see a crackdown. Going after the weed industry would require federal authorities to raid huge farms, confiscate enormous amounts of money, and put dispensaries out of business, and would set off a political firestorm. So an uneasy stasis persists.

Enter the STATES Act. A bipartisan group of senators, led by Cory Gardner (R., Colo.) and Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.), introduced the bill last week. It would amend the Controlled Substances Act to conform to the policies of individual states: Phat Panda Farms, based in Spokane, Wash., would be vulnerable to federal prosecution if it tried to open up a branch in Jackson, Miss., but otherwise would be phree to pharm away. Marijuana is a question to which the citizens of Mississippi and Washington obviously have different answers, making it a natural candidate for federalism.

The bill would also allow pot businesses to take deductions and make it easier for banks to serve them by clarifying money-laundering statutes — and aside from federalism, the incentives are clear for the bill’s proponents. Consumers want to smoke; producers want to profit; plenty of capital sits on the sidelines waiting for a change in federal policy. The current quilt of laws and the problems inherent to leaving lawmaking to the executive branch have led to uncertainty, which hinders the development of the weed business. Were it to pass, all interested parties would know what the rules are. Otherwise, companies risk falling afoul of money-laundering statutes if they put their revenue in the banks, so many sit in cash. They also can’t take business deductions on their federal taxes, so they wind up missing out on profits. The STATES Act addresses both of these problems, and could spur a Hemp Valley explosion of startups in states — such as Massachusetts and Colorado — that have legalized it.

We should not forget that the drug imposes economic and human costs. Its proliferation will invite new regulatory and social questions

Fearing opposition from the usual tough-on-crime suspects, advocates of the STATES Act are clear: This is not a legalization bill. Buying weed in Colorado and returning home to Nebraska would remain both a state and federal crime under the STATES Act, as would selling weed as a black-market drug dealer who also carries fentanyl in his inventory. People who run afoul of state laws would be subject to federal prosecution, potentially allowing the federal government to reinforce the various legal regimes of each state. Gardner points to another virtue of increased transparency in the business sector: “Conflicting federal and state marijuana laws make it difficult for legitimate businesses to use the basic financial services they need access to, which creates a public safety risk,” the senator told National Review. “Businesses are being forced to carry around bags of money to pay for their employees and rent because of banks not being able to accept their money. . . . Getting this industry into the banking system will help increase transparency and allow law enforcement to ensure both that the profits are going to investors rather than cartels.”

Comments
As more states legalize marijuana, the need for a reconciliation between the federal prohibition and the will of the people will come into sharper relief. But we should not forget that the drug imposes economic and human costs. Its proliferation will invite new regulatory and social questions: What is the proper taxation regime for marijuana? Set the wrong one — per-gram, for instance — and we risk incentivizing businesses to develop ever-more potent strains, amplifying the costs to heavy users. How much should society stigmatize marijuana? A newly libertarian legal regime need not come with a libertine social ethic that trivializes the abusive potential of weed.

All of which means the STATES Act, even if it were to pass, should not be considered the end of marijuana policymaking in the U.S. But if it is just a start, it is the right start. The federal government should bequeath these questions to the laboratories, and let us experiment with different regulatory strains.


Theodore Kupfer
— Theodore Kupfer is a William F. Buckley Fellow in Political Journalism at the National Review Institute. @theodorekupfer
 

Resolution Calls for Congress to Admit to Drug War Failures

Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman is taking Congress to task over the failed War on Drugs.

Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman (D-NJ) has introduced a resolution in the House of Representatives that would acknowledge the war on drugs has failed. Watson Coleman filed the measure, House Resolution 933, on Tuesday. More than two dozen additional Representatives have also added their names as sponsors of the legislation.

Watson Coleman noted that the government is addressing the current opioid crisis differently than previous drug issues.

“The War on Drugs didn’t just fail to stem the damage of addiction, its very declaration failed to meet the values of equality and justice our nation was founded on,” she said in a release. “Congress has rightly decided to tackle the opioid epidemic with evidence-based policies that seek to solve the issue of addiction. But for years, we criminalized addiction in ways that caused irreparable harm not just to users, but their families, neighborhoods, and communities. As we offer up funding and resources to address the disease of addiction among overwhelmingly White users, we must acknowledge our failures to do the same with victims of color.”

The resolution specifically calls on Congress to admit the War on Drugs has failed to reduce drug use. It also offers an apology to victims of the failed policy.


“To acknowledge that the War on Drugs has been a failed policy in achieving the goal of reducing drug use, and for the House of Representatives to apologize to the individuals and communities that were victimized by this policy,” it reads.

Resolution Details Racial Bias
Rep. Watson Coleman’s resolution also details racial bias and propaganda that have fueled drug prohibition. It notes that in 1937, Federal Bureau of Narcotics Commissioner Harry J. Anslinger was openly racist in congressional testimony.

“I wish I could show you what a small marijuana cigarette can do to one of our degenerate Spanish speaking residents. That’s why our problem is so great; the greatest percentage of our population is composed of Spanish-speaking persons, most of who are low mentally, because of social and racial conditions,” he said.


H. Res. 933 also notes the racial and political motives behind President Richard Nixon’s policies. Nixon formally declared the War on Drugs in 1971, saying drug abuse was “public enemy number one.”

But in 1994, Nixon aide John Ehrlichman admitted that the policy was really an effort to control liberals and blacks.

“We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did,” he said.


The resolution also notes that the War on Drugs created conditions that exacerbated the opioid epidemic. The policy has also led to “racially-charged mass incarceration of millions” of people, according to the resolution.

The resolution calls for changes in drug policy and its creation in the future. It seeks to treat addiction as a health issue rather than a criminal justice matter. The measure also supports a review of War on Drugs-era laws and replacing them with evidence-based statutes. Groups including the Drug Policy Alliance and Amnesty International have expressed support for Watson Coleman’s resolution.
 
"the issue at hand for the amendment is not about cannabis, but rather public safety and financial transparency"
:watchout: So they are telling us that having having this be a cash business and having all this cash sitting around is much safer and more transparent?


U.S. House Committee Rejects Cannabis Banking Measure

Wednesday, the U.S. House of Representatives’ Appropriations Committee voted down a measure designed to protect banking institutions that are willing to work with cannabis businesses, according to a Forbes report by Tom Angell.

The measure would have stopped the Treasury Department from penalizing a financial institution solely for doing business with a company in the cannabis industry, giving banks assurances from the federal government that they wouldn’t be closed down. It was defeated in a voice vote during the session.

Rep. David Joyce (R-Ohio) was the primary sponsor of the amendment. Joyce said the issue at hand for the amendment is not about cannabis, but rather public safety and financial transparency. Several other Republican supporters of the bill were absent for debate, weakening Joyce’s ability to have a formal roll call tally for the amendment.

Following the measure’s defeat, Joyce attempted to write a version of the amendment focused on medical cannabis instead but, after insufficient support and several calls for removal, Joyce withdrew the second attempt at an amendment.
 
"the issue at hand for the amendment is not about cannabis, but rather public safety and financial transparency"
:watchout: So they are telling us that having having this be a cash business and having all this cash sitting around is much safer and more transparent?


U.S. House Committee Rejects Cannabis Banking Measure

Wednesday, the U.S. House of Representatives’ Appropriations Committee voted down a measure designed to protect banking institutions that are willing to work with cannabis businesses, according to a Forbes report by Tom Angell.

The measure would have stopped the Treasury Department from penalizing a financial institution solely for doing business with a company in the cannabis industry, giving banks assurances from the federal government that they wouldn’t be closed down. It was defeated in a voice vote during the session.

Rep. David Joyce (R-Ohio) was the primary sponsor of the amendment. Joyce said the issue at hand for the amendment is not about cannabis, but rather public safety and financial transparency. Several other Republican supporters of the bill were absent for debate, weakening Joyce’s ability to have a formal roll call tally for the amendment.

Following the measure’s defeat, Joyce attempted to write a version of the amendment focused on medical cannabis instead but, after insufficient support and several calls for removal, Joyce withdrew the second attempt at an amendment.
I think you may have misunderstood the article, Mom. The person who said that was the one who authored and sponsored a bill to protect the banking industry wrt to MJ money. Her point is exactly as you stated...that its not about MJ but about public safety and financial transparency which will definitely be enhanced if MJ industry is allowed to use normal banking versus stuffing it under their mattress.
 
To me, all BS excuses and not actual reasons for fucking putting people in jail for it. Not actual reasons at all! :cursing::disgust::smackdown::torching:


7 reasons marijuana has yet to be legalized in the U.S


Throughout much of North America, the legal cannabis movement has been unstoppable. Last year, Mexico legalized medical marijuana, while Canada is currently in the final stages of becoming the first developed country in the world to legalize adult-use weed. Even the United States has witnessed steady progression, with 29 states (and Washington, D.C.) passing broad-sweeping medical cannabis laws since 1996.

According to cannabis research firm ArcView, the North American legal pot market generated $9.7 billion in sales last year, which was up 33% from the previous year. Of course, a vast majority of aggregate marijuana sales are still conducted on the black market, giving the industry and investors hope that there's still many years of huge growth that lie ahead.

Cannabis isn't legal in the U.S., and it may not be anytime soon
Of course, that growth could be severely hampered in the United States, where marijuana remains a Schedule I drug. As a Schedule I substance, it's entirely illegal and par for the course with LSD and heroin, considered to be highly prone to abuse, and has no recognized medical benefits.

The interesting thing is that the American public appears to strongly disagree with the federal government's continued stance that cannabis remain a Schedule I drug. Gallup's national survey in October 2017 showed that 64% of its respondents favored the idea of legalizing marijuana, representing an all-time high. Meanwhile, a poll from the independent Quinnipiac University in April 2018 found that an overwhelming 93% of respondents favor the idea of physicians being able to write prescriptions for medical marijuana.

So, why hasn't marijuana been legalized in the United States? Keeping in mind that I'm here to offer a neutral take, here are seven of the most logical reasons behind why pot will remain illegal at the federal level.

1. Lawmakers worry about adolescent access
drug-free-zone-sign-marijuana-pot-weed-cannabis-illegal-getty_large.jpg


To begin with, lawmakers are concerned that opening the door to legalizing cannabis would ease the access of adolescents to the drug. What's interesting, though, is that this worry has mostly been disproven given recent data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health.

In Colorado, one of the first states to have legalized recreational pot, a little more than 9% of teens aged 12 to 17 admitted to using marijuana between 2015 and 2016. Comparably, between 2013 and 2014, just before and during the initial launch of adult-use cannabis in the state, use rate for teens aged 12 to 17 was a considerably higher 12%.

Additionally, adolescent cannabis use fell across the country in 2016, according to the aforementioned federal survey, and no states (legal or not) demonstrated a significant uptick in adolescent use rates. It would appear that this concern is unfounded, but it remains a front-and-center objection of some lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

2. Clinical data has been mixed
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Another reason lawmakers have been leery of giving the green light to marijuana has been a history of mixed clinical data regarding the drugs' benefits and risks.

On one hand, there appears to be at least some benefits offered by cannabis and/or cannabinoids. GW Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:GWPH) has its lead cannabidiol-based drug, Epidiolex, under review by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) right now as a treatment for two rare types of childhood-onset epilepsy. In a handful of pivotal-stage studies, GW Pharmaceuticals' Epidiolex ran circles around the placebo, significantly reducing seizure frequency from baseline, and relative to the placebo, in the process. GW Pharmaceuticals' Epidiolex also received a unanimous vote in favor of approval from the FDA's advisory panel, putting it in good shape leading up to the FDA's decision date later this month.

On the other hand, a study released in the journal Hippocampus back in 2015 from researchers at Northwestern University discovered a worrisome trend in the brains of folks in their early 20s who began using marijuana heavily at age 16 or 17. MRI scans of these subjects showed an oddly shaped hippocampus region of the brain, which is an area responsible for long-term memory retention. It's these mixed results that concern lawmakers.

3. Driving under the influence laws aren't concrete

dui-marijuana-breathalyzer-police-officer-sobriety-test-getty_large.jpg


Next, lawmakers have reservations about what legalizing cannabis could do to driving under the influence laws in the United States.

The issue is that there are no firm lines in the sand when it comes to marijuana use, whereas there are pretty concrete guidelines when it comes to the use of alcohol. In essence, if you're determined to have a blood alcohol content (BAC) of 0.08% or above, it's considered driving under the influence and is an offense you'll probably be arrested for. Though a peace officer could cite a driver for being under the influence at a lower BAC, it's up to their discretion.

With marijuana, there are no guidelines in terms of what represents too much impairment behind the wheel. Marijuana breathalyzers are currently in development by a number of companies, but they're not yet ready for a real-world rollout. Further complicating matters is the fact tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the psychoactive component of the cannabis plant that gets you "high," remains in a person's system for days or weeks, making it difficult for peace officers to determine when a person ingested cannabis, and how impaired they actually are.

4. Congress doesn't have room on its docket for reform
congress-capitol-building-laws-budget-washington-getty_large.jpg


Congress also doesn't have much, if any, room on its docket for cannabis reform. Though we might think of politicians as professional thumb twiddlers, they have a pretty busy schedule when it comes to debating bills and introducing legislation.

With Republicans firmly in control of the legislative branch of the federal government, the docket is expected to be dominated by the 2019 fiscal budget, an infrastructure bill, and (once again) healthcare reform. This isn't to say that cannabis reform couldn't be squeezed in, but GOP lawmakers are liable to use a busy docket as an ongoing excuse to keep marijuana reform off the Senate or House floor.

5. Republicans have a mixed to negative view of marijuana
marijuana-buds-with-gavel-laws-legality-getty_large.jpg


I'd be remiss if I didn't also mention that Republicans have a generally negative view of cannabis, at least with regard to legalizing adult-use weed. The aforementioned April poll from Quinnipiac University found that despite 63% of respondents favoring the idea of legalizing pot in the U.S., just 41% of self-identified Republicans were in favor of legalizing marijuana nationally. This compares to the 55% who opposed such an idea.

However, Quinnipiac's survey did show that of the 93% of respondents who favored the idea of allowing physicians to prescribe medical cannabis, 86% of self-identified Republicans favored such a measure. In other words, if there is to be marijuana reform in the U.S., it's likely to be on the medical side of the equation.

6. Keeping the current scheduling has an economic benefit
marijuana-cannabis-weed-pot-leaf-cash-tax-regulation-getty_large.jpg


To be clear, there are quite a few economic benefits to legalizing cannabis, including tax revenue for states and the federal government, as well as job creation. An estimated 1.1 million jobs could be created by 2025 if marijuana were legalized, according to an analysis by New Frontier Data.

But there's actually an economic benefit to the federal government in keeping things the way they are right now. U.S. tax code 280E, a tax rule more than three decades old, disallows businesses that sell federally illegal substances (as defined by the Controlled Substances Act) from taking normal corporate income tax deductions. Assuming marijuana-based businesses are profitable, it means these companies still have to pay federal income tax, and without deductions they could be on the line for an effective tax rate of 70% to 90%. Laying on such a huge effective tax rate is a benefit to the federal government that it may not want to give up.

7. Rescheduling could be a nightmare
scientist-writing-on-clipboard-marijuana-cannabis-getty_large.jpg


Last but not least, lawmakers on Capitol Hill might be standing pat on pot because rescheduling would create a nightmare for the industry.

As noted, going from the most stringent classification (Schedule I) to being completely removed from the controlled substances list probably isn't an option -- at least as long as the GOP is in charge. This suggests that any sort of reform would likely take the form of a modest move down in scheduling to Schedule II. Schedule II drugs do have recognized medical benefits, but they're also considered to be highly prone to abuse.

Moving to Schedule II, while good news on the surface, would also expose the cannabis industry to the strict oversight of the FDA. The drug regulatory agency would have the final say on packaging and marketing, and would likely oversee the production of cannabis with regard to THC content from one crop to the next. Most importantly, the FDA could require marijuana companies to verify the medical benefits of pot via approved clinical trials before allowing it to be used for some, or all, ailments. That's a costly venture that could limit the number of people who have access to medical pot.

Though anything is possible, the chances of marijuana being legalized in the U.S. appear slim.
 
Just how far behind the electorate will our professional political class have to be before their self-serving re-election calculations flip them to supporting legalization? Hmmmm?


Across Gender, Race, and Party, More Americans Than Ever Support Cannabis Legalization

With legislation pending in Congress that would effectively end federal prohibition, a new national poll has found record support among registered voters for legalizing cannabis and taking steps to limit the impact of nonviolent criminal convictions.


A majority of all partisan, gender, and racial groups now support cannabis legalization, the poll found. Across all respondents, 68% said they favor legalization, with 40% saying they’re “strongly” in favor. That’s up since April, when a Quinnapiac poll found 63% support for legalization. In January, that number was 58%.

The latest numbers are based on an online survey of 1,000 registered US voters, which was conducted in late April and early May by the progressive Center for American Progress and polling firm GBA Strategies.

The new survey also revealed that a strong majority (70%) support sealing criminal records of nonviolent felonies or misdemeanors for people who complete their sentences and have not committed other crimes. “Sealing their record does not clear an individual’s criminal record,” the poll notes, “but it means these individuals would not be required to disclose their criminal record when applying for a job, housing, or further education.”

Overwhelming Support for Criminal Justice Reform
While most of today’s discussion of cannabis policy centers on legalization, the new survey suggests there’s even greater support for ending the consequences of past convictions for nonviolent crimes—whether cannabis-related or not—provided individuals complete the terms of their sentences and do not commit another crime. Past convictions can impede individuals’ efforts to get jobs, find housing, or further their education.

Both Michigan and South Carolina are currently considering so-called clean slate legislation, which would automatically seal certain records.

Screen-Shot-2018-06-20-at-1.14.30-PM-1024x845.png

(Courtesy of Center for American Progress / GBA Strategies)
The poll found bipartisan support for clean slate legislation, with 75% of Democrats, 66% of Republicans, and 61% of independents in favor. A majority of people across racial and gender lines also support such steps.

The group that most strongly supported sealing records were actually victims of crimes, 84% of whom said they favored the policy.
A sizable percentage (82%) of respondents who had been charged with a crime said they supported clean slate legislation. But perhaps more notably, of those surveyed for the poll, the group that most strongly supported sealing records were actually victims of crimes, 84% of whom said they favored the policy.

“American voters are ready to move forward with this important legislation,” the survey’s authors write, “and politicians should take their lead and bring clean slate to fruition to help nonviolent offenders move on with their lives and successfully reintegrate into American life.”


(Courtesy of Center for American Progress / GBA Strategies)
In terms of cannabis possession specifically, an even greater number (77%) of respondents said they favor automatically sealing criminal records. Notably, 54% of those who said they oppose cannabis legalization nevertheless support clean slate policies.

“Why do people support this idea?” the survey asks. “Fifty-one percent of those backing the clean slate proposal say that the best reason to support the idea is that it ‘would help people with criminal records move on with their lives, provide for their families, and become productive members of society.’ This reason for support far outstrips other arguments regarding safety and values.”

Cannabis Legalization Not a Partisan Issue

(Courtesy of Center for American Progress / GBA Strategies)
Across party lines, cannabis is now a winning issue among voters, the poll found, with 68% of respondents in favor of legalizing and 40% who “strongly” support the proposal.

“In an era of increasing partisanship, public support for ending cannabis criminalization is an issue that crosses party lines,” NORML Deputy Director Paul Armentano said Wednesday in a statement about the poll. “More and more, elected officials – and those who wish to be elected – must acknowledge that advocating in favor of marijuana policy reform is a political opportunity, not a political liability.”

Among political parties, 77% of Democrats, 62% of independents, and 57% of Republicans supported legalization. In terms of gender, more women (69%) than men (66%) said they were in favor. And across racial lines, legalization was backed by 72% of African Americans, 69% of whites, and 64% of Latinos.

“Voters across partisan and demographic lines strongly support these measures,” the poll’s authors conclude, “and political leaders who push for these measures should feel confident that voters will reward them for their efforts.”

 
Both Jeff AND Pete Sessions are pissing into the wind and I'm laughing as they wet themselves. Its over boys, give it up....for for mercy's sake, give it up.

More State Political Parties Endorse Marijuana Legalization


Delegates at Democratic party conventions in two separate states voted to add marijuana legalization planks to their official platforms this weekend.

In Texas, Democrats embraced a policy to “legalize possession and use of marijuana and its derivatives and to regulate its use, production and sale as is successfully done in Colorado, Washington and other States.” Delegates also called on the immediate legalization of medical marijuana, the removal of cannabis from the list of federally banned substances and the release of individuals convicted of marijuana possession, as well as the expungement of records for individuals convicted of marijuana-related misdemeanors.

A separate plank adopted by the party embraces the “legalization of hemp for agricultural purposes.”

The language of the planks is similar to the Texas Democratic Party’s current platform, which also called for marijuana decriminalization and the regulation of the “use, cultivation, production, and sale [of cannabis] as is done with tobacco and alcohol.”

The move comes about a week after the state’s Republican party delegates approved platform planks to decriminalize cannabis, expand the state’s medical marijuana program, reschedule marijuana under federal law and push forward with hemp reform.

In New Hampshire, Democratic delegates also voted in favor of adding a platform plank to legalize cannabis. “We believe that marijuana should be legalized, taxed, and regulated,” the Granite State Dems’ new plank reads. Delegates at the convention also approved a resolution supporting the removal of marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act.

The passage of the pro-legalization plank in New Hampshire reflects a significant policy evolution—but the path to its approval wasn’t necessarily smooth. There was debate among party officials about the initial language of the plank, which said the state should “treat cannabis in a manner similar to alcohol.” The plank was changed to satisfy some members who took issue with the reference to alcohol, The Concord Monitor reported. Even so, not all members were on board with the plank, with House Minority Leader Steve Shurtleff arguing that the party should wait until a legislative commission studying the impact of legalization in the state submits its report in November.

That the party’s delegates went ahead and adopted the legal marijuana endorsement is “an encouraging development that bodes very well for the future of cannabis policy in New Hampshire,” Matt Simon, New England political director for the Marijuana Policy Project, told Marijuana Moment. “After several years of modest, incremental reforms being obstructed by previous Democratic Governors John Lynch and Maggie Hassan, it’s great to see that the party, and both of its gubernatorial candidates, are now embracing legalization and regulation.”

New Hampshire’s Republican party has not taken up legalization as a platform plank.

The Texas and New Hampshire Dems joined the ranks of several others that approved similar platform positions.
In May, the Democratic Party of New York endorsed a resolution supporting “the legalization of marijuana which should be regulated and taxed in a manner similar to alcohol.” Connecticut’s Democratic party also adopted a platform plank this year stating that “[t]he time for legalization of Marijuana has come.”

“Doing so will raise revenue, which can be used to benefit those suffering from the disease of addiction to prescription pain medications and other opioids.”

And from California to Wisconsin, Democratic party delegates across the country officially backed marijuana legalization in 2016—and numerous others threw their support behind more modest cannabis reform policies such as decriminalization. Iowa’s Democratic party went even further, calling for the legalization of all drugs.

That same year, the Democratic National Convention (DNC) approved the first-ever major party platform to include a plank embracing a “reasoned pathway for future legalization” and the rescheduling of cannabis under federal law.

“We believe that the states should be laboratories of democracy on the issue of marijuana, and those states that want to decriminalize it or provide access to medical marijuana should be able to do so. We support policies that will allow more research on marijuana, as well as reforming our laws to allow legal marijuana businesses to exist without uncertainty. And we recognize our current marijuana laws have had an unacceptable disparate impact in terms of arrest rates for African Americans that far outstrip arrest rates for whites, despite similar usage rates.”

The growing support for legalization among Democratic state parties appears to reflect a similar trend in public opinion toward cannabis reform nationally. A recent poll found that a record 68 percent of Americans believe marijuana should be legal. That includes a majority of Republicans. While federal lawmakers have generally been slower to adopt pro-legalization stances, a number of bipartisan bills have also been introduced in recent months that aim to reform the country’s cannabis laws.
 
Now....we do remember that MJ and ALL of its constituent parts are Schedule 1 which means NO LEGITIMATE MEDICAL USE. Now square that BS away with the FDA getting ready to approve an extraction from MJ (not synthesis, but extracted...derived....came from MJ). It seems that our Government is pretty good at talking out of both sides of their mouth (and remember, there one guy who STILL gets Federally rolled joints for his meds) but I'm afraid that they are going to wretch their necks trying to reconcile all of the BS reasons they trot out for keeping it illegal, keeping it on schedule 1, and keeping at arresting people for it.


First marijuana-derived drug is on the verge of approval

Laurie McGinley June 23 Email the author
VYZUJZRBSMZY5CRTDZQNOOSLOM.jpg

Marissa Parsons and her family visit the Grand Canyon in 2016. (Ronda Parsons)

At 3 months old, Marissa Parsons began having frequent seizures, some lasting a half-hour. For almost two decades, her desperate parents tried drug after drug to treat her rare type of childhood epilepsy, but the medications mostly produced side effects — pancreatitis, hives and extreme drowsiness — and she was frequently hospitalized. Family outings became almost impossible. Eventually, her mother said, Marissa stopped smiling.

Three years ago, Marissa was enrolled in a clinical trial at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, testing a liquid anti-seizure drug made from a component of marijuana. Marissa, who cannot speak and uses a wheelchair, quickly went from eight seizures a day to half that number; these days, the 21-year-old has some weeks in which she doesn't have any seizures. She routinely goes to her sisters' baseball games and band concerts. In 2016, she and her family visited Mount Rushmore and the Grand Canyon. Plus, she's smiling again.

“We can function like a typical family,” said her mother, Ronda Parsons. “That, and her smile, mean the world to me.”

The drug that helped Marissa, called Epidiolex, is on the verge of becoming the first drug approved by the FDA that is derived from marijuana. In April, an advisory committee unanimously recommended approval of the drug for two of the most severe types of childhood epilepsy, and the agency is expected to render its decision by the end of June. The medication is an oral solution containing highly purified cannabidiol, or CBD, which is one of scores of chemicals in the cannabis plant. It contains only trace amounts of the psychoactive element THC, and does not induce euphoria.

For those who have long argued that cannabis offers medical benefits, an FDA approval would be a milestone, “a recognition that the plant is a rich source of compounds which have potential therapeutic activity,” said Justin Gover, chief executive of GW Pharmaceuticals, the London-based company that developed the drug. “We are just scratching the surface of what could be a range of cannabis-based medications.”

The FDA previously has cleared medications containing synthetic versions of THC for nausea for patients getting chemotherapy and for other uses, but it has not approved any drug derived from the plant itself. Marijuana and its components, including CBD, are Schedule 1 controlled substances — meaning they are banned because they are thought to have a high abuse potential, no medical value and serious safety implications. If approved by the FDA, cannabidiol would probably be reclassified by the Drug Enforcement Administration within 90 days.

The company is seeking approval to use the drug to treat Lennox-Gastaut and Dravet syndromes, which cause uncontrolled daily seizures and put patients at high risk for other physical and intellectual disabilities, injury and early death. The disorders afflict fewer than 45,000 people in the United States, but experts expect Epidiolex to be prescribed for other types of epilepsy, as well.

The medication, which would continue to be manufactured in Britain, would be marketed by Greenwich Biosciences, the U.S. subsidiary of GW Pharmaceuticals. The drugmaker is testing other CBD treatments for glioblastoma and schizophrenia.

Shlomo Shinnar, president of the American Epilepsy Society and a neurologist at Montefiore Medical Center in New York, said the drug would be “a very valuable addition” to the limited options for treating severe childhood-onset epilepsy. Shinnar said he would welcome approval of a medicine that had undergone stringent FDA review for safety and effectiveness.

Many parents already are giving children unregulated CBD formulations that are available in medical marijuana dispensaries in the many states where such operations are legal.

Heather Jackson, who lives in Colorado Springs, began giving her son Zaki a compound called Charlotte's Web, an unregulated type of CBD, six years ago. Her son, who was 12 at the time, had been having uncontrollable seizures since he was 6 months old. Not long after he started CBD, she said, the seizures stopped and did not return for four years. Now, he has occasional, minor seizures, Jackson said. She co-founded Realm of Caring Foundation to provide support services for people using CBD therapy and does not plan on switching her son to Epidiolex.

Igor Grant, a psychiatrist at the University of California at San Diego and director of the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research, said an FDA approval for Epidiolex might spur companies to investigate CBD for other purposes. There are “clues” it might be helpful for treating anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder and inflammatory diseases such as Crohn's, but “it's all speculation at this point,” he said. Early next year, his center is planning to launch a four-year study looking at CBD and autism.

In many ways, the story of Epidiolex began with Sam Vogelstein, a Berkeley, Calif., youngster who once was having as many as 100 seizures a day. In late 2012, Sam, who was 11 at the time, flew with his mother to London to try the GW Pharmaceuticals' compound; he was the first person from the United States to take the drug. His seizures declined sharply, and his remarkable response, along with pleas from other patients and doctors, prompted the company to begin making the unapproved medicine available in the United States under the FDA's “expanded access” program. The company then launched clinical trials at several medical centers. Those trials showed major reductions in seizures.

In April, Sam Vogelstein testified at the FDA advisory committee meeting in support of the drug. The audience applauded. Now 17, he takes Epidiolex and an older medication and has not had any seizures for two and a half years. This fall, he will be a junior in high school.

“He wants be a neurologist,” said his father, Fred Vogelstein, a contributing editor at Wired magazine. “He wants to help other people.”
 
For the first time, NORML has released a comprehensive breakdown of these citywide and countywide decriminalization policies.

Efforts to liberalize municipal marijuana possession penalties in states where cannabis remains criminalized have become increasingly popular in recent years. Since 2012, over 50 localities, such as Albuquerque, Milwaukee, New Orleans, Philadelphia, and St. Louis in a dozen states -- including Florida, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Texas -- have enacted municipal laws or resolutions either fully or partially decriminalizing minor cannabis possession offenses. Today, over 10.5 million Americans reside in these localities. (Please note: This total does not include cities or counties in states that have either legalized or decriminalized marijuana statewide).

Click here to see the full breakdown of localities that have decriminalized marijuana
 
Now....we do remember that MJ and ALL of its constituent parts are Schedule 1 which means NO LEGITIMATE MEDICAL USE. Now square that BS away with the FDA getting ready to approve an extraction from MJ (not synthesis, but extracted...derived....came from MJ). It seems that our Government is pretty good at talking out of both sides of their mouth (and remember, there one guy who STILL gets Federally rolled joints for his meds) but I'm afraid that they are going to wretch their necks trying to reconcile all of the BS reasons they trot out for keeping it illegal, keeping it on schedule 1, and keeping at arresting people for it.


First marijuana-derived drug is on the verge of approval

Laurie McGinley June 23 Email the author

Marissa Parsons and her family visit the Grand Canyon in 2016. (Ronda Parsons)

At 3 months old, Marissa Parsons began having frequent seizures, some lasting a half-hour. For almost two decades, her desperate parents tried drug after drug to treat her rare type of childhood epilepsy, but the medications mostly produced side effects — pancreatitis, hives and extreme drowsiness — and she was frequently hospitalized. Family outings became almost impossible. Eventually, her mother said, Marissa stopped smiling.

Three years ago, Marissa was enrolled in a clinical trial at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, testing a liquid anti-seizure drug made from a component of marijuana. Marissa, who cannot speak and uses a wheelchair, quickly went from eight seizures a day to half that number; these days, the 21-year-old has some weeks in which she doesn't have any seizures. She routinely goes to her sisters' baseball games and band concerts. In 2016, she and her family visited Mount Rushmore and the Grand Canyon. Plus, she's smiling again.

“We can function like a typical family,” said her mother, Ronda Parsons. “That, and her smile, mean the world to me.”

The drug that helped Marissa, called Epidiolex, is on the verge of becoming the first drug approved by the FDA that is derived from marijuana. In April, an advisory committee unanimously recommended approval of the drug for two of the most severe types of childhood epilepsy, and the agency is expected to render its decision by the end of June. The medication is an oral solution containing highly purified cannabidiol, or CBD, which is one of scores of chemicals in the cannabis plant. It contains only trace amounts of the psychoactive element THC, and does not induce euphoria.

For those who have long argued that cannabis offers medical benefits, an FDA approval would be a milestone, “a recognition that the plant is a rich source of compounds which have potential therapeutic activity,” said Justin Gover, chief executive of GW Pharmaceuticals, the London-based company that developed the drug. “We are just scratching the surface of what could be a range of cannabis-based medications.”

The FDA previously has cleared medications containing synthetic versions of THC for nausea for patients getting chemotherapy and for other uses, but it has not approved any drug derived from the plant itself. Marijuana and its components, including CBD, are Schedule 1 controlled substances — meaning they are banned because they are thought to have a high abuse potential, no medical value and serious safety implications. If approved by the FDA, cannabidiol would probably be reclassified by the Drug Enforcement Administration within 90 days.

The company is seeking approval to use the drug to treat Lennox-Gastaut and Dravet syndromes, which cause uncontrolled daily seizures and put patients at high risk for other physical and intellectual disabilities, injury and early death. The disorders afflict fewer than 45,000 people in the United States, but experts expect Epidiolex to be prescribed for other types of epilepsy, as well.

The medication, which would continue to be manufactured in Britain, would be marketed by Greenwich Biosciences, the U.S. subsidiary of GW Pharmaceuticals. The drugmaker is testing other CBD treatments for glioblastoma and schizophrenia.

Shlomo Shinnar, president of the American Epilepsy Society and a neurologist at Montefiore Medical Center in New York, said the drug would be “a very valuable addition” to the limited options for treating severe childhood-onset epilepsy. Shinnar said he would welcome approval of a medicine that had undergone stringent FDA review for safety and effectiveness.

Many parents already are giving children unregulated CBD formulations that are available in medical marijuana dispensaries in the many states where such operations are legal.

Heather Jackson, who lives in Colorado Springs, began giving her son Zaki a compound called Charlotte's Web, an unregulated type of CBD, six years ago. Her son, who was 12 at the time, had been having uncontrollable seizures since he was 6 months old. Not long after he started CBD, she said, the seizures stopped and did not return for four years. Now, he has occasional, minor seizures, Jackson said. She co-founded Realm of Caring Foundation to provide support services for people using CBD therapy and does not plan on switching her son to Epidiolex.

Igor Grant, a psychiatrist at the University of California at San Diego and director of the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research, said an FDA approval for Epidiolex might spur companies to investigate CBD for other purposes. There are “clues” it might be helpful for treating anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder and inflammatory diseases such as Crohn's, but “it's all speculation at this point,” he said. Early next year, his center is planning to launch a four-year study looking at CBD and autism.

In many ways, the story of Epidiolex began with Sam Vogelstein, a Berkeley, Calif., youngster who once was having as many as 100 seizures a day. In late 2012, Sam, who was 11 at the time, flew with his mother to London to try the GW Pharmaceuticals' compound; he was the first person from the United States to take the drug. His seizures declined sharply, and his remarkable response, along with pleas from other patients and doctors, prompted the company to begin making the unapproved medicine available in the United States under the FDA's “expanded access” program. The company then launched clinical trials at several medical centers. Those trials showed major reductions in seizures.

In April, Sam Vogelstein testified at the FDA advisory committee meeting in support of the drug. The audience applauded. Now 17, he takes Epidiolex and an older medication and has not had any seizures for two and a half years. This fall, he will be a junior in high school.

“He wants be a neurologist,” said his father, Fred Vogelstein, a contributing editor at Wired magazine. “He wants to help other people.”
@Baron23 thank you 4 letting everyone know what's going on!
 
Personally, I don't find adopting a broad set of liberal values and positions (or really any broad political platform) on social issues is necessary to my strong support of MJ legalization and MJ in general.

I guess my thought in reading this somewhat breathless BS article is that ALL Americans are entitled to their political views and can express them via their franchise as a citizen in all ways that are currently considered legal WITHOUT any fucking comment from anybody else.

I also find political litmus tests to be abhorrent in general and equally dispise the current trend where people seem to feel impelled to drop their metaphorical political pants, and stick their metaphorical political ass in your face, on the least provocation.

There really was a time, not that long ago, when if you asked someone about how they voted or their politics, they would then tell you its none of your damn business.

But I am an old curmudgeon so what do I know.



Why Are Cannabis Industry Leaders Donating to Anti-Immigration Candidates?
Most of the money going to the conservative immigration PAC What A Country! comes from cannabis companies

A political action committee (PAC) founded in 2015 with the stated purpose of pushing immigration reform is, in fact, donating mostly to anti-immigration candidates for the 2018 election cycle. Perhaps more surprising—its donors are mostly from the cannabis industry.

The PAC, called What A Country!, or WACPAC, has so far donated $63,000 to congressional candidates across the country, all of whom are Republicans who tend toward hardline positions on immigration.

Cannabis industry leaders have contributed a total of $69,000 to the PAC between January of 2017 and the present. Thirty-one of the forty-one individuals who have donated to the PAC so far are cannabis investors or business owners. Top donors include executives from major cannabis companies such as MedMen Enterprises, Columbia Care, LivWell, and PalliaTech Inc. Contributions also came from CEOs of smaller companies, such as Medicine Man in Colorado and Remedy Compassion Center in Maine.

MedMen founder and CEO Adam Bierman donated $5,000 to WACPAC. MedMen’s political lobbying arm, MedMen Opportunity Fund II LP, donated an additional $5,000, its only donation this year. MedMen is one of the largest cannabis companies in the country, currently operating eighteen shops in California, Nevada, and New York (the company opened its flagship shop on Manhattan’s 5th Ave this year). The company says it has a $1.65 billion valuation and recently went public in Canada.

Bob Mayerson, president of Columbia Care subsidiary Patriot Care, based in Massachusetts, donated $2,000 to WACPAC. Columbia Care, which has a locations in New York’s Union Square and opened a shop in Delaware this week, claims it is “the nation’s largest and most experienced medical cannabis company.”

** To get original news and analysis like this from veteran journalists straight to your inbox every morning, sign up for Cannabis Wire’s daily newsletter here. (This newsletter is free for now, but will soon be available only to Cannabis Wire subscribers.) **

Republican Florida Congressman Carlos Curbelo, who is running for re-election this year, formed What A Country! PAC in 2015. In 2016, Curbelo told the Miami Herald that all representatives who received donations from WACPAC are in favor of “immigration reform” and support the PAC’s mission, which its Facebook page describes as “supporting candidates for U.S. Congress who are committed to reforming America’s immigration laws.” He said that support for DACA would be a “litmus test” for donation recipients.

But in fact most candidates who have received support from WACPAC have staunch anti-immigration views. Of the twenty six candidates who received donations from WACPAC, nineteen of them support penalizing sanctuary cities. Twenty support giving the government more power to deport and deny admission to immigrants suspected of gang activity, and twenty voted to withhold Affordable Care Act subsidies from people until their citizenship is verified. Curbelo himself has voted against penalizing sanctuary cities, but supports deporting suspected gang members and withholding health care subsidies.

Vern Buchanan, a Republican congressman from Florida—who describes his immigration stance as “No Amnesty. Secure the Border. Enforce the Rule of Law. Respect the Constitution”—received $2,000 from WACPAC. He has consistently argued against amnesty for undocumented immigrants and for tighter border security, and has sought to make English the official language of the United States. Others, like Lee Zeldin of New York, Jack Bergman of Michigan, and Peter Roskam of Illinois, supported President Trump’s ban on immigration from Muslim-majority countries.

In the last election cycle, WACPAC contributed to several anti-immigration hardliners, such as Virginia Representative Barbara Comstock, who has said immigrants should be tracked like FedEx packages, and California Representative Duncan Hunter, who has sponsored legislation that would refuse funding to states with laws against disclosing information about citizenship status.

Why the industry is pouring money into WACPAC is unclear. Cannabis Wire contacted individuals who gave to the PAC and all but one either declined to comment or did not comment by time of publication. A spokesperson for MedMen said, “We support causes and candidates who are aligned with our efforts to pass common sense cannabis-related laws at the local, state, and federal levels. Congressman Carlos Curbelo is a champion of cannabis reform and represents a state where an overwhelming majority of the electorate voted to legalize medical marijuana, just as a majority of Americans, regardless of party of affiliation, now support marijuana legalization across the board.”

One possibility: A favorable relationship with Curbelo could benefit business owners who are looking to invest in the cannabis industry in Florida. Two of WACPAC’s top donors from the industry have obtained licenses to cultivate medical cannabis in Curbelo’s home state of Florida. In a June 6th press release, MedMen Enterprises announced that it had purchased Treadwell Nursery, which is based in Florida and operates as Remeny Wellness, for $53 million. The acquisition allows MedMen to open twenty-five medical marijuana facilities in the state. Another donor, Joseph Lusardi, the CEO of PalliaTech Inc., gave $5,000 to WACPAC. PalliaTech Inc., which also has locations in New York and several other states, operates in Florida under the name Curaleaf and is one of thirteen businesses licensed to cultivate medical cannabis in the state. Boris Jordan, the CEO of the Moscow-based private equity firm Sputnik Group, which invested $100 million in PalliaTech, also donated $5,000 to the PAC.

Curbelo has consistently advocated for legislation that supports the legal cannabis industry. On the federal level, Curbelo has sponsored legislation that would amend the IRS code to allow cannabis companies to take more tax deductions and has spoken out against Jeff Sessions’ hints about cracking down on legal cannabis businesses. Several WACPAC donors from the cannabis sector have also donated to Curbelo’s re-election campaign. MedMen CEO Adam Bierman has personally donated $5,400 to Curbelo. Other donors include John Lord, owner of one of the largest Colorado cannabis shop chains, LivWell, who personally donated $5,100 to Curbelo and $5,000 to WACPAC.

Why WACPAC beneficiaries seem to lean toward hardline positions on immigration is also something of a mystery. Curbelo has been outspoken about his support for DACA recipients and says he supports a path to legal immigration. He has announced his support for an immigration reform bill that seeks a compromise between moderate and hardline immigration policies, the text of which was released earlier this month. The bill supports amnesty for DACA recipients as well as funding the border wall, $25 billion for border security, and the end of the diversity lottery. Though Curbelo has vowed not to support a budget that does not include funding for DACA, he voted in favor of a two-year budget deal without DACA provisions earlier this year.

Curbelo’s WACPAC has also donated to Republicans with somewhat more moderate stances on immigration reform. Republican Tom Reed of New York praised Donald Trump’s executive order rescinding DACA but supports amnesty for the program’s recipients, contingent on strengthened border security. Pennsylvania representative Ryan Costello has expressed support for a bipartisan bill that would include a permanent solution for DACA recipients, saying he considers it an “essential aspect of the appropriate path forward on this issue.”

Both What A Country! and the Curbelo campaign could not be reached for comment.
 
"Another provision, according to its section title, would “level the economic playing field” in the cannabis industry by requiring the Treasury Department to annually transfer an amount equal to 10% of total tax revenue generated by marijuana or $10 million, whichever is greater, to an account called the Marijuana Opportunity Trust Fund. Grants would be doled out by the Small Business Administration to industry outfits controlled by women and socially and economically disadvantaged people."

While I support any efforts to deschedule MJ, I personally think affirmative action clauses are discriminatory by their very nature and abhorent to me on that basis. Oh, well...what would you expect. Both parties pander to their base and buy votes with their legislation and damn to any real intelligent leadership.



Top Senate Dem Introduces ‘Marijuana Freedom and Opportunity Act’

U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY), who leads his party as Senate minority leader, filed a far-reaching marijuana bill on Wednesday.

Titled the Marijuana Freedom and Opportunity Act, the bill would remove cannabis from the Controlled Substances Act.

The legislation, which is cosponsored by Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Tim Kaine (D-VA) and Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), would also set aside $20 million annually to states and municipalities for the purpose of administering, expanding or developing expungement or sealing programs for marijuana possession convictions. No less than half of the funds would be earmarked for public defenders and legal aid providers.

Another provision, according to its section title, would “level the economic playing field” in the cannabis industry by requiring the Treasury Department to annually transfer an amount equal to 10% of total tax revenue generated by marijuana or $10 million, whichever is greater, to an account called the Marijuana Opportunity Trust Fund. Grants would be doled out by the Small Business Administration to industry outfits controlled by women and socially and economically disadvantaged people.

“The time to decriminalize marijuana is now,” Schumer said in a press release. “The new Marijuana Freedom and Opportunity Act is about giving states the freedom to be the laboratories that they should be and giving Americans – especially women and minority business owners as well as those convicted of simple possession of marijuana intended for personal use- the opportunity to succeed in today’s economy. This legislation is simply the right thing to do and I am hopeful that the balanced approach it takes can earn bipartisan support in Congress and across the country.”

The legislation would also set aside funds for research on “the impact of driving under the influence of tetrahydrocannabinol on highway safety” as well as marijuana’s effects on the brain and its potential medical benefits.

Another provision states that the federal government can continue to prevent trafficking of marijuana to states that have not yet legalized it, implying that interstate commerce among legal states would be allowed.

Finally, it would require the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau to develop “restrictions on the advertising and promotion of products related to marijuana.”

“The bill’s emphasis on facilitating the expungement the criminal records of individuals for marijuana possession cannot be overstated,” Justin Strekal, political director for NORML, told Marijuana Moment. “Millions individuals have suffered from the lifelong collateral consequences of criminal prohibition, making it harder for them to find a job, obtain housing, and access to higher education.”

“This bill is a welcomed shift of policy by Democratic party leadership. At a time when 68 percent of Americans support outright legalization, including outright majorities of Democrats (77 percent), Independents (62 percent), and Republicans (57 percent), it is time for the end of federal prohibition to become a truly bipartisan issue.”

Schumer first announced his intent to file the legislation more than two months ago on the eve of 4/20, a day of celebration for cannabis consumers.

The Senate minority leader’s embrace of cannabis reform came as somewhat of a surprise to observers of the issue, since he was long one of Congress’s most vocal proponents of the war on drugs.
 

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