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Law The Cannabis Chronicles - Misc Cannabis News

This writer is being a little Pollyanna, IMO. Hopefully he's right. So far nothing...but plenty of smoke (or vapor :lol:)....
https://mjbizdaily.com/report-doj-gathering-intel-state-marijuana-cases/
A good article. I think that's where the Feds will crack down on is interstate trafficking from legal cannabis states - medical or recreational.

That would also include folks going over the boarder to buy from a legal state and bringing it home unfortunately. I hope it doesn't come down to that.

Edit
There are more important duties for state police to worry about. Like drunk drivers.
 
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Johns Hopkins was ready to test pot as a treatment for PTSD. Then it quit the study.

By Aaron Gregg April 2 at 5:48 PM
Eighteen months after joining a study on using marijuana to treat post-traumatic stress disorder, Johns Hopkins University has pulled out without enrolling any veterans, the latest setback for the long-awaited research.

The university said its goals were no longer aligned with those of the administrator of the study, the Santa Cruz, Calif.-based Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS). MAPS said the dispute was over federal drug policy and whether to openly challenge federal rules that say medical cannabis research must rely on marijuana grown by the federal National Institute on Drug Abuse.

One of the lead researchers from MAPS recently did just that, in a PBS report that said the government-grown marijuana provided for the study was of poor quality and contaminated with mold. Hopkins quit the study two days later.

Although MAPS will continue the research at a private lab in Arizona, the departure of the well-known university in Baltimore is a blow, analysts said, in part because the campus was considered a prime test site that could draw on Maryland’s large population of veterans.

The decision to withdraw coincides with uncertainty within the industry about whether President Trump will continue the Obama administration’s support for institutions that conduct research using marijuana, as well as its hands-off approach to states that legalize pot for recreational or medical use.

“The future of scientific research under the Trump administration generally is quite shaky,” said John Hudak, a governance-studies fellow at the Brookings Institution who tracks marijuana research.

The MAPS study is meant to capture the first clinical evidence of whether marijuana can effectively treat PTSD. Favorable findings would aid endeavors to add the condition to those that are authorized for treatment in state medical cannabis programs, as well as efforts to lift a prohibition on Department of Veterans Affairs doctors from recommending or even discussing the drug as a way to alleviate anxiety and other symptoms.

“We’re trying to study what cannabis does for veterans with treatment-resistant PTSD,” said Sean Kiernan, president of the Weed for Warriors Project. “These are vets who have not been helped by the traditional regimen and in many cases have been severely hurt.”

MAPS Director Rick Doblin started planning the study in 2009 with co-administrator Suzanne Sisley, an Arizona psychiatrist and marijuana advocate. At the time, Sisley was a faculty member at the University of Arizona. In 2012, their research proposal was approved by that university’s scientific review board.

But in 2014, the university fired Sisley and said her position as a physician educator for medical marijuana would no longer be funded. She says she was ousted because of controversy surrounding her marijuana PTSD study, an accusation the university denies.

MAPS got funding from Colorado, winning a nearly $2.2 million research grant paid for with license fees from the state’s legalized-marijuana industry.

Hopkins joined the study that year. Its scientific review board cleared the project in September 2015, but it took until January of this year for Hopkins to determine that the marijuana provided by the federal government was safe enough to give to veterans. The university received its first delivery of cannabis Jan. 13.

Although Hopkins set up a phone line for veterans to register for clinical trials, it did not enroll anyone. Advocates say they first learned the school had withdrawn when veterans who called the phone number heard a recorded message saying the university was no longer participating.

“This has been ongoing for years — roadblock after roadblock after roadblock,” said Scott Murphy, co-founder and president of the Massachusetts-based Veterans for Safe Access and Compassionate Care.

Sisley, backed by others at MAPS, had been trying to persuade Hopkins to speak out about the mold issue as a way of questioning the government-provided marijuana and other federal requirements for marijuana research.

In March, she told PBS that the samples were moldy and had insufficient levels of THC, the active ingredient in cannabis. The next week, MAPS said some of the samples also tested positive for trace amounts of lead.

“It’s crucial that the public is aware that their taxpayer dollars are going to support a single government-enforced monopoly, the sole federally legal supply of cannabis for any and all cannabis controlled trials,” Sisley said last week.

Before the televised report, those involved in the study agreed they could use the government-provided marijuana despite its deficiencies, after at least five rounds of testing determined that mold and lead levels were low enough for the product to be safely consumed.

Hopkins did not respond to questions about whether the PBS report affected its decision to withdraw. But MAPS spokesman Brad Burge said the adverse publicity was the direct cause of the university’s abrupt departure.

The publicity also prompted the Food and Drug Administration to contact MAPS requesting new information about the study and marijuana test results.

Advocates have pushed for years for the government to allow more providers to supply marijuana for medical research. The Obama administration took initial steps to allow private suppliers, but it did not complete the process. The Trump administration has not clarified its position.

The test center in Scottsdale, Ariz., where MAPS will continue with Sisley and other researchers, has close to a dozen veterans enrolled out of a planned 76, Burge said. Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Colorado who had been signed up to help with the study are continuing their participation.

Sisley said MAPS gave the University of Arizona and Hopkins “every opportunity to partner with us on these studies, and neither were willing to embrace it.”

“Ultimately, I think we will prove that we can conduct this research efficiently by working through the private system,” she said.
 
A Federal Bill has been introduced to end marijuana prohibition. This link explains it a bit more and has a form to contact your lawmakers and urge them to support this pending legislation.

"Representatives Tom Garrett (R-VA) and Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI) have introduced bipartisan legislation, HR 1227, to exclude marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act, thus leaving states the authority to regulate the plant how best they see fit."
 
Not exactly news, but an interesting watch - and also a bit silly.



I was just about to post the link to it. Silly? Well, maybe. But I rather see it as the truth presented in a humorous way.

Cheers


Marijuana Now Legal at Home in South Africa
In a landmark ruling, the Western Cape High Court of South Africa has declared that banning the adult-use of cannabis in a private residence is unconstitutional. Parliament has been given 24 months to change portions of the Drug Trafficking Act and the Medicines Control Act.

This incredible decision allows for the possession, cultivation, and use of dagga (cannabis) in a private residence. The ruling must still go to Constitutional Court for confirmation, where it will then be referred to the National Assembly.

“It was a unanimous decision made here at the Western Cape Court. Three judges declared the law to be unconstitutional,” said activist and lawyer Gareth Prince. (cont)
 
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Roger Stone calls on Trump to back legal marijuana, hits Sessions for 'outmoded thinking'

Roger Stone, one of President Donald Trump's most ardent surrogates, has publicly implored the president to back marijuana legalization—even as he blasted his U.S. attorney general for "outmoded thinking" on pot while quoting Thomas Jefferson and The Bible to justify his position.

In a blog post published on Friday, Stone called on Trump to remain true to sentiments he expressed as a presidential candidate, when he said that pot legalization should be left to the states. In recent days, however, his administration has suggested it would err on the side of stricter enforcement of marijuana laws.

That hasn't sat well with Trump supporters like Stone, who said the president should "honor his word and keep his promise, irrespective of what his Cabinet members may say." The Republican added that "there are so many other ways that law enforcement can be put to good use rather than to persecute harmless farmers and shopkeepers who are abiding by state law."

Stone specifically took aim at Attorney General Jeff Sessions, writing on his website that the former Alabama Senator was "far from the mainstream" in his opposition to marijuana.

"Perhaps Attorney General Sessions has forgotten his Genesis from the Old Testament," wrote Stone, a veteran political operative and self-described libertarian who frequently rides the television airwaves in Trump's defense.

He quoted a verse from Genesis decreeing that mankind possessed a God-given right to "every seed-bearing plant on the face of the whole earth and every tree that has fruit with seed in it. They will be yours for food."

Currently, more than half of the United States has at least partly legalized the use of marijuana, while others are inching in a similar direction. Stone cited that, as he voiced opposition to stricter enforcement by the president—a man he's known for decades.

"The Trump administration should be mindful that the recreational marijuana measures that passed in several states all passed this same way, with overwhelming popular support," he said. "This was clearly the Will of the People. It is not Jeff Sessions place to prosecute his version of morality and President Trump should not allow him to do so."

Representatives from the White House and the Department of Justice did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment.

This article is presented in full as I think Mr. Stone's views are correct, concise, and articulated very clearly.
 
4 get federal prison for conspiring to ship weed from Colorado


By The Associated Press

PUEBLO, Colo. — Four men who conspired to grow marijuana in Colorado to sell it in Florida have been sentenced to federal prison terms.

The Pueblo Chieftain reports that the men were arrested in March 2016 in one of multiple raids conducted last year in Pueblo County.


The ring leader, Dennis Rodriguez, was sentenced to the longest term — 2 ½ years in prison — on Thursday. Judge R. Brooke Jackson sentenced Rodriguez’s brother Angel and Daniel Bingham to 14 months and sentenced Nathaniel Clawson to 15 months.

Three others are awaiting sentencing.

Dennis Rodriguez was accused of recruiting the others to come to Colorado.

Jackson said he hoped the sentences send a message that people who violate marijuana laws will “spend a fair amount of time in prison.”

So, activities to circumvent Federal AND state laws by transporting cannabis across state lines only provides ammunition to Sessions and the 'anti's' and evidence of "organized criminal activity". Yes, clearly legalizing it at the Federal level would cut the criminal organizations off at the knees, but in the meantime stuff like this doesn't help (and I say that even though I know I have been the beneficiary of MJ grown in another state).
 
Four governors team up, urge feds to keep marijuana enforcement status quo

Governors in four states have joined forces with a marijuana message for two top officials in the Trump administration.

In an open letter, the governors on Monday asked Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin to “engage with us before embarking on any changes to regulatory and enforcement systems.”

The signatories of the letter are Gov. Bill Walker of Alaska; Gov. John Hickenlooper of Colorado; Gov. Kate Brown of Oregon; and Gov. Jay Inslee of Washington. They lead the first four states to implement laws allowing recreational marijuana sales. (cont)


Cowboys’ Owner Jerry Jones Pushes to Drop Prohibition

It’s been a rough road for NFL players who’ve stuck to their beliefs about medical marijuana as an alternative to opioids for treating pain and a number of other ailments, including concussions.

But things might be changing soon.

Jerry Jones, owner of the Dallas Cowboys, told the other 31 NFL team owners that he wants the National Football League to “drop its prohibition on marijuana use.”

Speaking at a private meeting as part of the Annual League Meeting in Phoenix last week, Jones said he also wants the NFL to stop its “practice of investigating off-field misconduct,” according to NBC’s Pro Football Talk.

Jones, the most powerful owner in the NFL, according to ESPN, is most likely to become even more popular among players with that one statement.

Pro football players have advocated for reasonable weed policies for years.

Marijuana is on the NFL’s banned substances list, which includes a provision for off-season testing. Under the NFL’s current marijuana policy, players can be suspended after their fourth failed test.

As more players are calling for the league to reconsider its stance, Jones’ words are music to their ears.

Jones made little headway with his suggestions, reported the Star-Telegram, as the league cannot alter its stance on weed without making changes to the collective bargaining agreement with the NFL Players Association, which has been considering a “less punitive” approach to the marijuana issue. (cont)
 
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Four governors team up, urge feds to keep marijuana enforcement status quo

Governors in four states have joined forces with a marijuana message for two top officials in the Trump administration.

In an open letter, the governors on Monday asked Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin to “engage with us before embarking on any changes to regulatory and enforcement systems.”

The signatories of the letter are Gov. Bill Walker of Alaska; Gov. John Hickenlooper of Colorado; Gov. Kate Brown of Oregon; and Gov. Jay Inslee of Washington. They lead the first four states to implement laws allowing recreational marijuana sales. (cont)


Cowboys’ Owner Jerry Jones Pushes to Drop Prohibition

It’s been a rough road for NFL players who’ve stuck to their beliefs about medical marijuana as an alternative to opioids for treating pain and a number of other ailments, including concussions.

But things might be changing soon.

Jerry Jones, owner of the Dallas Cowboys, told the other 31 NFL team owners that he wants the National Football League to “drop its prohibition on marijuana use.”

Speaking at a private meeting as part of the Annual League Meeting in Phoenix last week, Jones said he also wants the NFL to stop its “practice of investigating off-field misconduct,” according to NBC’s Pro Football Talk.

Jones, the most powerful owner in the NFL, according to ESPN, is most likely to become even more popular among players with that one statement.

Pro football players have advocated for reasonable weed policies for years.

Marijuana is on the NFL’s banned substances list, which includes a provision for off-season testing. Under the NFL’s current marijuana policy, players can be suspended after their fourth failed test.

As more players are calling for the league to reconsider its stance, Jones’ words are music to their ears.

Jones made little headway with his suggestions, reported the Star-Telegram, as the league cannot alter its stance on weed without making changes to the collective bargaining agreement with the NFL Players Association, which has been considering a “less punitive” approach to the marijuana issue. (cont)
I wouldn't be surprised if the latter article has more influence on national policy than the former one :eyebrow2:
 
Kansas City, Mo., Voters Approve $25 Fine In Easing Of Marijuana Law

Missouri deems marijuana possession a crime that carries hundreds of dollars in fines and a potential jail term. But residents of Kansas City voted overwhelmingly to reduce the penalties there, becoming the latest city in the state to relax punishments for people caught with small amounts of pot.

Nearly 75 percent of voters approved the ballot initiative, Question 5, in Tuesday's special election. The pot measure was considered alongside infrastructure issues and candidates for school district posts.

From member station KCUR, reporter Lisa Rodriguez says:

"Question 5 reduces the fine for being caught with 35 grams or less of marijuana to $25 and eliminates the possibility [of] jail time. Current Missouri penalties for the same amount of marijuana include possible incarceration and fines up to $500.

"Columbia ... and St. Louis have passed similar ordinances."

Under Missouri law, possession of up to 10 grams of marijuana is a misdemeanor, and possession of more than 35 grams — nearly 1.25 ounces — is a felony. Kansas City's new maximum punishments will apply to its municipal court system.
 
This Is Marijuana Legalization’s New Enemy Number One
For many years, the biggest threat to marijuana legalization and fledgling legal cannabis businesses was the police.

Fears of DEA agents breaking down the front door at dawn, prosecutions in federal court with its accompanying mandatory minimums or warrantless visits from helicopter-riding police who merely cut down plant and leave—such things happen and are legal—was what kept people involved in cannabis up at night.

But now, with legalization sweeping the country and a vast majority of Americans in support of medical marijuana, the real enemy is revealing itself.

And as recent events in Arizona demonstrated, it’s Big Pharma.

In 2015, U.S.-based companies made up 40 percent of the global pharmaceutical trade, a market share worth $413 billion. These companies are well aware that cannabis is becoming an accepted treatment for chronic pain and many of the other lifelong afflictions now treated by highly profitable trademarked drugs—and some have proven willing and able to take steps to make sure marijuana stays out of the hands of law-abiding Americans in order to protect that enormous bottom line.

“Pharmaceuticals are going to run me down,” Dr. Gina Berman, medical director of the Giving Tree Wellness Center, a Phoenix, Arizona-based cannabis dispensary, told the Guardian. “We have a small business, and we can’t afford to fight Big Pharma.”

The most egregious case to date is Insys Therapeutics. Insys, is an Arizona-based drug manufacturer of pain drugs that contain fentanyl, the powerful synthetic opioid that’s been fingered in many fatal opiate overdoses (including the death of Prince).

Arizona was the lone state where a marijuana legalization initiative failed at the ballot in November—and one of the leading donors to the anti-legalization campaign, with a $500,000 check, was Insys. (Another was Trump-supporting casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, CEO of the Las Vegas Sands Corp. Here are the Vegas nightlife spots to boycott, forever.)

As the Intercept reported this fall, Insys executives openly recognized the threat to its market posed by marijuana. And in a devious twist, Insys identified marijuana as an existential threat and moved to keep it illegal, while developing a new drug based on synthetic THC.

On March 23, the DEA ruled that Insys’s new drug, called “Syndros,” could be marketed and sold as a Schedule II drug—meaning it could be prescribed to patients as soon as this fall.

So far, the FDA has approved Syndros for AIDS-related weight loss and vomiting and nausea associated with chemotherapy—two of the original applications for medical marijuana.

“It’s pretty absurd that federal law considers marijuana to have no medical value, but allows for the development of synthetic versions of the same substance,” Mason Tvert, a spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, which sponsored Arizona’s legalization measure, told the Guardian.

But what about Insys Therapeutics? It’s a company straight out of a Superman comic.

In December, Justice Department prosecutors took the “unusual” step of charging six former Insys executives, including former CEO Michael L. Babich, with racketeering for its “aggressive” marketing of a fentanyl-based pain drug called Subsys, the New York Times reported. Prosecutors alleged that in order to sell more Subsys, the company arranged lavish dinners and other events for doctors who prescribed “lots of” the drug, and when that didn’t work, the company resorted to kickbacks. (cont. and I suggest this as a very good read)
 
Bill Maher and Roger Stone Agree! The War on Weed is Failed Policy

Celebrating his 420th show with conservative surrogate Roger Stone, Bill Maher discovered he and Stone agree on at least one topic: the war on weed has been an abysmal failure.

Despite Trump’s repeated promises throughout the 2016 campaign to allow individual states to dictate their own marijuana policies, his Atty. Gen., Jeff Sessions, has had no such epiphany.

Stone, a loyal advisor for the Trump campaign – and a principal player ensnared in the unfolding Russian investigation – said that Trump’s’ Attorney General is dead “wrong” when it comes to marijuana. Last week, while taping Maher’s 420th episode of Real Time, the hardened political advisor offered some sage advice to Pres. Trump, “He needs to get his attorney general in line.”

No fan of the GOP or its social policies, Maher focused the end of their conversation on the one topic he and Stone agree on, legalizing pot. “You think Jeff Sessions is wrong to be such a hard-ass on marijuana,” Maher asked Stone before making the obvious pun. “Is that because you yourself are a Roger Stoner?” Fast on his feet and honest with his response, Stone answered, “Only when I’m in the states where it’s legal.” Stone concluded, “Candidate Trump said we should let the states decide. He was absolutely right.”

Ending the segment on a sugary high note, Maher divulged to Stone this was his 420th episode, saying, “I need to get high, Roger, will you bring out the cake?” Eager to participate, Stone walked backstage and grabbed a large cake emblazoned with a decorative marijuana leaf and every stoner’s favorite number – 420.

Check out the below YouTube video for the full interview.

 
From NORML email today


Friend,

Congressman Beto O’Rourke (D-TX) with Representatives Amash (R-MI), Jeffries (D-NY), Sensenbrenner (R-WI), Nadler (D-NY), and Love (R-UT) have introduced The Better Drive Act, legislation removing the federal mandate that demands states to suspend the driver's license of individuals with a marijuana possession conviction.

Under current law, any drug conviction, regardless of whether or not a motor vehicle was involved, results in an automatic suspension of the individual's driving privileges for a period of six months.

Click here to email your member of Congress to support this common sense legislation

Enacted over 25 years ago as a part of the so-called “war on drugs,” this mandate imposed on states does not improve highway safety or help people address substance use. Rather, it has the opposite effect, as this mandate ends up costing minor offenders their ability to get to work and to school, and causes other undue economic hardships.

To date, 38 states have opted out of this mandate. Yet twelve states, home to more than 122 million residents – including Texas, New York, Michigan and Florida -- have not done so. Nearly 200,000 driver licenses are still suspended each year for these non-driving offenses. According to the AAMVA, nearly 4 out of every 10 suspended drivers who lost their license following a conviction for a drug or other type of offense were suspended for non-highway safety reasons.

Minor marijuana possession offenders ought not to face the undue burden of the loss of one's driving privileges for activities unrelated to driving. This punishment is disproportionate and unrelated to the offense and it needlessly hinders defendant's ability to rehabilitate and to be a successful member of our community.

Take just 20 seconds and send a message to your member of Congress to support The Better Drive Act and repeal this cruel mandate.

Thanks for all you do,
The NORML Team
 
KC NORML Successfully Decriminalized Marijuana in Kansas City
  • by Justin Strekal, NORML Political DirectorApril 4, 2017
    Comments


    Ballot initiative run by local group passes 71 to 29 to end arrests for possession of marijuana

    Kansas City, MO – In a blowout victory for sensible criminal justice policy, the voters of Kansas City, Missouri have decided to approve Question 5 and decriminalize marijuana to direct their law enforcement officers to no longer target citizens for possession of the plant and would replace current criminal penalties with just a civil fine.

    The measure will amend local laws regarding the possession of up to 35 grams of marijuana for adults age 21 and older from a criminal misdemeanor, previously punishable by up to six months in jail and a $1,000 fine, to a civil offense punishable by a $25 fine — with no arrest made or criminal record imposed.

    “We could not be more excited about the positive impact passing Question 5 will bring to the communities of Kansas City. We fought long and hard for this result and could not have done it without the support of our volunteers,” said Jamie Kacz, Executive Director of KC NORML. “The era of reefer madness in Kansas City has come to an end and no longer will otherwise law abiding citizens be targeted or arrested for the mere possession of marijuana.”

    This is yet another victory in the march to end the criminalization of marijuana in the United States.

    “The passage of this initiative is not just a victory for the people of Kansas City, but for the democratic process,” said Erik Altieri National NORML’s Executive Director, “When concerned citizens stand up, stand together, and fight back against unjust laws, we will win. The overwhelming majority of Americans want to end our nation’s war on marijuana consumers and politicians across the country should take heed of the message voters sent in Missouri: if you don’t reform our marijuana laws through the legislature, we the people will do it for you.”

    Nationally, more than 600,000 people a year are arrested for simple marijuana possession alone. These arrests are disproportionately targeted, the ACLU found that the racial disparity in marijuana charges were levied against people over color, by nearly 4 to 1.

    “Kansas City now joins the ranks of dozens of cities and states throughout the country that have ended the practice of arresting marijuana consumers,” said Kevin Mahmalji, outreach coordinator for NORML. “We at NORML are incredibly proud of the efforts of Jamie Kacz and her team at KC NORML and thank the voters of Kansas City for bringing a new era of sanity their law enforcement priorities and the overarching movement to end the prohibition of marijuana.”

    Kansas City now joins a growing list of cities around the country that have adopted a more pragmatic approach for dealing with marijuana-related offenses on the local level. Houston, Memphis, Nashville, Tampa, Orlando, Milwaukee, Monona, Toledo, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and several others have decriminalized the possession of small amounts of marijuana.

    For more information, visit http://www.normlkc.org/ or http://norml.org/



    ###

    NORML’s mission is to move public opinion sufficiently to legalize the responsible use of marijuana by adults, and to serve as an advocate for consumers to assure they have access to high quality marijuana that is safe, convenient and affordable.
 
High on the Hill: A Cannabis-Infused Dinner Series by Bud Appetit – April 8 2017
Rick Skunk April 3, 2017 No Commentson High on the Hill: A Cannabis-Infused Dinner Series by Bud Appetit – April 8 2017

cannabis-leaves.jpg


DESCRIPTION
Cannabis may cause: Intelligent Thoughts, Peacfulness, Bliss, Love, and the Feeling of Happiness and Good Will.
Join BUD APPETIT at our debut event:
HIGH ON THE HILL Dinner Series

Expect an exquisite dining experience in our exclusive, location in the heart of Capital Hill: HOUSE 51

All reservations must be made at least 3 days prior to the event. Limited seating. Advanced reservations only.

Initial 71 Compliant -- MUST BE 21 YEARS OF AGE - born before 4/08/96

Cannabis Leaf* Palm Saturday Brunch

Homemade Donuts

Grits Casserole
With Egg, Cheddar, Shrimp and Sausage


Stuffed Apple French Toast
Drizzled with Buddery Bourbon Maple Syrup


Fresh Fruit Salad
w/Herbed Whipped Cream


Assorted Cheese & Ganja Nuts

Uplifting Mimosa

Five Star Roasters Coffee w/optional CBD


*Complete menu will be provided to all attendees.
 
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http://wordonthetree.com/2017/04/07/report-says-legal-weed-will-fine-even-sessions-cracks/

"Russ Belville, cannabis activist and host of an eponymous radio show, said in an email that the question wasn’t whether Sessions wants to crack down. “But rather, how much of a crackdown can he mount?”

“There’s the idea that marijuana is too popular an issue and it would cost too much political capital,” said Belville. “I tend to think that a president [who] mocks the disabled is not too concerned about popularity and political capital.”
 
“There’s the idea that marijuana is too popular an issue and it would cost too much political capital,” said Belville. “I tend to think that a president [who] mocks the disabled is not too concerned about popularity and political capital.”

I'm not at all sure I agree with this fella, Belville.


Uruguay to sell cannabis in pharmacies at $1.30 per gram

April 7 (UPI) -- Uruguay's government said the legal sale of cannabis in pharmacies will begin in July after a registration period, which will make the South American country the first in the world to legally sell recreational marijuana.

Uruguay's Presidency of the Republic said the registration for users to access cannabis in pharmacies begins on May 2. Those registered will have access to buy up to 40 grams of cannabis a month. Uruguay legalized the cannabis trade in 2013 but needed to establish a regulatory agency.

"Uruguay complies, in this way, with the public policy of regulating alcohol, tobacco and cannabis, in accordance with national and international exchange, which gives coherence to the regulatory framework," Juan Andrés Roballo, National Drug Board president and presidential aide, said during a press conference.

The government said all stages of the cannabis market regulation will be monitored by the National Drug Board. Roballo said the government's regulation will attempt to prevent and address "problematic consumption" of cannabis, adding that the government has "expectations and hopes" that cannabis regulation will decrease money laundering and drug trafficking.

More than 30 pharmacies have signed or are close to signing a contract with the government to sell the cannabis. At first, the price of cannabis will be $1.30 per gram -- of which 0.90 cents will go to the company that produced the cannabis, and the remainder will be given to the pharmacy and the Cannabis Regulation and Control Institute for prevention programs.
 
New Dictionary Words Make It Official: Weed Culture Is Here to Stay
From pop culture to pot culture, news, trends, political movements, fashion, food, everything swirling around our ever-changing world influences the words, language and expressions we use.


Dictionary.com recently added more than
[URL='http://content.dictionary.com/about/press'] 300 new words
and definitions to its online database, reflecting the year’s news and booming pot culture with words such as “dabbing” and “Kush.”


“Some words like 420 and Kush reflect broader acceptance of marijuana use and culture, as it’s becoming medically and recreationally legal across the country,” Dictionary.com
said in a statement. “Once again, many new words came straight from the headlines, from Black Lives Matter and Burkini to alt-right and clicktivism.”


Launched in 1995, Dictionary.com is now among the most important digital dictionaries in English.


So how do they choose new words? (cont)

[/URL]
 
AMERICA'S WORST ADDICTION
In the past few years, it's been difficult to find any topics that feature bipartisan agreement. So it has been a pretty big deal that leaders from both sides of the aisle -- from law and order Republicans to liberal Democrats, from civil rights groups to the Koch brothers -- managed to find common ground on an issue (even if the need for reform was as wildly obvious as it is in this case). "When the Obama administration launched a sweeping policy to reduce harsh prison sentences for nonviolent drug offenders, rave reviews came from across the political spectrum." But there were a few outliers. And one of those outliers is leading Jeff Sessions' efforts to bring back the war on drugs. (Spoiler alert: Drugs win.) It will be worth taking note how this so-called war is fought on different fronts -- from the inner cities where drug use will be further criminalized, to rural America where the opiate addicts will be treated as victims of a rabid epidemic driven by economic forces. America's worst addiction is the war on drugs.

The Obama administration largely ignored Cook, who was then president of the National Association of Assistant U.S. Attorneys. But he won’t be overlooked anymore.

:watchout:
 

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