Saturday, August 29, 2009

Marijuana's new high life




In June, an estimated 25,000 people attended the inaugural THC Expo hemp and art show in downtown Los Angeles, an event that pumped hundreds of thousands of dollars into the local economy -- including a $22,400 payment directly to the city of Los Angeles for use of its convention center.

Barneys New York in Beverly Hills is celebrating the Woodstock spirit by selling $78 "Hashish" candles in Jonathan Adler pots with bas-relief marijuana leaves; Hickey offers $75 linen pocket squares or $120 custom polo shirts bearing the five-part leaf; and French designer Lucien Pellat-Finet is serving up white-gold and diamond custom pot-leaf-emblazoned wristwatches for $49,000 and belt buckles for $56,000.

Earlier this year, Season 5 of Showtime's "Weeds" kicked off with promotional materials plastered on bus shelters, buses and billboards throughout the city. Last year, just across from the tourist-packed Farmers Market at 3rd Street and Fairfax Avenue, a "Pineapple Express" billboard belched faux pot smoke into the air. Even the '70s slacker-stoner comedy duo Cheech and Chong are back. After recently concluding an international tour, they say they are working on another movie, voicing an animated version of themselves and even batting around the idea of staging a Cheech and Chong Broadway musical.

After decades of bubbling up around the edges of so-called civilized society, marijuana seems to be marching mainstream at a fairly rapid pace. At least in urban areas such as Los Angeles, cannabis culture is coming out of the closet.

At fashion-insider parties, joints are passed nearly as freely as hors d'oeuvres. Traces of the acrid smoke waft from restaurant patios, car windows and passing pedestrians on the city streets -- in broad daylight. Even the art of name-dropping in casual conversation -- once limited to celebrity sightings and designer shoe purchases -- now includes the occasional boast of recently discovered weed strains such as "Strawberry Cough" and "Purple Kush."

Public sentiment is more than anecdotal; earlier this year, a California Field Poll found that 56% of California voters supported legalizing and taxing marijuana. Last month, voters in Oakland overwhelmingly approved a tax increase on medical marijuana sales, the first of its kind in the country, and Los Angeles Councilwoman Janice Hahn has proposed something similar for the City of Angels. "In this current economic crisis, we need to get creative about how we raise funds," Hahn said in a statement.

Smoking pot used to be the kind of personal conduct that could sink a U.S. Supreme Court nomination (Douglas H. Ginsburg in 1987) and embarrass a presidential candidate (Bill Clinton in 1992). Today, it seems to be a non-issue for the current inhabitant of the Oval Office; Barack Obama issued his marijuana mea culpa in a 1995 memoir.

California Field PollDrug references in popular music have multiplied like, well, weeds in the last three decades. Marijuana's presence on TV and in the movies has moved from the harbinger of bad things including murderous rage ("Reefer Madness" in 1936) to full-scale hauntings ("Poltergeist" in 1982) and burger runs gone awry ("Harold & Kumar go to White Castle" in 2001) to being just another fixture in the pop-culture firmament. Cannabis crops up on shows such as "Entourage," "Curb Your Enthusiasm," "True Blood" and "Desperate Housewives," and even on animated shows such as "The Simpsons" and "Family Guy."

To date, none is as pot-centric as Showtime's "Weeds," which follows the adventures of widowed soccer mom turned pot dealer Nancy Botwin (Mary-Louise Parker), though the show's creator, Jenji Kohan, says there are TV shows in development that are set against the backdrop of medical marijuana clinics.

Richard Laermer, a media and pop culture trend watcher and author of several books, including "2011: Trendspotting for the Next Decade," points to Bill Maher as a bellwether of change. "Ten years ago, he would have been taken off the air." ("Real Time With Bill Maher" airs on HBO.) Now, he's "a totally mainstream comic who consistently talks about how much pot he smokes."

Marijuana's role on TV and in the movies is no surprise, says Robert Thompson, a professor of television and pop culture at the University of Syracuse S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications. "The people who are making movies and television shows, from the scriptwriters to the director and the producers -- a very large chunk of those are probably people who grew up not only much more comfortable with marijuana's presence in society, but probably as consumers themselves of it.

"As a result," Thompson said, "it's almost switched with alcohol. Think back to Dean Martin and Foster Brooks -- their whole comedy act was the fact that they were in the bag -- that now is seen a lot less often. The stoner is the new drunk."

There's one hitch

General marijuana use is, of course, illegal. Under federal law, marijuana is a Schedule I controlled substance (in the same category as LSD, heroin and peyote) and possession of it is punishable by up to one year in jail and a minimum fine of $1,000 for a first conviction. According to the FBI's annual Uniform Crime Report, in 2007 there were 872,721 arrests in the U.S. for marijuana violations. For Californians who are not otherwise covered under the state's medical marijuana law (which continues to engender controversy among those who believe it's abused by recreational users), possession of 28.5 grams or less is a misdemeanor punishable by a $100 fine. What's more, passing a drug-free urine test is still a prerequisite for many jobs across the country.

Nonetheless, some indulge. Marijuana reform groups say it's a $35.8-billion domestic cash crop. And today's cannabis consumers -- the state chapter of the National Organization to Reform Marijuana Laws estimates the number of Californians who have smoked at least once in the last year is 3 million -- open their wallets for pot-themed movies, handbooks, calendars, fancy glass storage jars, energy drinks, hemp clothing and ganja-themed bus tours, all part of the ever-widening marijuana-adjacent economy.

How much do we spend?

"It's hard to say," says Brian Roberts, co-founder of the THC Expo. "Do you count 'Pineapple Express' that did $100 million at the box office? Do you add in Dr. Dre's '[The] Chronic' and '2001' albums that [together] sold over 10 million copies? What I can tell you is that [the expo] pumped over $400,000 into the local economy," he added, citing expenditures for security guards and other temporary staffers, banners, decorations, printing and advertising, and renting the South Hall of the L.A. Convention Center.

Roberts, who launched and later sold a now-dormant, pot-themed apparel line called THC Clothing before getting into the expo business, has seen pot culture consumers' buying power firsthand. "I used to own a smoke shop [2000 BC] over on Melrose and people would spend up to $400 for a piece of glass to use as a water pipe -- you're talking about an adult with extra money. That's like buying a power tool."

Did something happen between 2003, when Tommy Chong started a nine-month stint in federal prison for selling a mail-order water pipe, and the June THC Expo, when he stood signing autographs and shaking hands, barely a roach clip's throw from row upon row of swirling glass pipes, smoking devices with octopus-like tentacles, whirring motors and price tags as high as $800?

Some people point to the Obama administration as the biggest game-changer. "It was when [former President George W. Bush] and his boys were run out of office, that made the biggest difference," Chong said by phone near the end of the "Light Up America and Canada Tour" that reunited him with Cheech Marin.

Roberts cited the election as the tipping point as well. "The whole show teetered on who won the election," he said. "If McCain had won, I'd have never have put up my money. But Americans are no longer living in fear."

In addition, trend watcher Laermer points to a more subtle shift: aging baby boomers -- a generation famous for tuning in, turning on and dropping out -- who are keeping their party habits going into their golden years.

"It's hard to fathom that the fifty- and sixtysomethings would be against pot after all the pot they smoked," Laermer said, "Their kids would laugh them out of the room if they started telling them not to smoke pot."

The so-called marijuana movement has attracted some surprising names. Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) has spoken out about decreasing penalties for possession and protecting medical marijuana users. Earlier this year, Glenn Beck of Fox News announced on the air: "Look, I'm a libertarian. You want to legalize marijuana; you want to legalize drugs -- that's fine."

David Bienenstock, senior editor of New York-based marijuana magazine High Times and author of "The Official High Times Pot Smoker's Handbook," said: "Whether you're with the press or a politician, it's no longer a third rail. In the past it could have cost you your job. Now people are at least able to have those conversations."

Roberts, for one, is ready. He's already booked 50,000 square feet at the Los Angeles Convention Center for next year's THC Expo. It's going to happen April 23-25 -- right after the April 20 date that's become a kind of pot smokers' national holiday.

"They're happy to have us back," Roberts said. "They told me the food concessions sold $38,000 worth of food on the first day alone -- and that's more than they do in a whole week at the California Gift Show."

adam.tschorn@latimes.com

Copyright © 2009, The Los Angeles Times

Friday, August 28, 2009

Riverside County deputies seize 25,000 pounds of marijuana



A routine traffic stop by deputies in Riverside County today ended up netting more than 25,000 pounds of marijuana valued at $10 million, authorities said.

Deputies from the Riverside County Sheriff's Department pulled over the 18-wheeler about 9 a.m. on northbound Interstate 15. While questioning the driver, deputies searched the vehicle and found boxes of marijuana, the department said.

The department said the quantity of pot appeared to be the largest confiscated in the agency's history.

The driver, an adult male, was taken into custody by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration.

-- Robert J. Lopez

Photo: Boxes of confiscated marijuana. Credit: Riverside County Sheriff's Department

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2009/08/riverside-deputies-sieze-25000-pounds-of-marijuana.html

1,000 marijuana plants found inside Chatsworth warehouse

August 27, 2009 | 9:44 am

Two people were arrested after Los Angeles police uncovered a marijuana-growing operation in a Chatsworth warehouse, where about 1,000 plants were growing, authorities said today.

A patrol unit stopped a white pickup truck with temporary plates in the 9900 block of Canoga Avenue about 10:45 p.m. Wednesday, said LAPD Officer April Harding. When officers approached the truck, they smelled the strong odor of marijuana and found plants, Harding said, and arrested a man and woman who were inside the vehicle.

LAPD officers traced the plants back to an industrial warehouse on the same block, where the smell of marijuana was escaping from a vent on the roof. When officers went inside, they discovered 1,000 plants and a hydroponic lab, Harding said.

About 100,000 kilowatts of unbilled electricity was being used in the warehouse, she said. The LAPD was continuing its investigation this morning.

-- My-Thuan Tran

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2009/08/pot-bust.html

Family members found marijuana in Jackson's bedroom

Rotting marijuana that Michael Jackson's family members mistook for heroin briefly caused detectives to look for further evidence of the illegal drug in the pop star's rented residence during the frenzied 48 hours after his death, according to sources close to the investigation.

Family members told coroner's officials that they found "tar heroin" in the Holmby Hills home's master bedroom. Only Jackson and his children had access to the room, according to court records unsealed Thursday. The discovery prompted authorities to obtain a search warrant for Jackson's house for heroin, hypodermic needles, cutting agents, scales, balloons, condoms, razor blades, buyer lists, and seller lists, among other items, documents show.

But within days, police had ruled out heroin as a factor in the singer's death, sources close to the investigation said. Lab tests showed that the purported heroin was actually moldy marijuana, sources said. And, according to court records, a lengthy police interview with Jackson's personal physician, Dr. Conrad Murray, placed another drug, the powerful anesthetic propofol, at the center of the investigation.

Law enforcement sources said that neither marijuana, cocaine nor heroin were found in Jackson's system.

The search warrant records, unsealed at the request of several media organizations, show that police seized 12 bottles of the sedative temazepam, several other prescription drugs and empty medication vials from Jackson's house the day after his June 25 death. As part of the investigation, police searched Murray's car June 29, records show. But according to the search inventory, the only items seized were a business card for an executive handling Jackson's London concerts, a contract and an envelope with miscellaneous writing.

In another warrant made public Thursday, a federal agent wrote that Jackson's longtime friend and physician Dr. Arnold Klein had self-prescribed medication 27 times during a nearly three-year period.

The allegation prompted a federal magistrate to sign off on a search last week of Mickey Fine Pharmacy, which Jackson frequently used.

State records showed that Klein had self-prescribed Vicodin, Valium, the sedative midazolam and modafinil, a drug used to improve wakefulness.

Klein's attorney, Garo B. Ghazarian, said Klein never self-prescribed any medication, but the lawyer declined to explain the drug-tracking records.

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-jackson28-2009aug28,0,1554430.story

Weed Protects Brain From Booze?!


Of course, this research was done at a college!

According to a new study at University of California San Diego, marijuana may stave off damage caused by binge drinking.

WTF?!

Brain scans were performed on three different groups all ranging in ages between 16 and 19: binge drinkers, binge drinkers who also smoke pot, and those with little drug or drinking experience.

The binge drinkers showed damage in their white matter, yet those who drink and smoke showed damage only in three of eight areas of the brain, only little more than the control group.

In extremely unexpected results, their brains were in substantially better shape in seven areas of the brain over the binge drinkers.

Researchers will continue on whether marijuana somehow stops alcohol from damaging brain cells.

If that's true, then why are frat guys so damn stoopid?!

http://perezhilton.com/2009-08-28-weed-protects-brain-from-booze

Free Weed in Cali, Oldes Stripper and Cigarettes Find New Lungs


Kush L.A. magazine put a certificate in their magazine for free weed at a medical dispensary in LA. Lining up outside at the Roscoe Compassionate Collective, everybody is claiming an affliction to get their free bag -- an 8th of a gram to anyone with a doctor's certificate.
That amount comes to a savings of $50. One fellow claimed chronic neck pain. RCC plans on doing more giveaways. They're also selling additional weed to those who want more. They've installed an ATM machine inside the dispensary.

Legendary Topless Dancer Still Performs
Her breasts were once called "the New Twin Peaks of San Francisco." All 44 inches of them. Her name is Carol Doda and she's been shaking her booty for over 45 years. She was one of the first ladies to get silicone injections into those breasts that were insured with Lloyd's of London for $1.5 million.



She got her start at the Condor Club. She was go-go dancing on a piano when the club's publicist handed her a topless swimsuit and she became the first popular topless dancer. Although she doesn't strip anymore, she does perform a nightclub act at Amante, singing and dancing. And she owns a lingerie shop called Champagne and Lace. She never married, which may make her one of Americas hottest older cougars.

Cigarettes Target Smaller Countries
A new report shows that tobacco kills 6 million a year. The report also shows that the tobacco industry is targeting low-income countries who are without tobacco regulations. Expensive lawsuit after expensive lawsuit has sent the industry to make money on those countries who can't sue.

The American Cancer Society estimates that the tobacco industry has cause $500 billion loss all over the world. Part of the claim is not only premature deaths but also tobacco taking the place of food on the farm.

Rapper Too Short Gets Busted For Weed, Alcohol and Burning Rubber


Oakland, California rapper and hip hop veteran Too Short seems to be the latest to be hit with charges for either drugs or alcohol or for both. According to Las Vegas, Nevada law enforcement, Too Short born Todd Shaw, 43, was arrested after allegedly speeding and burning rubber (exhibition of power) on a street in Las Vegas.

The rapper was apprehended early Thursday morning where they found less than an ounce of marijuana in his possession in addition to being over the legal alcohol limit.

Too Short was initially pulled over for peeling his tires to the pavement in the city of sin “Sin City.”

This is Too Short’s second time in less than 3 months to receive a DUI while in Las Vegas.

http://www.hiphoprx.com/2009/08/28/rapper-too-short-gets-busted-for-weed-alcohol-and-burning-rubber/

Former KFC Now Serving Weed, Not Wings

If you’re driving through the Los Angeles area and have a hankering for some Original Recipe chicken with its 11 herbs and spices, make sure you pull into a real Kentucky Fried Chicken store. Because if you stumble into the K.F.C. at Exposition and Hughes in Palms, you’ll find a different kind of herb altogether – the kind you need a prescription to buy.

What was once a KFC restaurant, serving the chicken and buttermilk biscuits you so crave, is now “Kind For Cures”, a medicinal marijuana dispensary, reports the LA Weekly.

There have been marijuana dispensaries popping up all over Southern California of late, but this one is slightly different. Rather than tearing the whole thing down and starting from scratch, the proprietors of this alternative KFC decided to incorporate the design of the previous tenants. They have removed the official Kentucky Fried Chicken logo, but the rest of the building remains mostly intact.

Chicken lovers, you can grab your Original Recipe down the road at National and Sawtelle. Though some might argue what this KFC serves is also finger lickin' good.

http://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/weird/NATL-Former-KFC-Now-Serving-Weed-Not-Wings-55792342.html

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Medical Marijuana Yellow Pages


Marijuana Pages



Check it out! There is a list and search feature that shows local dispensaries, equipment stores, Doctors, and MORE! For FREE! Get all f your medical marijuana news info and directories here!

Marijuana Farms Cropping Up In Colorado's Mountains

GOLDEN, Colo. -- Authorities said they have suspected there may have been drug trafficking in Colorado's forests but said now they have evidence.

Law enforcement seized 14,500 marijuana plants from an illegal marijuana farm located in Pike National Forest Friday. The site was the size of a football field and plants were meticulously planted every three feet and received water from a makeshift irrigation system.

The discovery has officials concerned.

"We’ve thought that we had drug trafficking organizations in the state, we assumed it, now we have that evidence," said U.S. Forest Service Special Agent Michael Skinner.

Skinner said it is hard to quantify and identify these farms because Colorado's lands are so vast totaling 14.5 million acres. Skinner said the U.S. Forest service only has 29 agents and officers assigned to the land which means they are responsible for roughly 500,000 acres each.

Skinner said they received $100,000 from the federal government for training and missions aimed at exposing these operations. He said he hopes the government will continue to provide them funding in light of Friday's investigation.

Skinner said he is worried about the safety of hikers who frequent Colorado's forests. He said a .22-caliber gun was found Friday and these farmers are armed.

"They live in fear they are going to be ripped off," said Skinner.

Skinner said hikers should avoid areas where they see blue tarps, heavy trash and irrigation piping. If you stumble on one of these farms, he said leave immediately and refrain from taking cell photos. Skinner said you should only call police when you are safely back to your car.

"I don't want the public to get involved because they could get hurt -- the possibility is always there," said Skinner.

http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/20571012/detail.html

Colorado's Marijuana Economy: An Explosion of Ganjapreneurship



At first glance, the One Brown Mouse Boutique looks like a typical hippie artisan shop--its ceiling festooned with tie dye, stained glass tributes to Bob Marley and post-Sgt. Pepper Beatles hanging in the window, racks of handmade jewelry, crocheted hats, and silk-screen T-shirts for sale. Only the sweet stank of high-grade marijuana permeating the room distinguishes the Brown Mouse of Nederland, Colorado from such patchouli-infused boutiques across the country. Proprietress Kathleen Chippi's shop nearly fell victim to the recession's retail stagnation earlier this year, until she altered her business plan to become the small mountain community's first medicinal marijuana dispensary.

What can only be rightly described as an explosion of ganjapreneurship is currently underway in Colorado, sparked by the Obama Administration's new policy announcement in February, which directed federal agencies to defer to state law enforcement on the issue of medical marijuana.



Medical marijuana has been technically legal in Colorado since 2000, when residents voted to add Amendment 20 to the state's constitution. The Bush Administration, however, always maintained a rigid stance that federal anti-drug laws took precedence over state rights. Regular DEA raids on medical marijuana distributors in states that legally permit such commerce effectively intimidated citizens who would have otherwise officially registered as patients or caregivers.

At the beginning of this year, only 2000 people had applied for Colorado's Medical Marijuana Registry since the system was established on 2001. In the past six months, the registry has grown to nearly 10,000. The registry card is actually optional under Colorado law--a doctor's note is sufficient--so it's difficult to determine the precise number of medicinal users. About thirty dispensaries currently operate to provide verified patients with locally-grown kind bud, up from just a handful in previous years. And the number of dispensaries is expected to double to 60 by the end of 2009.



Even though it passed the medical marijuana amendment nearly a decade ago, Colorado is just now entering a phase of transition that embraces that legal reality. The longtime lucrative blackmarket in a forbidden agricultural product is being legitimized--all the financial transactions that used to flow underground are now being raised to the taxable surface, creating a new era for an ancient industry, and fertile ground for ganjapreneurial start-ups to sprout like new shoots of Cannabis sativa.

kathleen.JPGKathleen Chippi has been a proponent of hemp and pro-medicinal marijuana activist for over twenty years, but had never considered opening a dispensary until the recession hit her boutique. With sales down 75% early this year, Kathleen faced financial probabilities of losing her business. After Obama's drug czar announced there would be no more federal raids on legal medical marijuana dispensaries, Kathleen decided to look into the requirements for starting one. "Our law is so gray and open," she explains, "there are no guidelines about dispensaries except that you have to collect sales tax." After procuring a business license identifying the new product she would sell, on June 26 Kathleen's modest artisan shop transformed into the One Brown Mouse Cannabis Healing Arts Center.... and Boutique.

The success of her new venture has been nothing short of astounding, with implications that reverberate far beyond the four walls of her tiny shop. From the micro-view of her own personal experience, Kathleen suggests, "Marijuana is the only thing pulling Colorado out of the recession right now." Not only has her own small business been saved, but whereas her previous sales tax bill would run about $500 per quarter, Nederland will be getting a $5000 check out of her first few months as a dispensary.

Most of the farmers Kathleen works with have been cultivating their product illegally for many years--the oldest has been in the illicit business for 35, more than half have grown marijuana for over two decades. Now that they sell their product to a legal commercial enterprise, weed farmers will have to register their income and pay taxes on it, just like anyone growing tomatoes or tobacco. "To have these people coming out of the closet after so many years, that's the really heartening thing about what's happening right now," Kathleen says.

Since marijuana farmers have begun selling exclusively to legitimate dispensaries, the underground market for illegal weed has been quashed, putting drug dealers out of business for lack of available stock. One such dealer I talked to in Boulder, who I will call Quark at his request, told me that with the supply of high-quality Colorado hydroponic weed redirected to dispensaries, he has only been able to procure cheap Mexican schwag for the past few months. Since the implications of indirect association with brutal Mexican cartels unsettles him, Quark is currently seeking a regular job so he will have money to pay tuition this year. Though it has negatively impacted his own solvency, Quark has nothing but praise for the new phase in Colorado's marijuana industry. His only concern is that the change in employment status will burden his study time as he nears completion of his advanced degree in astrophysics.

Opponents of legalization/decriminalization of marijuana--medicinal or otherwise--argue that legitimizing the industry will lead to increased usage by young people, though rational analysis and official statistics indicate otherwise. California examined the issue a decade after their 1996 legalization of medicinal marijuana. The state attorney general discovered that over the previous ten years, teen usage had declined dramatically, at a rate much faster than the national trend. As compared to California statistics pre-1996, different teen age groups evidenced 25 to nearly 50% fewer numbers reporting that they'd used marijuana in the previous month.

I would bet that one could find their way to a pot dealer on any college campus in this country by asking the first three people you meet where to procure ganja. Considering the prevalence of the underground market, legitimizing the business has the effect of tightening controls over it, regulating who can legally purchase, sell, or grow it, which puts unscrupulous drug dealers out of business, this reducing the availability of product through any but official channels. The controls that come with legalization effectively reduces its availability, rather than the contrary.

Kathleen acknowledges that the cultivation and sale of marijuana has been a thriving underground industry for decades in her tiny mountain town about 15 miles west of Boulder. "It's always been happening; it's just not been taxed until now," she says. The massive blackmarket is emerging into the light, though the Colorado Department of the Revenue says they have no plans to keep track of how much money the rapidly growing legitimate industry will be feeding into state coffers. The largest dispensary in the state, serving 1400 patients in Colorado Springs, generates $30,000 per month in sales tax revenue for the state. "And now that the legal dispensaries have killed the underground market, it will only get bigger," Kathleen predicts.

ganja.JPGFor her own ambition, that is most certainly the case. One Brown Mouse currently corners the medicinal marijuana market in Nederland, though half a dozen more dispensaries are preparing to open there in the coming months. Kathleen represents the leading edge of a growing movement of ganjapreneurs, and wants to carve out a substantial market share before the field becomes crowded with ambitious latecomers. Her fine-tuned business acumen, clearly unharmed by decades of casual marijuana use, recognizes the much larger market for her goods lies thirty minutes east in Boulder.

So Kathleen now has a business partner, with whom she has secured a 3-story 7,000 square foot building zoned for retail in Boulder. The opening of her new medicinal marijuana megastore is slated for October. Much more than simply a dispensary, Kathleen says her new "cannabis center" will sell growing equipment and art created by her patients. It will also offer a schedule of classes on cultivation techniques, and a club where those with the right paperwork can hang out, have a coffee, and smoke a joint or eat a "space cake" with friends. She even got a florist license so she can display and sell live marijuana plants, which will be a first for Colorado when she opens her doors.

Not only will Kathleen's cannabis center be feeding state coffers with tax revenue, but it will directly create jobs for those employees she will have to hire to run the complex operation. Further, the economic ripple from such an operation will generate business for gardeners talented in the delicate process of nurturing baby marijuana clones and bakers specialized in creating snacks infused with cannabis.

To learn more about ganjapreneurs who are stimulating Colorado's economy, check back tomorrow for part 2 of this story, where I will introduce you to the founders of Ganja Goods.

From http://correspondents.theatlantic.com/christina_davidson/2009/08/at_first_glance_the_one.php

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Medical marijuana user arrested in OR

SPOKANE, Wash. -- A medical marijuana patient and seller from Spokane has been arrested for suspicion of possessing the drug in Oregon.

Scott Shupe was arrested in Oregon last week while returning to Spokane after purchasing four pounds of marijuana to sell at his dispensary.

Shupe?s status as a medical marijuana patient in Washington didn?t matter. Oregon doesn?t recognize medical marijuana permits from other states.

Shupe is back in Spokane after posting $7,500 bond, and is hopeful he?ll eventually get his marijuana back. But Wasco County (Ore.) District Attorney Eric Nisley said the law isn?t in his favor.

Information from: The Spokesman-Review, http://www.spokesman.com

The Union - The Business Behind Getting High - Free Full DVD Torrent Download


Download it here for FREE! Only for you guys!

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Today was a good day!


It was definately a good day for reformation of marijuana laws! Argentina declares marijuana decriminalized! Also, Mexico. Woohoo! Who's next?!

Re: Study: Marijuana High Robs Men of Sexual High


View the article here.

Here is the artice:

Men who regularly get high on pot may be robbing themselves of sexual highs, according to a report in New Scientist.

A study of 8,656 Australian men found that those who smoked marijuana daily had more trouble reaching orgasm than nonsmokers.

Researchers led by Marian Pitts of La Trobe University in Melbourne also found that some smokers had the opposite problem — premature ejaculation, according to the study published in the Journal of Sexual Medicine.

Although they suffered sexual problems, men who smoked pot reported more sexual partners than nonsmokers and were twice as likely as nonsmokers to have had two or more sex partners in the previous year.


I think that is bullshit. Weed is a known aphrodisiac. If anything it makes you hornier! I want to know more about this study. It must have been researched with a group of guys who sit and whack-off to internet porn all day - so they can't perform when it comes to getting down with their woman!

What do you think?

Security debated for RI medical marijuana stores


(08-25) 16:08 PDT Providence, R.I. (AssociatedPress.com) --

Prospective proprietors of medical marijuana stores in Rhode Island asked Tuesday for permission to make home deliveries to patients, but state health officials were unsure whether that was legal.

State lawmakers voted this year to make Rhode Island the third state in the country after California and New Mexico to permit marijuana sales to chronically ill patients. The state Department of Health heard criticism and questions about the program Tuesday as the public got its first chance to comment on rules proposed for the stores.

The new law will eventually permit up to three nonprofit stores, dubbed compassion centers, to sell marijuana to the roughly 900 patients registered with the state.

Michael Anderson, 42, of Providence, who is interested in operating a store, suggested the businesses should be allowed to pick up housebound patients and drive them to the store. He also wanted permission to deliver marijuana to patients.

"I think it would be a nice thing for the patients," said Anderson, who credits marijuana with helping him cope with the debilitating effects of Crohn's disease, which causes a painful inflammation of his digestive system.

"It's the only way I can really keep my appetite up, to keep my quality of life relatively good," he said.

State Police Capt. David Neill, commander of the detective unit, worried at the meeting that thieves could target drivers delivering the drug. Neill also said police need a way to easily identify through the health department caregivers and patients who can possess it legally.

Right now, police can only learn that information by examining a state-issued card given to patients and caregivers who register. This week, police spent time secretly watching a suspected marijuana dealer in Warwick only to learn he was allowed to have the drug under the medical marijuana program, Neill said. Police learned of the man's status when they confronted him.

Before issuing a license, the new law requires state officials to consider whether the host community supports the proposed store. Charles Alexandre, chief of the office of health professionals regulation, said he was uncertain what would count as evidence of support.

The state cannot met a Sept. 14 deadline to finalize the rules governing marijuana stores because they need more time for public feedback, Alexandre said. He expects the state will begin accepting applications from potential store owners in late fall or early winter.

See the whole story on AssociatedPress.com!

Argentina decriminalizes small-scale marijuana use


Reuters News:

By Luis Andres Henao

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Argentina's Supreme Court decriminalized the small-scale use of marijuana on Tuesday, opening the way for a shift in the country's drug-fighting policies to focus on traffickers instead of users.

The high court ruled it unconstitutional to prosecute cases involving the private use of marijuana.

Elsewhere in Latin America, Colombia and Mexico have already decriminalized the possession of small amounts of drugs. Brazil and Ecuador are looking at an initiative to legalize some drug use.

"Each adult is free to make lifestyle decisions without the intervention of the state," the court's ruling said. It did not set a weight limit for what constitutes small-scale and the court said it was not decriminalizing all drug use.

The decision struck down a 2006 lower court ruling involving eight people sentenced to jail terms for carrying marijuana cigarettes.

"Behavior in private is legal, as long as it doesn't constitute clear danger," Supreme Court President Ricardo Lorenzetti said. "The state cannot establish morality."

Elias Neuman, a criminology professor at the University of Buenos Aires, said Tuesday's ruling "could be a step forward" in legalizing the personal use of other drugs.

"It is now clear what drug dealers do is sell people on drugs, and not the other way around," he said.

The Argentine government had urged the high court to review drug possession laws, seeking to redirect state spending on pursuing dealers and drug treatment instead of what officials called expensive prosecutions of thousands of smaller cases.

The ruling drew criticism from Argentine officials in the Roman Catholic Church and families of drug users who worry it will lead to increased drug trafficking.

A household survey showed an increase in the rate of marijuana use in Argentina. Consumption among the population aged 12 to 64 rose to 6.0 percent in 2006 from 1.9 percent in 2004, reversing a previous downward trend.

Marijuana use in Argentina is now at levels similar to those reported in western and central Europe, according to the latest United Nations World Drug Report.

Argentina, whose population is less than a quarter that of Brazil, is Latin America's biggest cocaine user, according to the U.N. report.

Several high-profile police raids and murders linked to drug gangs have exposed the country's status as a transit point for Andean cocaine bound for Europe and a source of precursor chemicals used to make drugs such as methamphetamine.

(Editing by Mohammad Zargham)

Taken from Reuters news. See the entire story here.

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Monday, August 24, 2009

We were meant to smoke weed!

Taken from Wikipedia

There are currently two known subtypes, CB1[1][2] which is expressed mainly in the brain, but also in the lungs, liver and kidneys and CB2 which is mainly expressed in the immune system and in hematopoietic cells. Mounting evidence suggests that there are novel cannabinoid receptors[3] that is, non-CB1 and non-CB2, which are expressed in endothelial cells and in the CNS. In 2007, the binding of several cannabinoids to a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) in the brain was described.[4]

The protein sequences of CB1 and CB2 receptors are about 44% similar.[5] In addition, minor variations in each receptor have been identified. Cannabinoids bind reversibly and stereo-selectively to the cannabinoid receptors. The affinity of an individual cannabinoid to each receptor determines the effect of that cannabinoid. Cannabinoids that bind more selectively to certain receptors are more desirable for medical usage.

Read more.

Barack Obama & Medical Marijuana. The Time is Now!

Here is a cool video I found on YouTube the other day. It's Barack Obama talking about decriminalization of marijuana for medical purposes.




I have also attached a few other clips of our President talking about marijuana!



This is America's #1 Request! Legalize Marijuana!



Gotta love Bill Maher! Get em!

Why is weed illegal anyways?

For real! I really don't understand why marijuana is illegal in the first place. The only thing I can think of that makes any sense is that the US Government cannot find a way to capitalize well enough from it being legal. They profit more from putting people in lucrative prisons. Prisons are highly funded and highly PROFITABLE.

On the other hand, we need to look out for the good of the people. Marijuana does NOTHING bad to you. You get high - then you're just hungry and happy afterward. I love the quote, "I got high and nobody died!" That is soo true! Marijuana helps thousands of US Citizens everyday. There are tons of people who need pain relief, or anxiety relief - but cannot take pills due to stomach issues. Personally, anytime I take even an aspirin my stomach gets upset.

I am also a lot more fond of the idea of smoking weed, which grows naturally, for medication as opposed to taking some pharmaceutical drug that I never REALLY know FOR SURE hat it is doing to my body or even to what the EXACT ingredients are!

Just my $.02 - More to come. Thanks for reading! ;)

-BakedLikeLays!