Archive for the ‘Medicinal Marijuana’ Category

Pot? Check. Taxes. Check. Step Three: Profit.

San Jose took a step toward welcoming medical cannabis into its fair city on Tuesday night — 14 years after state voters approved medical cannabis, six months after pot clinics began sprouting up in Northern California’s largest city and about five months after a city council member openly declared the cash-strapped burg ought to do something about it all: namely, start taxing.

Via a 7-3 vote last night, the council essentially said, “Yes, we ought to do something about it, and we will — in June, when city staff comes back to us with a regulation and taxation plan that they’ll spend the next few months concocting.” Not exactly words to foment a revolution — but for those who’d like to see green generating green in San Jose, it’s a good day. “San Jose took a pragmatic step,” Councilmember Pierluigi Oliverio said Wednesday. “We said, ‘We want a limited number of dispensaries in limited places, and we want them taxed.’”

Pot? Check. Taxes. Check. Step three: Profit.

Nothing left now but the wrangling over the details: minor points like what the business tax levied on dispensaries should be; if they should be restricted to industrial space in San Jose;  if there should be a strict cap on the number of dispensaries; if the permitting fee should be $10,000 or $30,000 per dispensary.

Wait, those are all major points, some with the ability to muck up the process entirely, said Lauren Vazquez of the Silicon Valley chapter of Americans for Safe Access. Lengthy haranguing over just those details is partially to blame for the drawn-out saga of dispensary regulation in Los Angeles, now at two years and counting. Did you ever think it’d be the marijuana advocates getting all serious and killing the buzz?

“We want to make sure [patients] are involved in the drafting process,” she said. “That way we can get an ordinance that’s reasonable, not too restrictive, and we’ll avoid a lot of the going back and forth.” Continue reading

‘South Park’ gets into the medical marijuana act

A medical marijuana dispensary has opened in South Park, Colorado – that is, the ‘South Park’ featured in the Comedy Central cartoon.

The debate over medical marijuana dispensaries has picked up in Colorado since a wave of the shops opened across the state over the last year. And now, the makers of “South Park,” Trey Parker and Matt Stone, plan to chime in.

Set to air this Wednesday, the episode will feature a new medical marijuana dispensary in South Park.

According to a post on the show’s Facebook page, Randy is first in line to get his medical marijuana, but is turned away when a doctor finds nothing wrong with him. That begins his quest to find a medical excuse to smoke marijuana.

For a preview, click here. (US Only, an alternative method in comments)

Cannabis Caviar: $1,400-an-ounce marijuana promises a bang for your buck

So you think you’re a connoisseur, what with your cans of Beluga, Kobe steaks and stash of 1998 Dom Perignon? Think again if you haven’t gotten your hands on cannabis caviar, a new kind of top-shelf marijuana popping up at Colorado dispensaries that sells for the astronomical price of $1,400 an ounce — nearly four times the average price of other high-grade strains.

“This isn’t stuff you are sitting around puffing all day,” says Jake, general manager of the ReLeaf Center, a Denver dispensary that’s selling caviar made in house for $60 a gram. “This is the definition of a one-hitter quitter.”

It ain’t your grandpa’s pot. Caviar is made by soaking marijuana buds in a potent stain of hash oil — thick, sticky and concentrated liquid cannabis made from dissolving hashish or marijuana in solvents like acetone, alcohol or butane. Once the oil’s soaked into the marijuana buds, the whole shebang is allowed to dry for several weeks or months.

The result is a potent marijuana smorgasbord: high-grade marijuana, with between 5 and 20 percent THC, infused with 30 to 80 percent THC hash oil. It also burns for long periods of time, notes Jake, although he adds a word of caution about taste: “It’s rough.”

People looking for a smooth-tasting product should look elsewhere, he says. “It’s for people who want to smoke less, need longer effects, or have medical needs that absolutely require them to take large amounts of THC in. It’s going to have a stronger medical benefit.”

That’s putting it mildly. To try some for yourself, keep an eye out for “caviar” on the top shelf of your local dispensary. It’s also been called “California Raisins,” though as Jake notes, “That name is falling out of favor in the ongoing weed war between Colorado and California.”

And with stuff like caviar, we just might have one up on our marijuana-loving neighbors to the west.

Source

Marijuana Legalization Officially Qualifies for California Ballot

It’s official. Tax Cannabis 2010, the most far-reaching state effort ever, which would legalize the consumption of cannabis for all adults over 21 — and would finally take the industry that serves those consumers out of a legal gray area — will qualify for the November mid-term ballot later today.

The Tax Cannabis campaign gathered just under 700,000 signatures, well over the 434,000 needed to qualify for the California ballot.

For background on the initiative, read my extensive analysis of the campaign, spearheaded by Richard Lee, the pot entrepreneur behind Oaksterdam University in Oakland.

From that article, here’s a primer on what this measure would change, if it were to pass:

The measure does not actually legalize pot as much as it absolutely decriminalizes certain marijuana offenses. (Marijuana has been “decriminalized” in California since 1975, but it still can generate a fine, an arrest and a misdemeanor charge on your record.) Tax Cannabis institutes a one-ounce personal possession limit and allows for limited personal cultivation.

Interestingly, the ballot initiative refers to local control, meaning that cities and counties can decide whether to allow regulated marijuana sales at all, and if so, how that would work. Tax Cannabis allows for the personal consumption, possession and cultivation of cannabis by any adult over 21 throughout the state, but the business of it would be left to local jurisdictions. (A few people suggested Lee was inspired by his home state of Texas’ dry-county, wet-county policy regarding alcohol sales.)

Polling shows that a growing number of people here in California think legalization is the right solution to this particular segment of the drug war. A poll in April showed 56 percent support for legalization. And Tax Cannabis’ internal polling in March found 44 percent support among likely California voters in non-presidential elections. This was followed by an August internal poll that found 52 percent support by likely November 2010 voters.

These slim majorities are not ideal, but that’s why Tax Cannabis is focused on a public-education campaign, and will be targeting their message to fit the different concerns and needs of all kinds of voters across the state.

I still stand behind what I wrote back in January: This is the best chance for marijuana legalization on a state-level yet. And as 13 states have followed California in legalizing medical marijuana, other states could similarly follow it if legalizes cannabis this year. In other words, as goes California, so could go many others.

9 Medicinal Marijuana Ads

Picture 5Unless you live in Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont or Washington, you probably aren’t getting a lot of medical marijuana ads in your local newspapers. (Did I leave any states off the list?) Because the ads are so ubiquitous, and so interesting, I thought a small roundup was in order for our friends living in all the other states, or in other countries where medical marijuana is illegal.

Of course, long before cannabis was legalized in these 14 states, it was used widely throughout ancient Greece, Egypt, India, and China to treat various illnesses and conditions. But it wasn’t until an Irish physician called William Brooke O’Shaughnessy, Assistant-Surgeon and Professor of Chemistry at the Medical College of Calcutta, conducted an experiment in the 1830s to help treat muscle spasms, that marijuana was introduced to the so-called modern world of medicine.

Click ‘Continue Reading’ for the pictures.

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Five Things You May Know About Marijuana That Arent True

How many of these myths have you heard of?

1. One joint equals a pack of cigarettes.

This hoary old favorite comes back again and again, seemingly impervious to the onslaught of the real world.

Prohibitionists earnestly tell us that smoking just one joint “equals a pack of cigarettes.” Or maybe it’s 16, or maybe just four cigarettes; they seem a little unclear on the exact number.

This fallacious conclusion is derived from a study by Dr. Donald Tashkin in which the UCLA researcher examined airflow resistance in the lungs of tobacco smokers compared to that in the lungs of marijuana smokers. Dr. Tashkin did find that daily pot smokers experience a “mild but significant” increase in airflow resistance in the large airways, greater than that seen in persons smoking 16 cigarettes per day.

But what they don’t tell you is that, ironically, Dr. Tashkin also found – in the largest study ever of its kind – other, more important markers of lung health, in which marijuana smokers did much better than tobacco smokers. In the four years since Dr. Tashkin’s latest study results were announced, I’ve never heard a single anti-marijuana speaker mention this.

They also never seem to have time to mention that Dr. Tashkin’s study unexpectedly found that smoking marijuana – even regularly and heavily! – does not lead to lung cancer.

Dr. Tashkin said these results “were against our expectations.”

“We hypothesized that there would be a positive association between marijuana use and lung cancer, and that the association would be more positive with heavier use,” Dr. Tashkin said. “What we found instead was no assication at all, and even a suggestion of some protective effect.” Continue reading

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