Tuesday, 17 February 2015

10 Reasons Marijuana Legalization Can’t Be Stopped


10 Reasons Marijuana Legalization Can’t Be Stopped



Gallup poll last October reported that a “majority continues to support marijuana legalization in the United Sates.” The 2014 poll indicated that 51% of Americans support legalization while 47% oppose it. This represented some shrinkage in legalization support from the 2013 poll, which found 58% in favor, but is still evidence of a solid trend line consistent with 2011 and 2012 polls that each reported 50% in support of legalizing marijuana. The most revealing finding, though, is that opposition to legalization is down from 64% in 2004.
Legalization is supported most strongly by Americans in the East and West, and by liberals and moderates. In the South, for example, support has grown from 40% in 2010 to 47% in 2014, and in the Midwest from roughly 40% to 45% during the same period (with some sharp shifts every other year above 50%). Among conservatives, support for legalization has averaged 32.6% over this five year period, 56.8% among moderates, and 72.8% among liberals.
Is this enough public support for complete marijuana legalization throughout the country? Actually, no, it is not. Does this matter? Well, truth be told, yes it does. The legalization movement still has an immense amount of work to be done, and just as support fell from 58% in 2013 to 51% in 2014 it could drop again to under the 50% threshold. The road to legalization covers rough, rocky terrain. Federal prohibition makes the construction of state regulatory systems unnecessarily complicated. This will produce flawed policies with imperfect results and unanticipated consequences, and opponents of legalization will use these to oppose further progress.
Nonetheless, legalization cannot be stopped. Here are 10 reasons why.
10. Diligent Advocates
Legalization has active and well-funded support from a number of prominent advocacy groups, including NORML, MPP, DPA and the ACLU. However it is the overall quality of grass-roots advocates (not to mention the sheer multitude of them) that gives the legalization movement an advantage over the opposition. Marijuana legalization advocates are well-informed, professional, dedicated and motivated by a sense of history.
9. Unappealing Alternatives
No one has or will make a credible argument that criminal laws and sanction will eliminate marijuana use and/or marijuana’s widespread availability. One of the consequences of the emerging legal market is that it puts a brighter light, through contrast, on the illegal market. Untaxed and unregulated are no longer abstract adjectives when it comes to describing the market produced by prohibition. The debate over legalization used to be about values, now it’s about a choice between two markets. When the illegal market is considered in this context, it does not appeal to the American public.
8. A Demoralized Opposition
Losers. Americans do not like losers, and the anti-marijuana movement lost this battle a long time ago. From their point of view, it is hard to have any confidence that this debacle (as they see it) can be reversed. The opposition is now left with petty arguments along the lines that marijuana should be illegal but no one should go to jail when they are arrested, or that it is better for criminal organizations to sell pot because they will keep the price high thus keeping marijuana use minimal. Their explanations about why legalization’s advocates are so successful mask a more troubling issue for the opposition, which is how they managed to squander widespread public support for their position and how their incompetent leadership failed to stop this ongoing and massive repudiation of prohibition that has been growing and succeeding since the mid-1990s.
7. Demographic Changes
Most adults today have a different attitude about marijuana than their parents did. A 50-year-old voter in 2015 was born in 1965 and has grown up seeing the failure of marijuana prohibition, and a large number of these people have first-hand experience with marijuana. They have either tried it, used it, or know people who have. This is not an abstract issue anymore for most Americans, and they are no longer willing to defer to prohibition’s supporters and accept that criminalizing marijuana is the only feasible public policy. More important, though, is that a greater and greater part of the electorate is made up of black, Hispanic and other so-called minority voters who recognize that marijuana arrests have disproportionately targeted them over the last two generations. Simply put, they are tired of marijuana laws being used as a pretext to arrest minority youths.
6. Other Priorities
According to an August 2014 Gallup poll the most important issues facing the United States were dissatisfaction with government, immigration, the state of the economy, jobs and health care. Next on that list, also in order of importance, were foreign policy, ethics and moral concerns, poverty, education and the federal budget deficit. Illegal drugs in general and marijuana in particular are not the popular political issues they were during the Reagan years of the 1980s. When it comes to the use of law enforcement resources the public is a bit more concerned these days with sexual assault on children, the global sex trade, identify theft, heroin overdoses and white-collar crime. Even when it comes to basic issues like public safety it’s a hard sell to divert police resources from street patrols to trips to the station to book marijuana possession offenders. The police have more important responsibilities and limited resources with which to meet them.
5. Appealing Tax Revenue
Colorado raised $60 million in tax revenue in the first 10 months of 2014, suggesting a total of $72 million for the entire year. Here is one, somewhat cynical, way of understanding why that would be appealing to state government: that’s enough money to pay 1,440 state employees a salary of $50,000 a year. A more sophisticated perspective here comes from a long-term view of trends in American politics. Since the civil rights revolution in the 1960s more Americans vote, and as more Americans vote they want and expect more from the politicians they elect to public office. This isn’t about welfare and entitlements, it is about public policy, and issues involving schools, transportation, health care, regulatory systems and public safety. The public wants more from government, and government has to find ways to raise sufficient revenue to address those demands. A legal and growing marijuana industry provides new revenue sources for local, state and eventually the federal government.
4. Reductions in Teen Availability
Marijuana legalization is good public policy. Unlike the illegal market, the legal market will not sell to minors. Colorado authorities have sent undercover operatives into marijuana stores throughout the state; they could not find a store that would sell marijuana to an underage buyer. Marijuana prohibition also inflates the price of marijuana, making it profitable for teenagers to sell it to their friends and schoolmates. A legal market will lower the price of marijuana and make such commerce unprofitable. Legalizing marijuana will reduce availability to teenagers, and as more Americans learn and understand this, more of them will support legalization.
3. Valuable Merchandise
People like marijuana. Consumers find marijuana use a pleasing, useful and satisfying experience. Marijuana is useful to many Americans, for medical and other purposes. Legalization’s opponents have distorted and misrepresented the reasons why people use marijuana, implying that the purpose of marijuana use is intoxication and that continued use is sustained by addiction. In truth, most marijuana is used to engage people in various pursuits, not to disengage and/or escape reality or responsibility. Like alcohol, marijuana can be abused, but most Americans use marijuana with decent and deliberate purpose, including but not limited to treatment of serious medical conditions.
2. A Growing Industry
A recent report suggests that the legal marijuana market is the fastest growing industry in the United States. The entrepreneurial characteristics of this emerging industry are on display at the Cannabis Cup exposition presented by HIGH TIMES throughout the United States each year. The industry is attracting capital investment, growing in scope and profitability, and in the early stages of launching trade and lobbying groups to advance its interests and protect its profits. There is a cynical way to look at this too, in that industry lobbyists will work their way into the hearts, minds and bank accounts of enough politicians to preserve and protect this new industry. On a more practical level, though, these entrepreneurs provide a mechanism by which government regulators can learn about the industry, gain industry cooperation and devise effective regulations with which to address legitimate public interests such as quality controls, informative labeling and effective age restriction policies. A legal industry can and will work with public representatives, something conspicuously absent from the illegal market culture produced by prohibition.
1. A Humanized Public Understanding of Marijuana Users
The main reason marijuana legalization can’t be stopped is that marijuana use and marijuana users have come out of the shadows. People who use marijuana are normal, everyday Americans who work hard, pay taxes, vote and contribute to American society. They are not abstractions, stoned hippies introverts or pathological deviants. The marijuana issue is no longer contested in the arena of social construction where validity and truth are mere functions of perceived authority and social position. In other words, this is no longer about deferring to anti-drug advocates and pro-prohibition law enforcement. The marijuana user is no longer a caricature, some stereotype for an old movie or bogus anti-drug commercial. The marijuana user is now a gal who lives next door, a guy from work, a son, a daughter, a wife or a husband, a fellow parishioner or a kid down the street. The more the public learns about real marijuana users, and the real reasons they use marijuana, the more they will support legalization.
Marijuana legalization can’t be stopped because it is the right policy, the right thing to do and the right way to treat our fellow Americans.

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18 States Predicted to Legalize Weed by 2020

18 States Predicted to Legalize Weed by 2020

The latest report from ArcView Market Research predicts 18 states will operate legalized recreational marijuana markets within the next five years—a forecast that would make pot fully legal in 36 percent of the nation. And while the report was devised to assist investors and members of the cannabis industry in charting a course for the future, a thoughtful dissection of the data indicates that the end of American pot prohibition may be well within reach—that is, if an overconfident nation doesn’t stop it dead in its tracks.
In the report, the firm’s analysts call to attention that while America has continued to put small dents in the prohibitionary climate, the illusion of federal legalization being a “sure thing” has created a veritable donation desert across the country, which is sandbagging the movement at nearly every level. 
“The continued success of the state markets has created the public perception that nationwide legalization is inevitable. This trend—compounded with the loss of big-name political donors, such as Peter Lewis and John Sperling—has created a political funding crisis,” wrote the study authors.
It is for this reason that Keith Stroup, founder of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), believes it is crucial for cannabis to be made legal through the legislature in at least one state in 2015. Because voter initiatives are expensive to pass, and with the arrogance of the nation sitting back and waiting for Uncle Sam to announce the end of prohibition during the morning news, there is less money feeding coalitions in states where these types of measures can amend constitutions. 
“Winning full legalization the old-fashioned way—by getting it approved by a majority of the legislature and signed by the governor—would be an enormous political achievement that would open up the possibility of legalization in the balance of those states that do not offer a voter initiative,” said Stroup, adding that Rhode Island is poised to make this happen.
Nevertheless, ArcView analysts predict retail marijuana will be legalized within the next two years in eight states, including Arizona, California, Nevada, and Maine. While this forecast is a bit more optimistic than those presented by the folks at the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), both agree that California is destined to join the ranks of Colorado, Washington, Oregon and Alaska by passing initiatives to legalize weed in the 2016 presidential election. If this happens, it would be a major victory in the realm of national pot reform, due to California having so much influence on the rest of the country.
Unfortunately, there is always a possibility that the federal government could decide to intervene in legal markets, as well as the potential for legal states to encounter unforeseen issues that could deter the future of legalized marijuana in America. Mason Tvert, Director of Communications with MPP, recently told Time magazine that the foundation of legal weed is volatile because an “unexpected event,” like a major anti-pot endorsement or a highly publicized scandal, could serve as a wrecking ball for the progress made thus far.

As cannabis is widely legalised, China cashes in on an unprecedented boom

As cannabis is widely legalised, China cashes in on an unprecedented boom

Almost 5,000 years ago, Chinese physicians recommended a tea made from cannabis leaves to treat a wide variety of conditions including gout and malaria. Today, as the global market for marijuana experiences an unprecedented boom after being widely legalised, it is China that again appears to have set its eyes on dominating trade in the drug.
The communist country is well placed to exploit the burgeoning cannabis trade with more than half of the patents relating to or involving cannabis originating in China. According to the World Intellectual Property Organisation (Wipo), Chinese firms have filed 309 of the 606 patents relating to the drug.
About 147 million people – around 2.5 per cent of the world's population – use cannabis, according to the World Health Organisation. And medicinal properties of the drug are increasingly being recognised. It can be used to treat conditions ranging from the nausea caused by chemotherapy for cancer patients and chronic pain to cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis and epilepsy.
Last month, Uruguay became the first country to legalise marijuana in its entirety – from growing the crop to processing and use. Yesterday it appeared that a second South American country, Peru, could follow Uruguay's example and legalise cannabis production. The former director of the Peruvian National Drug Control Commission, Ricardo Soberon, said: "The possibility of removing the criminal element from the cannabis trade – a drug that is a lot less dangerous than others – is the answer to 50 years of repeating the same strategies with no results."
Last week, the US state of Colorado decriminalised the recreational use of cannabis and people in Washington state have also voted to legalise marijuana, although stores are not expected to open until later in the year. Shares in companies involved in cannabis soared after Colorado's move. One firm, MediSwipe Inc, had its stock jump by nearly 70 per cent on 2 January. The legal trade of cannabis in the US alone could be worth $10bn (£6bn) by 2018. And analysts say it is China that is once again at the forefront of exploiting new economic opportunities.
"Because cannabis in Western medicine is becoming accepted, the predominance of Chinese patents suggests that pharmaceutical sciences are evolving quickly in China, outpacing Western capabilities," Dr Luc Duchesne, an Ottawa-based businessman and biochemist, wrote in InvestorIntel. "CTM [Chinese traditional medicine] is poised to take advantage of a growing trend. The writing is on the wall: Westernised Chinese traditional medicine is coming to a dispensary near you."
Many of the Chinese patents are for herbal treatments. One, filed by the Yunan Industrial Cannabis Sativa Co, refers to an application made from whole cannabis sativa seeds to make "functional food" designed to improve the human immune system. Another, by an inventor called Zhang Hongqi, is for a "Chinese medicinal preparation" for treating peptic ulcers. It uses an array of ingredients, including cannabis sativa seed. The filing says it has "significant therapeutic effectiveness and does not cause any adverse effect".
There is also a patent filing from China for a treatment for constipation, which is made using fructus cannabis and other ingredients such as "immature bitter orange", Chinese angelica and balloon flower. This, it is claimed, treats constipation's root causes and symptoms resulting in "obvious curative effects".
However, only one company in the world has developed cannabis-based drugs as medicines that have been recognised by regulators in the West following the long, costly process of clinical trials. GW Pharmaceuticals, based in Wiltshire, makes Sativex for the treatment of symptoms of multiple sclerosis and cancer pain, and Epidiolex for childhood epilepsy.
A spokesman for the company, which is the only one licensed to carry out research on cannabis in the UK, said China had a long history of working with herbal medicines. "In that sense it doesn't come as a surprise. This is a country with thousands of years of working with plants in medicines," he said of the patent filings.
In December, Jamaica announced it was forming its first medical marijuana company, called MediCanja. Henry Lowe, a scientist and executive chairman of MediCanja, said medical cannabis could help "transform Jamaica's fledgling economy". He added: "Given Jamaica's history with ganja, we could be the hub for medical ganja in Latin America and the Caribbean."
Peter Reynolds, leader of Cannabis Law Reform (Clear), a UK-based campaign group, said China had another advantage over other countries in selling cannabis as it is one of the largest producers in the world of industrial hemp, a form of cannabis with a low amount of the psychoactive compound THC. "The Chinese are smarter and they are on to all the good ideas," Mr Reynolds said. "The potential for cannabis as a medicine is monumental."
But smoking cannabis remains illegal in China. In April last year, the South China Morning Post reported that it was a popular drug among the country's young people despite the threat of lengthy prison sentences.
Mr Reynolds said the UK possessed world-leading expertise on cannabinoids, and there was a "terrible, terrible irony" that the Government was so hostile to its use. "We're in a situation now where cannabis is available on prescription [in the UK], but it's almost impossible to get because it costs so much more," he said.
The opening up of a legal trade in non-medical marijuana is not without its critics. Uruguay's decision to remove all legal restrictions on use was condemned by the International Narcotics Control Board, the body charged with monitoring international treaties on narcotics. "Cannabis is not only addictive but may also affect some fundamental brain functions, IQ potential and academic and job performance, and impair driving skills," it said in a statement. "Smoking cannabis is more carcinogenic than smoking tobacco."

Marijuana Tax Up In Smoke? Don't Worry, Feds Plot 50% Tax




Marijuana Tax Up In Smoke? Don't Worry, Feds Plot 50% Tax



Marijuana activists look to Colorado as a true leader, with legalized recreational use and tiered tax models. Coloradans and activists nationwide thought legalizing marijuana would mean huge tax revenues. Nationwide, there is a near intoxication promising money, jobs, appreciating real estate, and tax revenues that could achieve so much for so many.
Naysayers worry about public health risks, especially for young people. Yet even some naysayers find copious tax revenues alluring. In Colorado, the governor’s office estimated it would collect $100 million in taxes from the first year of recreational marijuana. The state’s economists were more conservative, estimating $67 million. They recently revised it downward to call for taxes of $58.7 million from recreational marijuana.
Now, Colorado’s first year tax haul for 2014 recreational marijuana is a disappointing $44 million, causing some to say that Colorado’s marijuana money is going up in smoke. Yet perhaps that is premature. Colorado was first to regulate marijuana production and sale, so other governments are watching closely. Although disappointing, the $44 million is nothing to sneeze at. Colorado also collected sales tax on medical marijuana and various fees, for a total of about $76 million.
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Residents of the state could get some of it back due to a quirk of Colorado law. It requires new voter-approved taxes, including these marijuana taxes, to be refunded if state tax collections rise faster than permitted. However, legislators may ask state voters to let the government keep and use the taxes, which the state arguably needs.
Colorado is still getting its bearings. The taxes are significant, but not all the sales are going through legal channels. Perhaps it was silly to think they would. Avenues for cheaper prices in the illegal and medical markets can trump legal recreational sales where tax revenues are highest. That makes perfect sense, and is calling for a re-examination of tax rates and enforcement.
In Colorado, legalization has surprised both supporters and critics, with a mixture of good and bad. Approximately 16,000 people are licensed to work in Colorado’s marijuana industry. A Marijuana Group study claims that tourists account for almost 90% of recreational sales in some mountain communities, and 50% in Denver and environs.
Washington state became the second to legalize recreational marijuana. Oregon and Alaska have followed. With four recreational victories, activists are pushing legalization in other states, including California where a ballot measure is expected in 2016. The tax tally is likely to keep growing, if not always as predicted.
In Colorado, there is a 2.9% sales tax and a 10% marijuana sales tax. Plus, there is a 15% excise tax on the average market rate of retail marijuana. It adds up to 27.9%. But with all those taxes, many smokers buy illegally. An estimated 40% of purchases in Colorado are  not through legal channels. There is also a growing relationship between the 2.9% medical marijuana tax and the 27% recreational variety.
Some patients may be reselling 2.9% medical stock. A medical marijuana card costs $15. About 23% of estimated marijuana users in Colorado have medical cards. Meanwhile, the Colorado tax on marijuana has been upheld despite claims that paying it amounts to self-incrimination that violates the Fifth Amendment.
Since marijuana remains illegal under federal law, the argument is that filling out state tax forms admitting buying or selling implicates you in federal crimes. It’s a clever argument, but the plaintiffs have lost so far. Yet the lawsuit challenging the taxes continues. Of course, taxes aren’t clear on the federal side either. Federal law trumps state law, and Section 280E of the tax code denies even legal medical marijuana dispensaries tax deductions.
Some dispensaries go through elaborate gyrations to try to pay income taxes only on their real revenues net of expenses. But there is only so far one can go. Some marijuana sellers operate as nonprofit social welfare organizations or as cooperatives or collectives. And yet taxes could become major under federal law.
The proposed Marijuana Tax Equity Act would end the federal prohibition on marijuana and allow it to be taxed–at a whopping 50%. The bill would impose a 50% excise tax on cannabis sales, plus an annual occupational tax on workers in the field of legal marijuana. Hopefully, anticipated tax revenues will be based on hard data and realistic projections.
Still, the times, they are a changin’.






STUDY SHOWS MARIJUANA DOES NOT LOWER IQ

MARIJUANA DOES NOT LOWER IQ


Marijuana And Test Scores

STUDY SHOWS MARIJUANA DOES NOT LOWER IQ

By  October 23, 2014 • 9:34 am
A recent UK-based study says that there is no connection between non-habitual teen cannabis use and IQ. The was study conducted on 2,612 children born in the Bristol area of the United Kingdom between 1991 and 1992. Each child’s IQ was tested at the age of 8, then again at the age of 15. Each student at the age of 15 was also surveyed on their use of cannabis for this study.
Although there seemed to be correlation of lower test scores to cannabis use, the correlation was also tied to use of alcohol, tobacco, drugs, and other risky teen behaviors. After these factors were taken into account, researchers found that there was direct correlation between cannabis use and IQ. However, teens who used marijuana heavily did show measurable signs of cognitive damage. This group of heavy users showed a 3% drop in test scores as the result of using cannabis at least 50 times by the age of 15.
“People often believe that using cannabis can be very damaging to intellectual ability in the long-term, but it is extremely difficult to separate the direct effects of cannabis from other potential explanations,” researcher Claire Mokrysz explained. She went on to say that, “The belief that cannabis is particularly harmful may detract focus from and awareness of other potentially harmful behaviours.”
It may come surprising (or not) that alcohol use was found to be strongly associated with IQ decline, but no other factors were found to be predictive of IQ change. This study comes as a significant contradiction to many American studies which try to tie the drug to memory loss or long-term impaired cognition. As recent as 2012, a study by Duke University reported a link between heavy marijuana use and lower IQ scores. The study came under heavy fire by researchers who pointed out significant flaws in their methodology; not surprising considering that Duke is located in the heart of tobacco country. The study was discredited shortly after it’s publication.
With many areas of the world inching toward legalization, proper studies have a tremendous impact on public perception of cannabis. While use is restricted to adults, the prospect of losing brain cells is no less a worry to anyone using cannabis. This new study’s findings may help to curb fears of losing a few IQ points from smoking a joint. It will be presented at the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology next March.
Photo Credit: Colorlines.com

Cannabis Oil’s Recipe. The Best Alternative For Chemo Patients - Rick Simpson’s Hash Oil Recipe


Cannabis Oil’s Recipe. The Best Alternative For Chemo Patients 
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Did you know that properly made hemp medicine can cure and/or control all medical ailments? This in mind, would anyone go against its use?
It has been Rick Simpson’s mission to help patients with various diseases and disabilities by using natural hemp oil.

Hemp Oil and Curing Cancer

For over 10 years, Rick has been educating individuals over the benefits and healing power of Hemp oil. This was as a result of his experience after he cured himself of skin cancer in the year 2003. Since then, he has dedicated his life to sharing hemp’s oil treatment benefits to all those who need it. Despite his efforts, he has faced rejection and opposition from the Canadian authorities, pharmaceuticals, health government agencies and United Nations offices. Even at this, he has set his mind to make it known of his benefits and has treated more than 5,000 patients. He believes that all diseases can be cured. Rick has offered his services free of charge to his patients. He puts emphasis on use of high quality hemp for it to be useful in treatment.
Some of the treated diseases include: cancer, AIDS, arthritis, multiple sclerosis, diabetes, leukemia, Crohn’s disease, depression, osteoporosis, psoriasis, insomnia, glaucoma, asthma, burns, migraines, weight management, chronic pain, mutated cells etc.
Documentary on “Run From The Cure”
This documentary that was created by Christian Laurette and it shares Rick’s theory. The documentary features testimonies from patients who were cured by Rick. The documentary looks at the benefits of the hemp oil.

Self-healing

Ingestion of hemp oil helps destroy cancer cells in the body according to Rick. As a topical, hemp can be used to prevent and cure some skin ailments like melanomas.
It is important to realise that the drug also has side effects if consumed in extremes just like with the use of every other drug. These side effects include hunger, joy and sleep. Otherwise, this medication is safe unlike most of the drugs that are untested in the market that have worse side effects including death. On the other hand, the use of cannabis has never killed anyone.

Rick Simpson’s Hash Oil Recipe

You will need one ounce of dried herb to get started which will produce about 3-4 grams of oil. You can get about two ounces of high quality oil from a pound of dried material.
N/B: This guide is from Rick Simpson’s website. Take extreme care when boiling solvent off as the flames are extremely flammable. AVOID any source that can produce any fires such as smoking, sparks and red hot heating elements. It is also important that you prepare this in a well-ventilated room with a fan that blows away the fumes so you do not inhale.
1- The completely dry material goes in a plastic bucket.
2- Using a solvent, dampen the material. The solvent can be pure naphtha, ether, butane, 99% isopropyl alcohol. One pound requires about two gallons of solvent to extract the THC.
3- Using a clean stick, crush the plant material.
4- Keep crashing as you add the solvent until it is soaked and completely covered. Keep stirring for about three minutes which will allow THC to dissolve into the solvent.
5- Pour off the mixture into a different bucket.
6- Add some more solvent into the retained plant material and keep stirring to extract more THC.
7- Pour the second mixture to the first.
8- Discard the plant material.
9- Pour out the oil mixture through a coffee filter into another clean container.
10- Boil the solvent using a rice cooker to ease the process. REMEMBER: no sources of a flame in the room as the fumes are highly flammable.
11- Add more solvent to the rice cooker until you reach about ¾ full then turn the heat up. Keep in mind that you must be in a well-ventilated room.
12- While it is heating, check the level in the rice cooker. Add about 10 drops of water for a pound of dry material that will help release the solvent residue as well as protect it from a lot of heat.
13- With about an inch of solvent-water mixture, put on your oven mitts and pick up the unit. As you put up the mitts, swirl the contents until you have finished boiling off the solvent.
14- Turn the cooker to low heat. Ensure that the oil does not boil over 140degrees delicious.
15- Keep the oven mitts on as you remove the pot having the oil from the rice cooker. With a stainless steel container, pour out the oil into it gently.
16- Put the stainless steel into a dehydrator. You can also use a device that can gently heat such as a coffee warmer. You will know that it is ready as soon as there is no more surface activity.
17- Using a plastic syringe, suck up the oil. The syringe makes it easier to dispense. It will look like thick grease.
According to Rick, hemp oil rejuvenates vital body organs which helps individuals that use it feel 20-30 years younger during the initial stages of treatment. Keep in mind that use of hemp must be used in the right proportions and doses.
It is during this new age and era that hemp can be used to save mankind through the elimination of human suffering and to a further extent put an end to starvation. Rick Simpson encourages individuals to embrace this method of treatment.


Read more at:  http://www.thoughtpursuits.com/cannabis-oils-recipe-best-alternative-chemo-patients/

Elevated, R.I.’s first medical marijuana vapor lounge, opens in Providence

Elevated, R.I.’s first medical marijuana vapor lounge, opens in Providence

  • PROVIDENCE, R.I. –— In another era, college professors ly probably flunked students for turning in business plans built around a marijuana lounge.Times, of course, have changed and with cannabis laws loosening...
  • PROVIDENCE, R.I. –— In another era, college professors probably flunked students for turning in business plans built around a marijuana lounge.
    Times, of course, have changed and with cannabis laws loosening across the country, Kevin Cintorino’s idea to create a venue where medical marijuana users could gather comfortably doesn’t seem so farfetched.
    On Saturday, Cintorino and fellow Johnson & Wales University graduate Ray Diao opened Elevated, Rhode Island’s first medical marijuana vapor lounge.
    It was a modest opening, with a little more than a dozen customers and potential members dropping by in its first day, Cintorino said.
    “Lots of people came by early and were asking about memberships, but because they had to go to work they couldn’t stay,” Cintorino said. When things slowed down, they closed early for the night.
    Located in a small storefront on Peck Street, Elevated combines two things — medical marijuana and vaping — that have become prominent in recent years.
    Vaporizing drugs — either tobacco or marijuana — instead of burning them has become popular for a number of reasons, including health, but in Rhode Island it has the added advantage of avoiding the state’s indoor smoking ban. (It’s not smoking if there’s no open flame or combustion.)
    The combination of medical marijuana and vaping results in a lounge business that, perhaps because of its novelty, is not highly regulated by the city or state.
    “We want to do everything by the book, so we called the [state] Department of Health and the city, but no one knows how to treat it,” said Cintorino, adding that the only permits he was told he needed were a general retail license and a permit to operate on Sundays.
    That doesn’t mean authorities don’t have their eyes on this new kind of business.
    On Saturday night, a man who identified himself as a Providence police officer visited Elevated during a reporter’s interview.
    The officer said he was just there to learn more about the lounge for permitting purposes and declined to answer any questions.
    Earlier calls to the Providence Board of Licenses were referred to the city solicitor’s office, where no one was immediately available.
    Cintorino said the idea for Elevated came from his own experience — he is a medical marijuana user for a stomach condition — and the success of lounges in Colorado, which decriminalized recreational marijuana.
    “A lot of landlords don’t let you use medicine in your apartment, so people have to go to their friends’ houses and other places that aren’t convenient,” Cintorino said. “Here they can relax and talk about what works best with other people who know about it.”
    Cintorino does not intend to sell any marijuana at Elevated — patients must bring their own — but expects to generate revenue from memberships, hourly rates for use of the space, pipe rental and sales of accessories. (The single-year membership is $65, one-month is $34 and single-day a symbolic $4.20)
    Cintorino said he took out a line of credit from Bank of America to help renovate the lounge, which can only hold 18 customers at a time, and has invested between $20,000 and $30,000 so far.
    The lounge features couches, tables and televisions in front, and behind the counter an assortment of pipes, heating equipment and a commercial dishwasher.
    With a degree in food service management and Diao’s in culinary arts, Cintorino said one day, in a larger venue, he could see a kitchen and full menu added to the Elevated concept.