Monday 30 April 2018

Bill Allowing School Nurses to Administer Medical Marijuana Given Approval by Colorado Senate, Already Passed House

School nurses would be legally authorized to administer medical marijuana to patients under legislation passed through its second reading today in the Colorado Senate.

Under current law, a primary caregiver may possess and administer medical marijuana in a nonsmokeable form to a student while the student is at school. According to the official summary of House Bill 1286, which the Senate passed today through its second of three readings; “The bill allows a school nurse or the school nurse’s designee, who may or may not be an employee of the school, to also possess and administer medical marijuana to a student at school.”

The bill “provides a school nurse or the school nurse’s designee protection from criminal prosecution if he or she possesses and administers medical marijuana to a student at school.”

House Bill 1286 has already been passed through its third and final reading in the House, meaning its now just one Senate vote short of being sent to Governor John Hickenlooper for consideration. Once sent to his desk, Governor Hickenlooper will have the option of signing it  into law, allowing  it to become law without his signature, or vetoing it.

The full text of the bill can be found by clicking here.

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Colorado House and Senate Votes to Add Autism Spectrum Disorders as Qualifying Medical Cannabis Conditions

A proposal that would add autism spectrum disorders to Colorado’s medical cannabis program has been passed through its second reading in the Senate, having already been approved by the full House of Representatives.

House Bill 1263 was filed by State Representative Edith Hooton (D) along with a bipartisan group of three additional lawmakers. The measure was passed by the House on April 12 in a 53 to 11 vote, and today it was approved through its second reading in the Senate. It will now need to receive one final vote in the Senate before it can be sent to Governor John Hickenlooper for consideration.

According to its official summary, “The bill adds autism spectrum disorders to the list of disabling medical conditions that authorize a person to use medical marijuana for his or her condition.”

If the measure becomes law, as is expected at this point, autism spectrum disorders would join the following qualifying conditions:

  • Cancer
  • Glaucoma
  • HIV or AIDS
  • Cachexia
  • Persistent muscle spasms
  • Seizures
  • Severe nausea
  • Severe pain
  • Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

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Five Maine Men Indicted on Federal Firearms Charges for Saying They Don’t Use Marijuana

By Betty Adams, Portland Press Herald (republished with special permission)

Five central Maine men were indicted earlier this month on federal firearms charges. Four have pleaded not guilty to the charges and are free on unsecured bail pending their next hearing in U.S. District Court in Bangor.

The fifth, Donald “Donny” Henderson, 33, of Winthrop, is set for arraignment May 4. He was issued a summons to appear in court and is represented by attorney James Nixon.

Henderson’s indictment says he made false statements on Feb. 28, 2017, while buying a Smith & Wesson Bodyguard .380-caliber pistol from Audette’s Inc., located in Winthrop. It alleges he checked a box indicating he was not an unlawful user of marijuana when, in fact, he was. The allegation is repeated in the second count, which says Henderson purchased an SCCY model CPX-1, 9 mm pistol on March 2, 2017, also from Audette’s.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives prohibits the sale of firearms and ammunition to those who use marijuana because it remains illegal under federal law even if state laws such as Maine’s permit medical and recreational marijuana.

Richard Quattrone, 48, of Augusta, is charged with two counts of lying to a federal firearms licensee on March 10, 2017. The indictment says he purchased a Smith & Wesson Bodyguard .380-caliber pistol from Audette’s and indicated that he is an not an unlawful user of marijuana or other controlled substances. It says that Quattrone “was an unlawful user of marijuana” at the time and that he intentionally wrote down an address that was not his current one. Quattrone is represented by attorney Christopher McLean.

Quattrone pleaded not guilty to the charges on Thursday and is free on $5,000 unsecured bond.

Convictions on charges of making false statements to firearms dealers carry penalties of up to 10 years in prison.

David O. Miles Jr., 27, of Hartland also allegedly bought two pistols, an SCCY CPX-1 9 mm and an SCCY CPX-2 9 mm, on March 2, 2015, from Bio-Rem Auto Sales, which is in St. Albans, and said the firearms were for him, which was untrue. Miles, who is represented by attorney Matthew Erickson, pleaded not guilty to the charge Thursday morning and is free on $5,000 unsecured bond.

Mark White, 28, of Searsmont was indicted on two counts of lying to federal firearms dealers. He is accused of buying a Smith and Wesson SD40VE .40-caliber pistol on Jan. 31, 2017, from Parsons Small Engine & Gun Shop and indicated he was the actual purchaser when he was not. The second count is similar and involves the purchase of a Glock model 9 mm pistol, again from Parsons.

He pleaded not guilty to both charges on Tuesday and is free on unsecured bond. White is represented by attorney Ronald Bourget.

Steven P. Springer II, 25, of Waterville is accused of two counts of lying to a federal firearms licensee. The first count in the indictment says he purchased a Kel-Tec PF9 9 mm pistol on Feb. 22, 2015, from Bio-Rem Auto Sales, which is in St. Albans, and indicated he was the actual buyer, which was untrue.

The second count says he purchased two Kel-Tec P-11 9 mm pistols on Feb. 24, 2015, from Jon’s Redemption & Pawn Shop, located in Newport. Springer pleaded not guilty to both counts in the indictment and is free on unsecured bail.

Springer is represented by attorney David Bate.

Betty Adams can be contacted at 621-5631 or at:

badams@centralmaine.com

Twitter: betadams

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Illinois House Committee Votes to Allow Expungement of Past Marijuana and Paraphernalia Convictions

Illinois legislation that would allow for individuals to have marijuana (and marijuana paraphernalia) possession charges expunged (removed) from their records has been advanced in the state’s legislature.

Since the passage of a law decriminalizing marijuana in 2016, the possession of up to 10 grams is no longer a criminal offense in Illinois. House Bill 2367, filed by State Representative La Shawn Ford, would allow those who received a charge for possessing up to 10 grams of marijuana (or for possessing paraphernalia) prior to this law taking effect to petition their circuit court to have the conviction expunged from their criminal record. This would mean it would no longer show up on a background check. In order for the individual to apply, three or more years must have passed since the petitioner had their sentence completed.

According to La Shawn Ford, “law enforcement would have a right to object to it”, which he calls fair. “You have to go before a judge, the judge will look at it, and ultimately grant a ‘yes’ or a ‘no'”, says Ford.

The full text of House Bill 2367, which was initially filed in early 2017, can be found by clicking here.

The post Illinois House Committee Votes to Allow Expungement of Past Marijuana and Paraphernalia Convictions appeared first on TheJointBlog.

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California Committee Approves Bill to Establish Marijuana Banks and Credit Unions

Legislation that would allow for the creation of a special class of state-chartered banks and credit unions that could service California’s legal marijuana industry has been passed by a key Senate committee.

Filed by Senator Robert Hertzberg (D), Senate Bill 930 was passed recently by the Senate Banking and Financial Institutions Committee in a 6 to 1 vote, sending it to the Senate Appropriations Committee. Passage in the Appropriations Committee would send it to the full Senate. If passed by the Senate, and then the House of Representatives, it would go to Governor Jerry Brown for final consideration.

The proposed law would allow for the creation of special state-chartered banks and credit unions that could legally process transactions by licensed marijuana businesses. These “marijuana banks” would be regulated by the Department of Business Oversight.

According to its official bill analysis, Senate Bill 930:

“establishes the creation of cannabis limited charter banks (CLCBs) and cannabis limited charter credit unions (CLCCUs) to provide limited banking services to the cannabis industry. Under the administration of the Department of Business Oversight (DBO), CLCBs and CLCCUs can accept and maintain cash deposits as well as issue special purpose checks that can only be used for the following:

  • To pay fees or taxes to the state or local jurisdiction,
  • To pay rent on property that is associated with the account holder’s cannabis business,
  • To pay vendors located in California for expenses related to goods and services associated with the account holder’s cannabis business, or
  • To purchase bonds or interest-bearing notes or warrants backed by the full faith and
    credit of the state, or bonds or warrants of any local jurisdiction.”

Proponents of the measure say it would  allow marijuana businesses to move away from the cash-only scenario most are forced into, which many argue is a security risk and puts the lives of those who work at such outlets in danger. Opponents of the measure – and there doesn’t seem to be many (at least many that are being particularly vocal – argue that allowing banks to provide services to businesses that are illegal under federal law is putting them at risk.

The full text of Senate Bill 930 can be found by clicking here.

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Michigan Legalization Initiative Qualifies for Ballot

The Coalition to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol has cleared a major hurdle towards making marijuana legal in Michigan. This morning, the Board of State Canvassers approved the petition signatures, and the initiative to regulate marijuana will be on the ballot in November. If approved by voters, Michigan would become the first state in the Midwest with an adult-use cannabis law.

In addition to allowing adults age 21 and older to possess and cultivate limited amounts of marijuana, the initiative would: regulate marijuana businesses that cultivate, process, test, transport, and sell marijuana; legalize the cultivation of industrial hemp (used to make textiles, biodegradable plastics, food, construction materials, and fuel); protect consumers with proper testing and safety regulations for retail marijuana; impose a 10 percent excise tax on marijuana sold at the retail level on top of the state’s six percent sales tax; and give local governments the option of whether they want to allow marijuana businesses in their communities.

Organizations supporting the coalition include the Marijuana Policy Project, the National Cannabis Industry Association, the ACLU of Michigan, the Drug Policy Alliance, the National Patients Rights Association, Michigan NORML, and MILegalize.

The initiative is being certified at a time when national attention is focused on marijuana policy reform. Earlier this month, President Trump reiterated his position in favor of not interfering with state marijuana policies in a conversation with Sen. Cory Gardner and assured him that the Department of Justice would not target individuals and businesses that are in compliance with state marijuana laws.

The post Michigan Legalization Initiative Qualifies for Ballot appeared first on MPP Blog.

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Zimbabwe to Allow Medical Marijuana

As public support for medical marijuana hovers over 90% in the United States while Congress continues to struggle to pass comprehensive legislation that would permanently protect state medical marijuana programs, Zimbabwe recently became the second African nation to legalize medical marijuana.

Marijuana Business Daily reports:

Details of the country’s cannabis regulations were announced in the government gazette on Friday, according to Zimbabwe’s state-owned newspaper, The Herald. (The gazette prints official notices and laws from the government.)

Five-year renewable licenses would allow growers to possess, transport and sell cannabis oil and fresh and dried cannabis, according to Reuters, which reported to have viewed Zimbabwe’s regulations.

The regulatory change came via Statutory Instrument 62, which amended the Dangerous Drugs Act to include Production of Cannabis for Medicinal and Scientific Use Regulations, The Herald reported.

“In the case of a company, proof of citizenship or proof of being ordinarily resident in Zimbabwe of the majority of directors or proof of an exemption by the Minister and proof of incorporation in Zimbabwe of the company…” according to the regulations.

Production must be licensed by the Ministry of Health and Child Welfare.

No details are available on whether imports or exports would be permitted or how local MMJ consumption would be regulated.

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Michigan Voters Can Legalize It in November

Michigan is angling to become the 10th state to legalize recreational marijuana. On Apr. 26, the state’s Board of Canvassers ruled that the Coalition to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol (CRMA) had submitted a sufficient number of signatures (250,000 were needed) to get the measure on the Nov. 6 ballot.

The state legislature will have the opportunity to enact it first, but that’s unlikely. The measure would allow adults to possess up to 2.5 ounces of pot and grow up to 12 plants at home. The overall tax rate would be 16% (10% excise tax and 6% sales tax) on cannabis products sold in licensed stores.

This is second effort to get recreational legalization on the Michigan ballot. In 2016, the state Elections Bureau rejected signatures submitted on a technicality. Due to this snafu, Michigan missed the opportunity to be part of the windfall of cannabis victories at the polls in 2016 when eight out of nine states passed either rec or medical initiatives.

Michigan NORML’s Rick Thompson

“The people of Michigan deserved this,” crowed Michigan NORML‘s Rick Thompson. “We’ve faced many trials and tribulations. We’ve had many stop and go signs from the federal government. That’s why states have to take the reins on the issue and really be the crucibles of democracy that they’ve always been intended to be.”

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said as much when he called for federal decriminalization on Apr. 20. “Justice Brandeis said let the states be laboratories,” the Congressman commented. “We’ve now had some evidence. In Washington and other states, it’s done a lot of good and no harm. The experiment has been a success. Let’s nationalize it.”

Schumer’s bill (he’s yet to introduce it in the Senate) would remove marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act, hence legalizing it.

But in the meanwhile, states are taking action. Voters in eight states and Washington, D.C. have passed legalization measures since 2012. Earlier this year, Vermont became the first state to enact legalization legislation. Currently, business is flourishing in Colorado, Washington, Oregon, Alaska, Nevada and California. Sales begin in Massachusetts in July, but are being delayed in Maine. Vermont and D.C. have yet to approve a commercial market for cannabis.

Michigan voters legalized medical marijuana by a 63%-37% margin in 2008. With a war chest of $1 million, CRMA should have enough money and support to offset efforts by Healthy and Productive Michigan and Smart Approaches to Marijuana to thwart Michigan’s marijuana measure.

Related Articles

No Equity in Detroit When It Comes to Cannabis

New Jersey’s Path to Marijuana Legalization

Provinces Take Lead in Canada’s Legalization Ramp-Up

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Friday 27 April 2018

Willie Nelson at 85: “Last Man Standing”

Willie Nelson turns 85 years old on April 29. It’s become a tradition for him to release an album around his birthday; Last Man Standing, his 73rd studio album and eighth since 2012 with Sony’s Legacy Recordings, is a fitting next episode in Nelson’s late-career renaissance.

Teaming up again with producer/songwriter Buddy Cannon, the duo penned 11 new songs for the album. Like on 2017’s God’s Problem Child, Nelson takes inventory of those that departed on Last Man Standing. On the opening title track (watch below), he name-checks Waylon Jennings, Ray Price, Merle Haggard and songwriter Norris Wilson, and wonders “who the next will be.” Despite the sad theme, Nelson’s sunny delivery and clever wordplay make for a fun tune as he jokingly sings, “I don’t want to be the last man standing/On second thought, maybe I do.”

Nelson’s Trump-era bewilderment surfaces on “Me and You” (“It’s like I’m in some moron country/I’ve never seen before”), which suggests circling the wagons with the ones you love (“The world has gone out of its mind/Except for me and you”). Unlike the Nelson favorite “Me and Paul,” there’s no reference to getting busted for weed.

But that sentiment comes through on the rollicking Western-swing number, “Ready to Roar,” when Nelson recalls: “Well, I picked up a lid from a friend of mine/And the man picked me up, now I’m doing time.” Nelson has been arrested for marijuana four times.

The heart and soul of the album, the ballad “Something You Get Through,” is destined to take its place among Nelson’s all-time classics like “Always on My Mind” and “Crazy.” Based on a conversation with a close friend who’d just lost her husband, it offers not simply consolation, but strength: “It’s not something you get over, but it’s something you get through.” Accompanied by a funereal organ and Mickey Raphael’s plaintive harmonica, the song provides the album’s overall message: “Life goes on and on/And when it’s gone/It lives in someone new.”

Willie Nelson with Merle Haggard (left), who passes away in 2016, (Photo by Danny Clinch)

Much of Last Man Standing belies that sense of mortality with Nelson’s “refuse to go gently” spirit. Along with “Ready to Roar,” the back-to-back tracks about femme fatales he fell for rollick. On “I Ain’t Got Nothin’,” Nelson’s left high and dry by a shameless gold-digger (“I gave you the ring/And you gave me the wringer”). It also includes a weed reference. And on “She Made My Day,” an innocent flirtation turns into a “world of strife” (“She made my day/But it ruined my life”).

Another fun track, Nelson’s hilarious waltz-tempo ode to liquor-induced “Bad Breath,” finds him ruminating about halitosis (“a word I never could spell”) and bad breath, which “is better than no breath at all.”

On the metaphysical two-step “Heaven Is Closed,” Nelson toasts everyone with this herbal blessing:

Let’s burn one for those still living in hell

Let’s burn one for those who think they’re in heaven

Burn one for everyone in the whole world

And anyone stuck in between

The rueful “I’ll Try to Do Better Next Time” and eerie “Very Far to Crawl” that close out the album add a level of sobriety to what is otherwise a celebration of a very lively octogenarian troubadour who’s not only surviving, but artistically thriving. This Last Man Standing plans to squeeze every drop out of his time left on Earth.

Related Articles

Album Review: Willie Nelson’s God’s Problem Child

Freedom Goes on the Bus with Willie Nelson

Annie Nelson at the Women Grow Summit

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New Study Provides Proof of CBD’s Potential in Relapse Prevention

Results of a new study “provide proof of principle supporting potential of CBD in relapse prevention”.

The study was published in the journal Neuropsychopharmacology, and epublished ahead of print by the U.S. National Institute of Health.

“Cannabidiol (CBD), the major non-psychoactive constituent of Cannabis sativa, has received attention for therapeutic potential in treating neurologic and psychiatric disorders”, begins the study’s abstract. “Recently, CBD has also been explored for potential in treating drug addiction. Substance use disorders are chronically relapsing conditions and relapse risk persists for multiple reasons including craving induced by drug contexts, susceptibility to stress, elevated anxiety, and impaired impulse control.”

Here, researchers “evaluated the “anti-relapse” potential of a transdermal CBD preparation in animal models of drug seeking, anxiety and impulsivity.” For the study, rats with alcohol or cocaine self-administration histories “received transdermal CBD at 24 h intervals for 7 days and were tested for context and stress-induced reinstatement, as well as experimental anxiety on the elevated plus maze.” Effects on impulsive behavior were established using a delay-discounting task following recovery from a 7-day dependence-inducing alcohol intoxication regimen.

“CBD attenuated context-induced and stress-induced drug seeking without tolerance, sedative effects, or interference with normal motivated behavior”, claim researchers. “Following treatment termination, reinstatement remained attenuated up to ≈5 months although plasma and brain CBD levels remained detectable only for 3 days. CBD also reduced experimental anxiety and prevented the development of high impulsivity in rats with an alcohol dependence history.”

The results “provide proof of principle supporting potential of CBD in relapse prevention along two dimensions: beneficial actions across several vulnerability states and long-lasting effects with only brief treatment.” The findings “also inform the ongoing medical marijuana debate concerning medical benefits of non-psychoactive cannabinoids and their promise for development and use as therapeutics.”

More information on this study can be found by clicking here.

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Thursday 26 April 2018

Poll: 63% of U.S. Voters Support Legalizing Marijuana, 93% Support Medical

According to a new Quinnipiac University poll, a strong majority of voters in the U.S. support legalizing marijuana, while an even higher percentage supports legalizing medical marijuana.

According to the new Quinnipiac University national poll released today, when asked “Do you think that the use of marijuana should be made legal in the United States, or not?”, 63% of U.S. voters say “Yes”, it should be (a 5% increase from January). Just 33% of poll respondents stated that they believe it should remain illegal. Support was highest among  Democrats (75%), and lowest among Republicans (41%). Among Independents, 67% support legalization.

Among the various age groups those 18 to 34, by a large margin, had the highest level of support for making marijuana legal with 82% in favor and just 16% – less than one in five – opposed. Those 65+ was the only age group without a majority support for legalization (43% to 51%).

When asked “Do you support or oppose allowing adults to legally use marijuana for medical purposes if their doctor prescribes it?”, more than nine out of 10 U.S. voters say they support it, with just 5% saying they don’t. Medical marijuana is supported by all political parties and age groups (including being  supported by 91% of those 65+, and 86% of Republicans).

When asked “Keeping in mind that your answers are confidential, have you ever recreationally used marijuana or not?”, 43% said that they have, with 54% saying they haven’t.  When asked “Would you support or oppose a bill protecting states that have legalized medical or recreational marijuana from federal prosecution?”, 74% say they would  support it, with 20% saying they wouldn’t.

More information on this new poll can be found by clicking here.

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N.H. Senate Committee Ignores Patients’ Testimony, Rejects Home Grow Bill

Yesterday, the New Hampshire Senate Health and Human Services Committee voted 3-2 to reject a bill that would allow home cultivation of up to two mature cannabis plants and 12 seedlings by registered patients and caregivers. Instead of listening to the numerous patients who testified at the public hearing, the committee recommended that HB 1476 be sent to “interim study,” which would effectively kill it for the year. But there’s still hope. Next, the bill is expected to receive a vote in the full Senate sometime in the next few weeks. Gov. Chris Sununu has not expressed a public position on the bill.

This bill is critically important because many patients are unable to afford the products that are available at dispensaries, which are not covered by health insurance. For some patients, home cultivation is simply the best, most affordable option. There is no need for further study before allowing limited home cultivation by registered patients and caregivers, especially now that it is becoming clear that access to cannabis is a key to addressing the opiate crisis.

If you are a New Hampshire resident, please email your state senator’s office today and urge him or her to support HB 1476! Then, call Gov. Chris Sununu and urge him to do the same.

 

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Tuesday 24 April 2018

Flower Power: Pennsylvania Amends Medical-Marijuana Program

Pennsylvania’s Medical Marijuana Advisory Board recently recommended adding the use of flower, or dried bud, to the state’s nascent medical pot program. On April 16, Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine approved the board’s recommendation.

“I’m ecstatic,” Pennsylvania Democratic Sen. Daylin Leach, whose support was key to getting the state’s medical marijuana bill passed in 2016, told Freedom Leaf during the 2nd Annual World Medical Cannabis Conference & Expo from April 12-14 at the Lawrence Convention Center in downtown Pittsburgh. “Hopefully, we’ll have whole plant in the dispensaries in the next couple of months.”

Pennsylvania State Sen. Daylin Leach speaking at right.

The good news is cannabis flower will eventually be available in dispensaries that opened throughout the Keystone State earlier this year. The bad news is it will only be allowed for vaping purposes. According to Dr. Levine, smoking medical-grade marijuana would be a criminal offense. Currently, cannabis is available in Pennsylvania as a concentrated oil or tincture. “I really do think this is the right thing to do,” she stated. The health department has a 90-day comment period before it can effect changes in the program.

Levine also approved the board’s recommendation to add cancer remission therapy to the list of accepted conditions and changed the definition of chronic intractable pain. Leach would like to go further (such as including insomnia as a condition), but said he was “happy about this expansion.”

Patrick Nightingale speaking at Pennsylvania Capitol in Harrisburg.

Patrick Nightingale, executive director of the Pennsylvania Medical Cannabis Society, agreed with Levine. “I fully expect the flower material will be approved for sale in our dispensaries,” he told Freedom Leaf during the conference. “Then our dispensaries will resemble medical dispensaries in other states where patients are able to select from a variety of actual cannabis strains. It’s critical that patients have greater variety and can dial up what works best for them.”

Both Nightingale and Leach were presenters at the World Medical Cannabis Conference & Expo, which offered workshops and courses and featured 125 exhibitors for the event’s 5,000 attendees.

Related Articles

Rohrabacher-Blumenauer Amendment Safe Until September

California Medical-Marijuana Pioneer Passed Away

New York’s Medical-Marijuana Program Continues to Evolve

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Want Potent CBD Oil Tinctures? Look No Further!

Every Day Optimal CBD manufactures some of the strongest, potent CBD oil tinctures on the market.

CBD oil tinctures are an increasingly popular option for those with a variety of medical ailments (from anxiety to chronic pain), and for those wanting an effective preventative medicine. By dropping CBD oil tincture under the tongue, our bodies absorb the CBD quickly and efficiently resulting in fast acting, effective results. Tinctures is just one method for consuming CBD. There are many other ways to experience CBD as well; ranging from capsules, gummies and other candies, drinkables, crystal isolate, CBD vape liquids, topical creams, and dry herbs.

All of the tinctures available at EveryDayOptimalCBD.com are made from legal industrial hemp and contain absolutely zero THC making them accessible in every state without a prescription. Their tinctures are completely free and clear of heavy metals, pesticides and contaminants of any kind.

Every Day Optimal CBD also has a speciality line of CBD Capsules called their Total Relief CBD line. These products are formulated specifically for certain ailments, such as insomnia. This line of products “contain added vitamins and minerals designed to boost the CBD’s power and effectiveness” – vaporsmooth. The capsule form is another popular consumption method for taking CBD, they do however take a bit longer for the body to absorb.

EveryDayOptimalCBD.com offers an 100% money back guarantee on all of their products. They have a wide-range of potencies (ranging from 300mg to 4,000mg), making it easy to find the product that’s exactly right  for your needs.

CBD oil tinctures are easy to consume in a consistent manner. If you have not yet tried a CBD tincture you will be happy to know that you can do so for pretty cheap. Below are some options to help you better understand how you can use a tincture:

Sublingual Administration (dropping the tincture under the tongue)

All tincture products sold by Every Day Optimal come in the same size bottles. The difference is the varying concentrations levels of cbd oil. Inside each of the bottles you will find a applicator dropper that you can use to ensure accurate dosage. Depending on the concentration you get and your desired dosage level you will want to find the amount that works best for you. A few drops is a good starting point and you can increase or decrease from there.

Dropping CBD oil under your tongue allows the CBD to enter your bloodstream quickly and efficiently and can provide almost immediate relief. It’s best to try to keep the oil under your tongue for as long as possible before swallowing to allow the most absorption possible.

Adding the oil to food

A popular method of taking CBD tincture is by mixing it with something else that you are going to consume. Things like a milkshake or tea can be used. The oils/tinctures offered by Every Day Optimal have a light peppermint taste that make them pleasant to consume.

You can find more information about these tinctures – and can purchase them – by clicking here.

 

The post Want Potent CBD Oil Tinctures? Look No Further! appeared first on TheJointBlog.

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Monday 23 April 2018

Marijuana Legalization Initiative To Be On November Ballot In Michigan

Enough valid signatures have been gathered in Michigan to place a marijuana legalization initiative on this November’s general election ballot.

The Committee to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol has submitted an estimated 277,370 valid signatures for their marijuana legalization initiative, according to the Bureau of Elections. This is well more than the 252,523 needed to place the proposal on the November ballot. The Board of State Canvassers is expected to officially certify the signature count later this week.

If passed into law by voters, the initiative would legalize the possession and personal cultivation of marijuana for those 21 and older, while establishing a system of licensed marijuana retail outlets. Marijuana would be taxed with a 10% excise tax and a 6% sales tax, with funding going towards schools, local governments and road repairs.

The Committee to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol, which put forth the initiative, is a partnership between the Marijuana Policy Project, the ACLU of Michigan, the Drug Policy Alliance, the National Patients Rights AssociationMichigan NORMLMI Legalize, the Michigan Cannabis Coalition, and lawyers from the State Bar of Michigan Marijuana Law Section.

For more information on the Committee to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol, and to view the full text of their initiative, click here.

The post Marijuana Legalization Initiative To Be On November Ballot In Michigan appeared first on TheJointBlog.

from https://thejointblog.com/marijuana-legalization-initiative-to-be-on-november-ballot-in-michigan/

Marijuana Legalization Initiative To Be On November Ballot In Michigan Find more on: The Nick Adams Blog



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Pennsylvania Health Dept. to Expand Medical Marijuana Program, Allow Flower Vaporization

The Pennsylvania Health Secretary Rachel Levine announced the department will implement all of the advisory board’s recommended changes to the medical marijuana program. They include:

  • Allowing patients to use whole plant, flower cannabis via vaporization.
  • Rewording the qualifying condition “severe chronic or intractable pain” to delete the phrase “in which conventional therapeutic intervention and opiate therapy is contraindicated or ineffective.”
  • Allowing patients to qualify if they are undergoing “addiction substitute therapy — opioid reduction.”
  • Adding the following conditions to the program: cancer while in remission therapy, neurodegenerative diseases, dyskinetic and spastic movement disorders, and terminal illness.
  • Eventually requiring minor patients to have recommendations from a pediatrician or other pediatric or adolescent health specialist. (This could be problematic due to the very small number of pediatricians who are recommending cannabis.)

The department will promulgate regulations with these changes on May 12, and they will then undergo legislative review.

These changes would have a major impact for Pennsylvania patients. Allowing cannabis in its flower form is crucial to affordability. And with the revised wording for severe pain, Pennsylvania will no longer steer pain patients to more dangerous medications, such as opiates.

The post Pennsylvania Health Dept. to Expand Medical Marijuana Program, Allow Flower Vaporization appeared first on MPP Blog.

from https://blog.mpp.org/medical-marijuana/pennsylvania-health-dept-to-expand-medical-marijuana-program-allow-flower-vaporization/

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Battle Over Home Cultivation in New Hampshire Intensifies

The New Hampshire Senate Health and Human Services Committee is expected to vote on HB 1476 next Tuesday, April 24.

The bill, which has already passed the House in a voice vote, would allow home cultivation of up to two mature cannabis plants and 12 seedlings by registered patients and caregivers. Many patients are unable to afford the products that are available at dispensaries, which are not covered by health insurance. Others have to drive long distances in order to reach a dispensary. For some patients, home cultivation is simply the best, most affordable option.

If you are a New Hampshire resident, please call or email your state senator’s office today and urge them to support allowing limited home cultivation.

 

The post Battle Over Home Cultivation in New Hampshire Intensifies appeared first on MPP Blog.

from https://blog.mpp.org/medical-marijuana/battle-over-home-cultivation-in-new-hampshire-intensifies/

Battle Over Home Cultivation in New Hampshire Intensifies was initially published to www.nickadamsinamerica.com



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Key House Committee Advances Medical Marijuana Bill in South Carolina

The House version of the South Carolina Compassionate Care Act, H 3521, emerged from committee today in a landslide 14-3 vote.

Unfortunately, a key deadline has passed, and it’s too late for the medical cannabis bill to become law this year. However, it’s important to remind lawmakers that patients and those who care for them are counting on their support.

There is much to be done before the bill becomes law, but today’s vote marks a big step forward for patients. Both the House and the Senate versions made it through their committees, and the bills were sent to the full bodies in both chambers.

Thank you to bill sponsors, Sen. Tom Davis and Rep. Peter McCoy, and the many supporters who have been active behind the scenes and at the hearings, including those who attended an educational symposium for lawmakers yesterday evening.

If you are a South Carolina resident, please contact your lawmakers and ask them to support the Compassionate Care Act in the next legislative session.

The post Key House Committee Advances Medical Marijuana Bill in South Carolina appeared first on MPP Blog.

from https://blog.mpp.org/medical-marijuana/key-house-committee-advances-medical-marijuana-bill-in-south-carolina/

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Why Does Weed Make You Hungry?

Why does weed make you hungry

Have you ever mixed Cheetos and Sour Straws? Have you ever covered spicy pickles with whipped cream for an afternoon treat? Have you ever emptied the contents of your refrigerator into the kitchen sink and eaten it with a large spoon?

If you can answer yes to any of these questions, you’ve experienced (maybe “enjoyed” is a better word) the munchies. Having the munchies is an integral part of the marijuana experience, and every cannasseur has their own hilarious story to tell (peanut butter/marshmallow fluff/caramel corn sandwich, anyone?).

But why does weed make you hungry? What’s going on in your body that makes any and every combination of food sound like the best thing ever? The experts at Honest Marijuana are here to peel back the foil, remove the plastic, and pop the top, if you will, to reveal the chemistry and biology that causes you to become ravenous after toking a doobie.

Before we get to that, it’s essential that you understand the natural feeling of hunger (without the influence of weed). That’s what we’ll focus on in the next section.

Why Do You Get Hungry?

The simple answer is that you feel hungry because your stomach is empty. But that’s much too basic an explanation for our readers, so let’s break it down. Stand back—we’re going to do some science!

Think of your stomach like the fuel tank on your car. You don’t want to run out of gas because that would be a major pain and seriously cut into your social life. So as the needle on your dashboard moves closer and closer to E, you become more and more motivated to stop and fill up your tank.

People eating

A similar thing happens in your stomach. Your body doesn’t want to run out of energy (calories) because that would be a major pain (e.g., eventual death). So as your body’s energy stores decrease, your stomach and gastrointestinal tract begin to produce the hormone ghrelin.

Eventually, your ghrelin levels get high enough that they trigger the hypothalamus in your brain. When that happens, your hypothalamus releases other hormones that make you feel hungry. When you feel hungry, you’re extra motivated to stuff some calories down your gullet.

When your tank is full, so to speak, your stomach and digestive tract trigger the release of another hormone, leptin. Like ghrelin, leptin sets off on a road trip through your bloodstream and eventually arrives in your brain.

The first thing it does when it gets there is to give your hypothalamus a big old hug. That PDA (public display of affection, not personal data assistant) makes your hypothalamus release other hormones that make you feel full. When you feel full, you’re less motivated to stuff more calories down your gullet.

After you stop eating, the entire process starts over until you’re hungry again and ready to inhale a foot-long hoagie with a side of onion rings. Make sense? Good, because we’re going to add another wrinkle to this story that will help tie everything together later on: all of this occurs because your body produces its own cannabinoids.

The Endocannabinoid System

We’ll give you a minute to let that sink in, but, yes, it’s true—your body produces cannabinoids all by itself. These cannabinoids are known technically as endocannabinoids because they’re made inside your body.

In fact, there’s an entire system—the endocannabinoid system—devoted exclusively to using the cannabinoids your body produces. Your endocannabinoid system helps control emotions, memory, pain sensitivity, and—wait for it—appetite.

Let’s revisit the explanation about why you get hungry but take it just a bit deeper. After the ghrelin or leptin triggers your hypothalamus, it releases endocannabinoids that activate certain receptors in your brain (cannabinoid receptor type 1, or CB1 for short). These receptors then send messages throughout your body that cause a specific reaction (e.g., fullness, hunger, pain relief, euphoria, mellowness, etc.).

Before we go any further, let’s address the elephant in the room: your body doesn’t make enough endocannabinoids to get you high (we know that’s where your mind immediately went; ours did too).

Your body produces enough endocannabinoids to influence your mood, but it doesn’t make enough to send you on a groovy trip like your favorite strain of Cherry OG. For that, you need to look elsewhere. Bring on the ganja!

Cannabis Contains Cannabinoids

Up-close image of cannabis bud

Unless you’ve been living in a compound in Guyana (don’t drink the Kool-Aid!) for the past 20 years, you’re probably familiar with the fact that cannabis contains cannabinoids. With the legalization of recreational and medicinal marijuana in numerous states across the country, cannabinoids have been in the news a lot lately.

And that’s a good thing. But for the sake of full-disclosure, let’s take a moment to discuss these cannabinoids so we understand what they have to do with our original question (“Why does weed make you hungry?” for those of you who are already starting to forget).

The cannabinoids found in your beloved buds are known as phytocannabinoids because they’re produced by the cannabis plant itself (phyto- means “of a plant”). Scientists have isolated 113 phytocannabinoids so far. The best known of those are:

THC is the king of all cannabinoids thanks to its exclusive ability to send you on a seriously righteous head-trip. CBD is the queen thanks to its ability to treat a wide variety of medical problems, like anxiety, ADHD, back pain, and others.

In the next two sections, we’ll focus on CBD and THC exclusively because they have the most to do with why weed makes you hungry

Cannabinoids Interact With Your Brain

Cannabinoids interacting with brain and making you hungry

When you smoke a joint or blunt, toke a bong, dab some wax, or in any other way consume cannabis, you introduce phytocannabinoids (hereafter referred to as just “cannabinoids” for simplicity’s sake) into your bloodstream. Eventually, the cannabinoids find their way to your brain.

These cannabinoids are similar enough to the ones produced by your body (endocannabinoids) that they can dock with the CB1 receptor (and others) to produce all kinds of wonderful effects.

The reason for that is because you’ve basically flooded your system with cannabinoids. The high level of cannabinoids turns on every available neuron in the endocannabinoid system, which results in an epic high (in the case of THC) or the decrease in pain and anxiety (in the case of CBD).

With that information, we’re finally ready to explain why weed makes you hungry. Before we do that, let’s do a quick review, just to make sure we’re all on the same page.

A Quick Review

Here are the key facts you need to know:

  1. You get hungry (naturally) after your digestive system releases ghrelin. The ghrelin signals your hypothalamus to release endocannabinoids. These endocannabinoids, in turn, activate the feelings of hunger in your body. We might illustrate it like this: Ghrelin → Hypothalamus → Endocannabinoids → Hungry
  2. Cannabis contains cannabinoids (of the phyto- variety) that are similar in structure to the endocannabinoids in your body.
  3. When you consume cannabis in any form, you introduce A LOT of cannabinoids into your brain (Woohoo!).
  4. These cannabinoids mimic the endocannabinoids that are already there and turn on every neuron they can find.

So, with that in mind, let’s do what we came here to do.

Why Does Weed Make You Hungry?

Waiter carrying food

One of the first things all those extra cannabinoids do when they hit your brain is to activate your sense of smell. This does two things:

  1. It makes you more susceptible to the smell of food.
  2. It makes food taste better (because a big part of the taste sensation is smell).

So not only are you able to smell food from farther off; you’re also motivated to eat because you know the food will taste good. But it doesn’t stop there.

The cannabinoids in your brain also increase the palatability of sucrose. That’s a lot of fancy mumbo jumbo, so allow us to simplify it a bit: sugar good! Essentially, you begin to crave sugar and sugary snacks.

Keep in mind that sugar is basically a carbohydrate. So to satisfy your newfound craving, you’ll pretty much do anything for carbs. That’s why bags of junk food tend to look like Ambrosia when you’re high.

Finally, the cannabinoids in your Yoda OG, for example, mimic the endocannabinoids your body regularly uses to signal hunger. These invader cannabinoids (a.k.a. exogenous cannabinoids) interact with the hypothalamus, causing it to produce more ghrelin (the stuff that signals that you’re low on fuel).

That then creates a feedback loop that basically tricks your body into thinking you’re hungry even if you just ate (more ghrelin means your body must be low on fuel).

When you put it all together—the heightened sense of smell, the increased palatability of sucrose (sugar good!), and the amplified production of ghrelin—it’s easy to see why the munchies are such a big part of going on a date with Mary Jane.

For more information on all things cannabis and to check out our 100-percent all-natural marijuana products, visit HonestMarijuana.com today.

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