Our friends at Firedoglake are petitioning the FDA to reschedule marijuana from a drug with “no medical benefit” to a drug that has acceptable medical uses. This tactic would eliminate the need for medipot states to come up with creative ways for doctors to give the go ahead to their patients who could benefit from medicinal marijuana. Currently, doctors can’t actually prescribe marijuana (because the FDA says it has no benefit); instead, they can only “recommend” certain patients use the drug. As it stands now, each medipot state has its own rules governing the sale of marijuana to needy patients.

Firedoglake and its subsidiary, JustSayNow, want to get state governors and legislators to pressure the FDA to reschedule marijuana. In order to get your governor to put pressure on the Feds, you (yes, YOU, too) need to put pressure on your governor and representatives. The first basic step to take is to add your name to the following petition:

http://action.firedoglake.com/page/s/reschedule-mmj

Although we all know the obvious benefits that would occur in the realms of healthcare and economics (state tax revenues increase, drug enforcement costs decline), this is going to be a tough fight.

Because marijuana is a naturally occurring drug that patients can grow themselves, the FDA, which is heavily influenced by the giants of the pharmaceutical industry, will not be easy to convince. When they do agree to budge on this issue, it will probably be to approve a compound derived from marijuana like THC that a drug company wants to market as relieving nausea in chemotherapy patients. We can’t be satisfied with that outcome because such a drug would likely cost much more and work no better than medical marijuana does currently. Therefore, they would have to give full approval to the entire whole foods version of cannabis on humanitarian grounds.

I rest my case.

 

High Times has “changed” its name to High Times Medical Marijuana…talk about going from stoner to professional!

 

 

Wonder what’s it like to visit  Medical Marijuana Dispensary?  Well remember you have to have a card and ID to get it.  You can check out this interesting youtube channel of weedmaps (http://www.youtube.com/user/MMJDispensaryTours)

Tri City Holistic Dispensary Tour

Pacific Island Care Dispensary Tour

So-Cal Co-Op of Tarzana

Organic Amsterdam Mart Dispensary Tour

 

It’s no shocker that Mexican drug cartels are operating within the U.S., but parents probably have no idea that their children are being targeted to aid the cartels in evading law enforcement. The cartels are paying children to do minor tasks for a small reward of maybe $50 – not the kind of first employer that parents may have envisioned. Here are the deets:

http://news.yahoo.com/mexican-drug-cartels-recruiting-texas-children-173402030.html

 

 

Happy 420 every body.

http://www.taxandregulate.org/measurez.htm

and your zen moment of the day is…..



Spongebong weed pants by 04tayjor

 

This is a prescription form for medicinal use of liquor during the prohibition of alcohol. Medical marijuana is in a similar situation today, it is an illegal substance, but considered medicine by the Federal government. It is a controlled substance and taxed where it has been legalized for medicinal use. This is an obvious loophole in the law, but there needs to be some kind of recognition by the Federal government of how wide spread and common the use of this substance is. Alcohol has very little real medicinal use, as opposed to marijuana. There has been more recognition by the federal government of the medicinal use, but its policies do not follow through.

 

The following article is not currently still a company that is publicly sold.  But I found this on on  http://moneycentral.msn.com/detail/stock_quote?symbol=CANA this one is called

General Cannabis Inc (CANA)

Quote CANA

If you thought that the legalized marijuana for medicinal purposes was a controversial, imagine how controversial it would be if a company was public in the sector of legalized marijuana.  Forget the “if” in the equation.  This week, a small and formerly unknown company called Club Vivanet announced that it is the first public company to enter the legalized, medical marijuana business.  The company even changed its name to Medical Marijuana, Inc.  While it does not trade on the NYSE nor on the NASDAQ, the stock does trade over-the-counter under the ticker “CVIV” and is listed as Medical Marijuana, Inc. (OTC: CVIV) on the pink sheets.

Quote CVIV

This morning the company filed a patent application for an invention that the company says “potentially satisfies various governmental and the medical marijuana dispensaries’ needs for tax collection in the medical marijuana industry.”  This is to identify the dispensary’s tax ID number and tax rates for state and local taxes.

Medical Marijuana, Inc. is currently undergoing a 1-10 forward split and a ticker symbol change to reflect its new name in the stock market.   The company is spinning off two subsidiaries on a share-for-share basis (pre 10 for 1 forward split) of the shares of Club Vivanet, Inc. (a Florida corporation) and MyNewPedia Corp (a Colorado Corporation).

The company’s description says that it is positioned to take advantage of opportunities as they appear in the emerging legal medical marijuana industry through an enhanced payment gateway introducing verifiable levels of enhanced security. It also states that a trend is in place that clearly indicates medical marijuana is quickly becoming a legal enterprise in need of various solutions in numerous areas.

Bruce Perlowin is serving as the company’s new Chairman and CEO.  He has been referred to as the “King of Pot” in various articles and was recently interviewed on CNBC’s most popular feature called “Marijuana, Inc.”  Here is a link to that video interview.

Whether or not this one takes off is something we won’t speculate on.  If you ever thought that cannabis, pot, weed, or hemp were not going to be applied to a public company, it looks like that has changed.  The Mustang Ranch, a brothel in Nevada, had tried to come public before.  A brothel in Australia did manage to go public at one time.  It seems that even for a legalized medical marijuana company coming public, stranger things have happened.

JON C. OGG
April 3, 2009

Read more: Legalized Medical Marijuana Company Now Public Stock, Really (CVIV) – 24/7 Wall St. http://247wallst.com/2009/04/03/legalized-medical-marijuana-company-now-public-really-cviv/#ixzz19uBgogFD

 

 
medipot-states


From: http://medicalmarijuana.procon.org/view.resource.php?resourceID=000881

15 Legal Medical Marijuana States and DC
Laws, Fees, and Possession Limits 2010

I. Fifteen states and DC have enacted laws that legalize medical marijuana:

State Year Passed How Passed
(Yes Vote)
Fee Possession Limit Accepts other states’ registry ID cards?
1998
Ballot Measure 8 (58%)
$25/$20
1 oz usable; 6 plants (3 mature, 3 immature)
unknown1
2010 Proposition 203 (50.13%) unknown2 2.5 oz usable; 0-12 plants3 Yes4
1996
Proposition 215 (56%)
$66/$33
8 oz usable; 18 plants (6 mature, 12 immature)5
No
2000
Ballot Amendment 20 (54%)
$90
2 oz usable; 6 plants (3 mature, 3 immature)
No
5. DC
2010 Amendment Act B18-622 (13-0 vote) * 2 oz dried; limits on other forms to be determined unknown
2000
Senate Bill 862 (32-18 House; 13-12 Senate)
$25
3 oz usable; 7 plants (3 mature, 4 immature)
No
1999
Ballot Question 2 (61%) $100/$75
2.5 oz usable; 6 plants
Yes6
8. Michigan 2008 Proposal 1 (63%) $100/$25 2.5 oz usable; 12 plants Yes
2004
Initiative 148 (62%)
$25/$10
1 oz usable; 6 plants
Yes
10. Nevada
2000
Ballot Question 9 (65%)
$150 +
1 oz usable; 7 plants (3 mature, 4 immature)
No
2010
Senate Bill 119 (48-14 House; 25-13 Senate)
2 oz usable
unknown
12. New Mexico 2007 Senate Bill 523 (36-31 House; 32-3 Senate) $0
6 oz usable; 16 plants (4 mature, 12 immature)
No
13. Oregon
1998
Ballot Measure 67 (55%)
$100/$20
24 oz usable; 24 plants (6 mature, 18 immature)
No
2006
Senate Bill 0710 (52-10 House; 33-1 Senate)
$75/$10
2.5 oz usable; 12 plants
Yes
2004
Senate Bill 76 (22-7) HB 645 (82-59)
$50
2 oz usable; 9 plants (2 mature, 7 immature)
No
1998
Initiative 692 (59%)
24 oz usable; 15 plants
No


If you are in one of the lucky states to have passed legislation on medical marijuana, here is what you should do.

  1. Go see a doctor, get a patient card…This will protect you legally.
  2. This status of patient will allow you to legally grow weed.  You can get to know other patients, and act as their caregiver to up the quantity of plants you are allowed to grow.
  3. Develop a relationship with a dispensary, hang out there, buy a gram.  Bring a sample of your own stuff, and see if you can sell to a dispensary.
  4. Then you are legally making cold hard cash from the WEED business!
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