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  • (September 28, 2024, 09:49:53 PM)

Weediquette - The Weed / Cannabis / Marijuana thread

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Offline droidrage

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Weediquette - The Weed / Cannabis / Marijuana thread
« on: May 02, 2021, 06:41:21 PM »
So thanks to 2021 new state laws for recreational pot 5arah and I have started doing 100mg marijuana edibles from Bloom Dispensary - Tucson and they work well on an empty stomach after about a 1-2 hour wait for them to kick in.

GUMMIES



https://www.sirnewtons.com/sir-newtons-gummies


CHOCOLATE BARS



https://www.hazeandmain.com/products


Great show on VICE called Weediquette

https://www.vicetv.com/en_us/video/stoned-kids-weediquette/5699516fa4e767937f028321


The Vingance - Snoop Dogg Smoke Weed Everyday




Snoop Dogg - Smoke Weed Everyday (Remix) [Bass Boosted]

« Last Edit: April 30, 2024, 09:35:52 PM by Administrator »

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AsymmetricalXeno

Re: Weediquette
« Reply #1 on: May 06, 2021, 12:28:54 AM »
It's not legal here, but I have my means. Thankfully I have a website here that mails it to my door. It's pretty cool geting it in the post. I get massive instant anxiety relief from it, and helps motivation on bad days :)

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Re: Weediquette
« Reply #2 on: September 26, 2021, 08:25:37 AM »
AfroMan - Because I Got High (Uncensored) HD''


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Offline droidrage

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Re: Weediquette
« Reply #3 on: April 20, 2022, 09:14:44 PM »



Cheech and Chong - Marijuana




The Big Lebowski "Smoking Joint And Crash The Car




Harold & Kumar "Fuck A Bag Of Weed"




Scary Movie 2 - Marijuana Monster Tokes Shorty (2001) HD

« Last Edit: April 20, 2022, 09:39:01 PM by droidrage »

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Re: Weediquette
« Reply #4 on: April 30, 2024, 09:08:02 PM »
Attorney general moves to reclassify marijuana as lower-risk drug, officials say

https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2024/04/30/marijuana-restrictions-loosen/




Attorney General Merrick Garland on Tuesday will recommend loosening restrictions on marijuana in what would be a historic shift in federal drug policy, according to multiple people familiar with the matter.

The measure, if enacted, would not legalize marijuana at the federal level but could broaden access to the drug for medicinal use and boost cannabis industries in states where it is legal. The move may also prove to be a political win for President Biden, who is campaigning for reelection and has sought to ameliorate racial and criminal justice inequities wrought by the nation’s long war on drugs.

The Justice Department was scheduled to submit the formal recommendation to the White House on Tuesday. It follows the Drug Enforcement Administration’s approval of the Department of Health and Human Services recommendation that marijuana be reclassified.

The White House Office of Management and Budget must review the measure, according to the people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal administrative matters. The measure, if accepted, would not go into effect for months until the public has a chance to comment.

The DEA’s approval was first reported Tuesday by the Associated Press. The DEA, the Justice Department and the White House declined to comment.

For more than five decades, marijuana has been classified as a Schedule I controlled substance with a high potential for abuse and no accepted medical use. Under the DEA’s proposed change, marijuana would go to the less risky Schedule III — in the same tier as prescription drugs such as ketamine, anabolic steroids and testosterone.

The historic policy shift comes as marijuana is easier than ever to obtain and has become an industry worth billions of dollars in the United States. Thirty-eight states and D.C. have legalized medical marijuana programs, and 24 have approved recreational marijuana.

In October 2022, Biden directed health officials to expedite a review of whether marijuana should remain a Schedule I substance. In August, HHS notified DEA that it was recommending marijuana be reclassified. The agency relied on a Food and Drug Administration scientific analysis that found marijuana has an accepted medical use and evidence it can treat certain conditions, including nausea and vomiting. It also cited studies showing “moderate benefit” of smoking marijuana for pain.

Cannabis advocates Tuesday hailed the potential change as a milestone that will signal that criminal cases should assume a lower priority.

“This is going to help to normalize cannabis more than anything that’s ever occurred in the U.S. since they started the war on drugs,” said David Culver, senior vice president of public affairs at the U.S. Cannabis Council, an industry advocacy group. “This is the most significant federal cannabis reform in modern history, and I think sets us on a path for the ultimate goal of federal legalization.”

Other advocates asserted that the reclassification doesn’t go far enough. They want to see marijuana removed from the schedule system entirely and regulated like tobacco and alcohol.

Paul Armentano, deputy director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, an advocacy group, said treating marijuana as a prescription drug would not legitimize how cannabis is available through a vast network of dispensaries and delivery services in legal state markets.

“Those involved in the state legal marijuana industry and the tens of millions of Americans who patronize that industry are all acting in a manner that is inconsistent with federal law,” Armentano said. “Theoretically, if the federal government wished to do so, all of these players could be prosecuted for being in violation of the federal law.”

The rapid legalization of marijuana facilitated the rise of a booming industry of growers, processors, dispensaries and other cannabis companies. But the industry has struggled in recent years as it faced continued competition from the illicit market along with a glut of supply in some states driving down prices. States collected $3.77 billion in cannabis taxes in 2022, down from $3.86 billion in 2021 in the first-ever decline in revenue, according to a report from the Marijuana Policy Project.

Under IRS code 280E, businesses that sell Schedule I substances cannot deduct business expenses, resulting in a substantially higher tax rate for companies that grow and sell marijuana. But with marijuana reclassified, they will be eligible for the tax breaks.

Kaliko Castille, former board president of the Minority Cannabis Business Association, said many cannabis companies have been struggling to become profitable in part because of high taxes.

“This will potentially help small businesses who are struggling around the country get into the black,” Castille said. “My concern is although this will provide some relief for small businesses, it may actually lead to more consolidation and smoking out smaller players.”

The long-expected recommendation has not been embraced in all corners. Some former federal law enforcement officials and conservative members of Congress have said stripping marijuana’s Schedule I status would hinder attempts to prosecute drug traffickers and harm public health.

While marijuana has been shown to have medicinal benefits, some studies have also found that the drug has downsides, including addiction and negative effects on the developing brain.

“If the Biden Administration follows through with rescheduling, this decision will be anti-science and harmful to public health and safety,” Rep. Andy Harris (R-Md.), one of the most vocal cannabis critics in Congress, posted on X.

Former president Donald Trump, who’s expected to be the Republican nominee for president again, has campaigned in the past on allowing states to set their own policies for marijuana, saying he supports the legal use of marijuana for medical purposes. He has not weighed in on whether he supports a reclassification of marijuana under federal law.

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Re: Weediquette - The Weed / Cannabis / Marijuana thread
« Reply #5 on: October 16, 2024, 08:44:52 PM »
Opinion  Marijuana use is rising. The government needs to correct its mistake.

A new report details federal actions to protect the public from the harms of cannabis.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/10/16/marijuana-harms-national-academies-report/

The nation’s leading scientific academies recently issued an important report calling for urgent federal action to protect the public from the harms of rising cannabis use. Policymakers should heed these recommendations — many of which don’t even require legislation.

The recommendations come from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, which Congress chartered to advise government officials on pressing scientific matters. This isn’t the first time the National Academies has weighed in on cannabis: In 2017, it issued a thorough analysis documenting the short- and long-term consequences of cannabis use, ranging from lower IQ in youth to increased incidence of psychosis and suicidal ideation.

More recent research has shown additional risks, including higher rates of cancer and heart disease as well as cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome, which involves severe, continuous bouts of vomiting and stomach cramping.

Unfortunately, the message doesn’t seem to be getting through to the public. Despite hundreds of research articles documenting the consequences of cannabis use, daily or near-daily users now exceed regular alcohol drinkers. As the National Academies’ 2024 report explains, states have legalized recreational marijuana with minimal federal oversight, allowing manufacturers to downplay harms and exaggerate therapeutic uses.

Beau Kilmer, co-director of the Rand Drug Policy Research Center and a member of the committee that wrote the report, told me policymakers attributed their inaction to marijuana not being legalized at the federal level. “Federal decision-makers sat on the sidelines and watched industries grow,” he said.

What little guidance the federal government has issued has focused on sales and revenue, not mitigating the health impacts on users and communities. The new report details how to reorient cannabis policy through a public health lens.

Three key points stood out to me:

First, there are many things the federal government can do without passing new laws. For example, it could develop a research agenda to draw upon lessons learned from other harmful products, such as tobacco and alcohol.

Though all states have minimum age requirements for cannabis use, there are few restrictions on advertising. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention could develop best practices to limit youth access. It can also set up a public health surveillance system to track public health impacts. And as I’ve written before, the CDC can lead research into how law enforcement might gauge impairment and reduce cannabis-impaired driving.

Second, the CDC could lead public education campaigns that raise much-needed awareness among Americans about the proven harms of cannabis use. These can promote strategies for identifying risky behavior, treatments for people already suffering ill effects and targeted messaging for those especially vulnerable to harm.

The National Academies’ report highlighted a specific issue that deserves the public’s attention: Marijuana products have become markedly more potent in recent years. One National Institutes of Health study found that the average amount of THC, marijuana’s primary intoxicating ingredient, has increased more than tenfold in cannabis plants over the past 50 years.

Moreover, though smoking remains the most common way to consume cannabis, other products have gained popularity, including concentrates (“dabs” and “shatter”) that can contain THC concentrations as high as 90 percent. Higher doses lead to greater risk, and there is scant oversight of THC amounts in products such as vape pens and cannabis oils.

Finally, the government must reverse a law that unintentionally opened the door for dangerous, intoxicating products. The 2018 Agriculture Improvement Act, a.k.a. the Farm Bill, removed hemp — products with up to 0.3 percent THC — from the Controlled Substances Act. One of hemp’s derivatives is cannabidiol (CBD), which is not a psychoactive drug.

But CBD can be synthetically changed into THC as well as another form of the chemical, called delta-8 THC, which is mind-altering and might have similar risks as naturally occurring THC. These synthetic products are considered legal and not subject to limitations of cannabis sales. In recent years, delta-8 THC products — including gummies, vapes, infused beverages and smokable hemp sprayed with the substance — have proliferated.

Many users have confused these products with nonintoxicating hemp or CBD. Some have ended up hospitalized from accidental intoxication, including two children who ingested a parent’s delta-8 THC gummies. They experienced decreased blood pressure and slowed breathing and required intensive care.

The National Academies’ report is blunt: “Congress should refine the definition of ‘hemp’ to state clearly that no form of tetrahydrocannabinol [THC] or semisynthetic cannabinoid [CBD] derived from hemp is exempt from the Controlled Substances Act.” Meanwhile, health officials should educate potential users that these products also carry substantial risk.

The bottom line from this report is that the federal government must stop ceding its authority to control these drugs. It never should have allowed the patchwork of state-by-state legalization, which fostered America’s largely unregulated cannabis industry.

Protecting the public’s health must come first. Now is a better time than never.