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Thursday, February 2, 2023

Cannabis Will Not be the Next Big Tobacco

By Tim Beck, Safer Michigan Coalition Chairman

Many years ago, way before herb ever became legal in the U.S., my peers and I closeted together, sitting in circles, sometimes toking on stubby roaches and exercising our prophetic skills. A burning question back then was what would happen if marijuana were legalized. Would it be controlled by the government? Big Pharma? Big alcohol? Cigarette makers? The Coca-Cola Company? Could we just grow it like tomatoes someday?

The answer to this question, so far, is none of the above; especially when it comes to the Marlboro Man.

On December 19, 2022, news broke on the Dow Jones Newswire that multibillion dollar tobacco giant Altria, owner of Marlboro and other big cigarette brands, was terminating its funding of Canadian cannabis company Cronos Group and taking a tax loss of $483 million. Altria, which owns 45% of Cronos, abandoned its warrant to purchase any future shares of Cronos, at $19 per share. Cronos share price the day Altria made its announcement was $3.81. The stock had not traded above $6 in the last 12 months.

“Given the Cronos trading levels and the March 2023 expiry of the warrant, Altria has elected to abandon the warrant,” said an Altria spokesman. Altria shares rose 2% on the announcement.

With the exception of the marijuana media outlet Cannabis.net, which published a piece titled “Altria Walks From Cronos,” there was very little coverage of this major business news in the mainstream media or even the cannabis industry business press.

“While this is not the final bell in the ‘cannabis vs. big tobacco war’, it is certainly disheartening to see your opponent walk away with a smirk and say, ‘Yeah you just aren’t that interesting as a business model, we will cut our losses . . . and just walk away, thank you very much’,” Cannabis.net eulogized.

The publication went on to say, “With hundreds of analysts crunching numbers and looking at how to salvage this cannabis investment for the future, they [Altria] came to the conclusion [that to] ‘stop the bleeding’ . . . it is better to lose $500 million now than wait for upside in the future.”

Altria continues to own 45% of Cronos stock, for which it paid a collective total of $1.8 billion in 2018. At current share prices of $2.45, the company has seen an erosion of over $1 billion in market capitation, which it will likely never recover. When Altria first made its move to capture the world cannabis market in December 2018, the news was frightening to some and an exciting, even breathtaking, development for others.

For Cronos shareholders, it was a good day. The stock price soared over 30%. Altria and Cronos executives were effusive about what seemed like a brilliant business move.

“Investing in Cronos Group as our exclusive partner in the emerging global cannabis category represents an exciting new growth opportunity for Altria,” said its CEO Howard Willard.

Cronos’s top brass was even more excited. “Altria is the ideal partner for Cronos Group, providing the resources and expertise we need to meaningfully accelerate our strategic growth,” proclaimed Cronos chairman Mike Gorenstein. He went on to say, “The proceeds from Altria’s investment will enable us to more quickly expand our global infrastructure and distribution footprint, while also increasing investments in R&D and brands that resonate with our consumers. . . . It helps make sure we’re getting in front of the
regulators.”

Gorenstein’s reference to “the regulators” reflected the belief that Altria’s legendary ability to protect its tobacco business from aggressive government agencies like the Food and Drug Administration, the Federal Trade Commission and hostile members of Congress could also get marijuana legalized in the U.S.—and give the Cronos Group a competitive advantage. 

On the other hand, Altria’s move was met with fear and horror from both smalltime cannabis entrepreneurs and cannabis prohibitionists alike.

Arch prohibitionist Kevin Sabet, founder of Project Smart Approaches to Marijuana (SAM), immediately went on the attack. He asserted that cannabis culture was becoming a sinister dupe of the cigarette industry, which was guilty of killing millions of people with its products over the years. SAM’s new slogan in its antimarijuana crusade became “preventing another big tobacco.”

National Review Online columnist J.J. McCullough wrote a long column making comparisons between cannabis and big tobacco. “We know the tobacco industry funded studies and swayed results to fit their narrative that cigarettes won’t kill you,” he said.

“As was the case with smoking tobacco, smoking marijuana is said to prove you’re sociable, hip, and modern,” McCollough continued. “As with tobacco, marijuana is portrayed not only as largely harmless, but as objectively good for you, with a credible function as self-medication for all sorts of ailments. . . .

And as with the tobacco industry, a cash-flush marijuana industry is eager to use its wealth to slant scientific study and political debate, lest its flattering claims begin to sire organized suspicion.”

Well, dear readers, some dark fantasies do not come true.

Kevin Sabet and his acolytes are now minus a talking point.

Those of us in our community who have been alarmed by the possibility of some kind of cannabis monopoly, rigged to benefit those who already have way too much money and control, can rest easier.

Altria could have continued for years burning cash to prop up Cronos Group. Let’s give them credit for their commonsense decision to exit the market. The political paralysis in Washington, D.C., over cannabis regulation will go on for years. The illegal cannabis market in the U.S. will be thriving for a very long time. These realities are the equivalent of a death sentence for big companies who dream of monopolies.

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World News: Czech Republic Proposes Legalization of Adult-Use Cannabis

Czech Republic is drafting the laws to introduce regulated cannabis use. These laws could potentially be reached by the end of March of this year. The decision has followed after Germany announced that they intend to legalize cannabis for adult-use.

Since 2013, the use of cannabis for medical use, has been legal, as well as decriminalizing the possession of 15g of flower, 5g of resin, and growing up to 5 plants since 2009. The recreational users could potentially receive a $500 fine though. 

The draft for adult-use will include rules for taxation, legal cultivation, sales, exports, as well as cannabis clubs. This would create laws around who is permitted to produce and sell cannabis. In order to reduce the black market of cannabis, they plan to use the three pillars - reform, regulation, and taxation, while hoping to regulate the market with Germany, in order to have greater export opportunities.

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World News: Tilray Lays Off Nearly 25% of Employees in a Portugal facility


Tilray, with their headquarters out of Canada, is a Pharmaceutical company, with operations in 7 countries. They are a global leader when it comes to many aspects of cannabis, including research, cultivation, processing, and distribution.

In their medical facility in Cantanhede, Portugal location, they employ roughly 200 people. In order to keep up with the demand changes in our current economy, Tilray will be laying off 49 jobs within the next few months. With the progression of legalization in both medical and adult-use cannabis, Tilray needed to make some changes to “rightsize” their medical facility by decreasing by nearly 25%. These changes will affect many areas of the company, from production, supply chain, to even IT positions.

CEO Irwin Simon has stated that they are considering producing fruits and vegetables, while waiting to see if the United States will legalize cannabis adult-use federally. This is to keep utilizing their facilities, rather than letting them sit idle.

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World News: Egyptian Actress Arrested After Returning Home


Egyptian actress Menna Shalaby was flying back home from New York when she was met with an unexpected surprise at the airport. After arriving in Cairo International Airport, Shalaby was detained for suspicious objects in her carry-on. Shalaby’s belongings were put through the X-ray machine, which showed “the presence of organic densities,” and were set aside to be examined for narcotics.

Shalaby was detained for allegedly carrying cannabis, which is illegal in Egypt and punishable by law. She was quick to deny possessing any narcotics in her belongings, stating, “After a while, I found many people and officers looking at a green box and telling me that it contained marijuana. I told them that this is not true and it was normal makeup.” She was also accused of having cocaine in her possession, but stated, “I told him that I do not consume them in the first place but then they told me to wait a while.”

While coming from a foreign country with remnants of narcotic substances in one’s bloodstream is not illegal, bringing narcotics with the intention of use is still illegal in Egypt. It was said that she had the intent to use, and not to share the narcotics with anyone when she arrived home.


 

The next day, Shalaby was released on bail in the amount of EGP50,000 (US1,838.20). The possessions were seized and sent to a chemical lab to confirm that they were cannabis and hash. She still denied having any narcotics in her possession, and her lawyer quickly attempted to make a plea during the trial hearing, stating that the actress had no connection to the seized substances.

On January 5, 2023, Shalaby was to appear in court for these allegations, but never showed. With five testimonies submitted to the prosecution by the airport personnel who inspected the belongings, Shalaby was given a one-year suspended prison sentence by the Cairo Criminal Court. She was also fined EGP10,000 (US367.60), and sentenced to three years’ probation.

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World News: Canada Increases Beverage Limit Nearly 5 Times the Original Amount


As many parts of the world try to determine the correct dosage for the different types of cannabis consumption products, in December, Canada faced the same issue. Officials were trying to decide the new equivalent for canned beverages.

When the Cannabis Act began, Canadians were not able to carry more than 30 grams of dried cannabis or its “equivalent” at any given time. This caused some confusion when trying to create these conversions. Canned beverages could not be purchased if they contained more than 10 mg of THC, but a person could purchase 50,000 mg of THC in the form of 100 bottles of cannabis oil spray.

After years in the making, on December 2, 2022, Canadian officials were able to amend the Cannabis Act to increase the purchase amount of cannabis-infused beverages that a person can buy in a single transaction. When officials initially offered canned beverages, they allotted for 1o mg of THC per canned beverage purchase, which was equivalent to 5 standard-sized 12-ounce beverage cans containing only 2 or 2.5 mg of THC per can. Now, people are allowed to purchase up to 578.2 fluid ounces, still at 2 or 2.5 mg of THC per can, equivalent to 48 standard-sized 12-ounce beverage cans. 

“Canadians can finally purchase a six-pack, 24, or up to 48 of their favourite cannabis beverages to enjoy with family and friends, which represents a win for consumer choice as this innovative category takes a leap forward,” wrote David Klein, chief executive officer of Canopy Growth Corp., a licensed cannabis producer, in a statement.

With the increased amount available, Canadian officials are still enforcing their strict regulations to ensure that either accidental consumption or overconsumption does not occur. All the packaging must be childproof and each can will have a strict THC limit per can. Enforcing these restrictions to ensure that people are going to drink the beverages responsibly will help lawmakers and activists in the future when trying to expand their limits on other cannabis-infused products."

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State of the States: Californians Hit on Death Row Cannabis

Known for decades for producing hip-hop hits enamored by stoners, Death Row now hopes
stoners will be hitting on their new cannabis line.

On December 24, 2022, Snoop Dogg announced that
the famed record label would be launching its own
cannabis brand in collaboration with Cookies locations, just in time to toke in 2023, along with esteemed curator and cultivator AK, best known for winning strains like Studio 54 and Shirazi by exotic breeder DEO.


Its premier product will be flower, followed by diamondinfused pre-rolls, which Death Row Cannabis plans to launch shortly thereafter.

While this may be a new game for Death Row since Snoop is now at the helm, this is not Snoop Dogg’s
first time dipping his paws into the cannabis industry. In 2015, Snoop Dogg launched his first cannabis line in Colorado called Leafs by Snoop.

When launching Leafs by Snoop, he reportedly told the local newspaper, The Denver Post, “Since I’ve been at the forefront of this movement for over 20 years now, I’m a master at marijuana.”

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State of the States: Kansas Cancer Patient Cited for Vaping


Over the holidays, a story that involved a terminal cancer patient from Kansas getting raided in his hospital room by three cops went viral in many advocate circles. The knee-jerk reaction by most, as expected, was anger and hate toward the police who could conduct such a travesty against a dying man.

As the story, which began as an opinion piece written prior to knowing the entirety of the situation, circled sources as news, the police department involved began getting threats. Eventually, Hays Police Department chief Don Scheibler felt the need to go on record to clarify what had happened.

On December 19, 2022, his police department was notified by the hospital that a patient was found using an illicit device. Kansas, being one of the three holdout states along with Nebraska and Idaho, still has protocol in place for calls, especially those made by hospitals. 

The chief told local news sources that the two, not three, responding officers followed protocol. They first went to hospital staff who had already confiscated the vape in question. From there, they went directly to Mr. Bretz to get his version of the incident, not knowing he was terminal. Mr. Bretz was undoubtedly upset about what was happening to him, but the cops, in turn, listened to his plea. They issued the citation as directed by policy but drove directly to the office and asked the supervisor and prosecutor to promptly drop the ticket due to the patient’s terminal diagnosis.


Just like that, it was all dropped, even before the first opinion article was released to go viral, reminding those in the media that there must be vetting and research done prior to spreading certain opinions and
stories as legitimate news.

While this magazine does not condone any of the actions, whether by the police or the hospital, this true story also acts as a reminder that while most of the country has seen legalization or decriminalization, there are still the three holdout states that would rather profit from criminalizing cannabis patients and users over legalizing and taxation.

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State of the States: New York Takes a Bite out of the Green Apple


New York City, known for being a world hub and trendsetter, is finally catching up for a change.  While many states and local municipalities within them have already legalized cannabis sales not only on a medical level but also at a recreational level, New York City was set to open the first New York recreational dispensary just in time for New Year’s celebrations.

While 36 licenses have been approved, as of December 30, 2022, in the SoHo neighborhood of Manhattan, Housing Works Cannabis Co. was the first to open its doors promptly at 4:20 p.m. to a line that spanned for blocks, as eager New Yorkers waited to get their hands on the state’s first legally sold recreational cannabis products.

Having been open its first day from only 4:20-7:00 p.m., the dispensary with a staff of just under 15 served over 500 customers before closing its doors. The dispensary, according to multiple local news accounts, was still forced to turn away at least 150 disappointed customers. They were told by management to please come back the next morning.

So what can New Yorkers and its visitors expect to pay for their legal weed? Just like when purchasing a Big Mac in New York, tourists can expect to pay slightly higher costs than they might be used to. According to their website, Housing Works Cannabis Co. products run as follows:


 

Flower will cost the patron $40-$60 per eighth or $130 for a half ounce available in only a couple of strains. 

Pre-rolls will run $18-$40 for 1-gram to 2.5-gram singles and $50.00 for a pack of seven minis.

Edibles are sitting at a retail value of $30-$35 and vape pens are anywhere from $45-$95.

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Michigan News: Gage Cannabis Is Being Sued for Text Spamming

Gage Cannabis Co. is being sued by a Michigan woman who said the company violated federal telemarketing laws when it sent unsolicited texts about its products. Gage is based out of Massachusetts under AEY Holdings and operates dispensaries and cultivation in multiple states.
In the case filed in the Western District of Michigan, plaintiff Nicole Sapphire said she received several texts in October 2022 regarding products and Halloween-themed bundle deals. She alleges that the company ignored her “repeated opt-out demands and continued to send plaintiff further text messages.”

This is not the first time AEY Holdings has been sued over this issue in Michigan by Andrew J. Shamis, of the Miami-based law firm Shamis & Gentile PA. The firm also took on plaintiff Dane Theisen in a July 2020 class action complaint. Attorney Shamis has developed a legal strategy for suing companies over use of unsolicited telemarketing, which is focused on marijuana companies in Michigan.

Shamis & Gentile has sued at least three Michigan marijuana companies in federal court, including MichiCann Medical, which operates as 420 Dank in Detroit; AEY Capital, which does business as Gage Cannabis; and Light’N Up Provisioning and Microbuddery in Flint.


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Michigan News: Michigan Cannabis Product Holds Via Metrc

 In a recent bulletin, the Cannabis Regulatory Agency (CRA) announced their excitement about a new function available to Metrc. Metrc is the seed to sale tracking system that monitors legal commercial cannabis in Michigan and many other states. Dispensaries, growers and processors will now receive an automatic email notification from Metrc when a package has been placed on “Administrative Hold.” 

In the past the CRA has put products on hold for various reasons. There was the joint-licking incident. There was the Viridis labs recall due to bad lab testing practices. There were multiple contaminated vape carts that hit the market before being recalled and destroyed. In those incidents, and others, consumers continued to get these products that were put on hold, because there was a lag in response time. 

Since the email will be sent to Metrc admins, it is recommended that—in order to ensure notifications are reaching the correct individuals—licensees periodically check that the correct contact information is listed for the Metrc admins. This new function is a result of the CRA trying to figure out how to make cannabis “safe” for consumers. Prior to the shift from a caregiver model to a state licensed system no person died or was seriously injured from ingesting marijuana. Cannabis dust in a commercial factory allegedly killed one exposed worker last year.

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Michigan News - Pot Shop Delivery Drivers Are Getting Held Up

 A series of robberies of marijuana delivery drivers has spurred the Cannabis Regulatory Agency (CRA) to issue a bulletin warning about the criminal activity. The pattern of the crimes was identified in 13 reported incidents in December 2022 and January 2023. Dispensary drivers out for deliveries arrived with product in hand, but instead of getting paid by a happy customer, they were robbed, sometimes by armed individuals. 

Carjacking and assaults were also reported. All the reported thefts happened in southeastern Michigan, specifically Ypsilanti, Ann Arbor, Lansing, Westland, Detroit, Ferndale, Hamtramck, Hazel Park, and Utica.

The bulletin reminded licensed dispensaries of the obligation to report any theft, loss of product, or criminal activity within twenty-four hours. Reporting suspicious activity to the agency and local authorities was also advised. Dispensaries faced with this new threat are exploring ways to increase safety for their delivery drivers. 

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Michigan News: Medical Marijuana Patient Wins Back Driver’s License

Chad Morrow lost his driver’s license in 2007 as a result of driving under the influence. Nine years later, after a hearing with the state of Michigan, he was given a restricted license requiring the use of a BAIID interlock breath alcohol device while driving. After being convicted in a highly publicized conviction for delivery of marijuana as a result of operating the Gaylord dispensary, Cloud 45, the state revoked the restricted license. He was told that the state used his medical marijuana and caregiver cards as a factor and they wanted to review all of the cards that he had ever possessed, as well as the police report from the raid on the medical marijuana dispensary. Most attorneys would advise their clients they had a much better chance of getting their license back if they willingly gave up their state-issued medical marijuana and caregiver cards. Attorney David Rudoi didn’t, stating that the denial was bullshit and he would appeal it all the way up to the Supreme Court if he needed to.

Not backing down, Morrow refused to give up his cards. He convinced superstar cannabis rights attorney Michael Komorn to help advise on the appeal, which was brought to the court by Rudoi. Morrow won the appeal and attempts are underway to get the 2-1 decision published, which would set a precedent to protect medical marijuana patients and caregivers in many ways. On Friday, January 13, 2023, the circuit court judge assigned to the remand issued Morrow his restricted license. When asked why he took this long hardship of a process, Morrow explained, “The appeals court ruled in my favor 2 to 1, that the review officer decision wasn’t supported by competent material . . . the [medical marijuana] cards were going to be used against me and likely [would be] a hurdle I wouldn’t overcome without a higher court ruling. It seems we need case law to give these cards the true power they should yield.”

Attorney David Rudoi and Chad Morrow celebrating victory after circuit court

 
  

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Maintenance-Free Gardening: Jerusalem Artichokes

By Happy Camper


Jerusalem artichokes are a great plant to include in a maintenance-free garden. Just 100 square feet of them provides enough carbs for a family of four—two adults and two kids—for a year.
 
Called sunroot by the Indigenous peoples of this continent, Jerusalem artichokes are easy to grow and take no more work than planting and harvesting. Six hours of full sunlight will ensure the best yield, but they will also grow in partial shade. They are packed with nutrition, vitamins and minerals.
 
This root vegetable contains inulin, making it a great alternative to potatoes for people with diabetes. It is important to introduce Jerusalem artichokes into your diet slowly because of their amazing digestion qualities. If you eat too many before your body is used to them, they can cause flatulence. Cooking them for four hours in a soup can help people eating them for the first time. Harvesting them in spring also helps with this.

You can cook them like a potato or eat them fresh. My favorite recipe is Sunroot Patties (made similarly to potato pancakes, or latkes) served with sour cream, chives and fried apples. You can also cut fresh slices of them or shred them into a salad. They improve gut health, give you energy, support muscles and nerves, and stop spikes in blood sugar levels.

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Wednesday, February 1, 2023

Grow Tip: Spring Seed Popping by Ben Horner

 February through March is a good time to sprout seeds of your favorite strains. Outdoor growers who are not using feminized seeds need the time prior to planting to sex their plants by sprouting some potential mother plants. Indoor growers also find that spring-cleaning means cleaning out old genetics that have been stressed from a long winter.

The transition from seed to seedling 

 Sprouting seeds is simple, and most of us learn how to do so in kindergarten. Simply place your seeds in a plastic bag with a damp paper towel, and in a few days the seeds will crack and a small root will extend out from them. Plant those seeds in your preferred grow medium, or dirt, and water. Be sure to keep sprouts in at least 18 hours of light per day, which means you cannot just leave your sprouts on the windowsill. A small fluorescent light on a timer is enough to grow seedlings, especially if they are getting some natural sunlight. While in an 18-hour-on light cycle, a plant will stay in the vegetative stage and continue to grow without producing flowers (female buds or male pollen sacs).

When your seedling grows big enough (3-5 weeks, depending on the strain), you can take a cutting (aka a clone) of each of your young plants to determine the sex of your plant. Marijuana plants will show their sex after approximately two weeks of growth in a 12-hour-on/12-hour-off light cycle. This light cycle will transition the plants into sexual maturity. Make sure to carefully mark each plant and clone with a unique label so that you know which plant each cutting came from.

 Female cannabis plants show small white hairs (early pistils called calyxes) in between the nodes, whereas males have balls (small unbloomed flowers called staminate primordia) that grow in between the nodes. These male plant balls are pollen-bearing sacs that when mature will pollinate your buds and cause them to be loaded with seeds. Most growers destroy all male plants, keeping the females only. That is the technique that produces what we call sinsemilla, which simply means no seeds.

Using preflowers for sexing is for advanced growers.

“Preflowers” are little versions of adult flowers that appear on your marijuana plants relatively early in the vegetative stage. When I first started growing weed, I learned (incorrectly) that there is no way to determine a cannabis plant’s sex until the flowering stage. But I’ve since learned that preflowers can reveal the plant’s sex while it’s still in the vegetative stage! Cannabis plants grow preflowers as young as 3-4 weeks from germination for male plants, and 4-6 weeks from germination for female plants. Advanced growers who really know what they are looking for can use this technique. Remember, it only takes one male to pollinate your whole crop, which is not good unless you are looking to produce seeds. Advanced growers frown on clones due to issues with contamination, disease, and a weaker taproot. I find these issues arise more often after second-generation clones and from lack of sanitation in one’s grow room.

I let them veg till May to grow monster outdoor plants.

 

If you start this process in the beginning of February, you can produce healthy mothers of clones that can be ready to plant in your outdoor grow in late April, and you will know that those plants will be potent and seedless. Personally, I let them veg inside till May to grow monster outdoor plants and avoid late frost. Mother plants can produce many clones for both indoor and outdoor grows. One good rule of thumb: It’s OK to take clones from your indoor plants but not your outdoor ones. Nobody wants to bring bugs and contaminants into a freshly cleaned grow room. Be sure to disinfect your grow space routinely. I like to start out the spring fresh, airing everything out, a fully cleaned room with some new mothers started from seeds every year.

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FREE THE WEED 135

A Column by John Sinclair

Hi, everybody. Happy Valentine’s Day, Happy Mardi Gras, happy month of February from front to back. Today is my daughter Celia’s date of birth as well, so I’ll wish her a happy birthday here.

I’ve been taken with the current state of the marijuana scene in Amsterdam, where I spent most of 15 years until I took ill after being struck in the back by a bicycle while strolling down the street on my way to the Spui, knocked flat on my face and taken to the hospital.

As a U.S. citizen on SSI and a penurious tourist in Holland, I was forced to pay for my medical treatments and my prescriptions with cash money, of which I had only enough to keep eating and smoking my weed.

So I evacuated back to Detroit, where I’m taken care of by Dr. Mohammad Kang and his excellent staff in the Rosa Parks Geriatric Center at the Detroit Medical Center, just blocks from my apartment.

I started to fly over to Amsterdam three years ago, but I turned back. I suffered a heart attack the next day and had quintuple bypass surgery a few days later, so it’s been five years since I’ve had the pleasure of strolling alongside the canals and down the ancient streets of Amsterdam.

A recent story by Senay Boztas in DutchNews.nl titled “Blowback: Nuisance Tourists Unwelcome in Amsterdam” reveals that “Amsterdam has proposed a major package of measures to combat nuisance tourism as the city ‘welcomes’ its 18 millionth overnight guest this year, triggering a pledge to limit tourism numbers to 20 million.”

City government authorities have opined that “smoking cannabis on the street should be forbidden in tourist hot spots,” Boztas writes, and they also want to ban “cannabis sales in the red light district at the weekends, from 4pm on Thursday to Sunday.”

Further, they are looking to “earlier closing times for restaurants, bars and brothels in the red light district, and a public ‘stay away’ campaign to be launched in 2023 to counter low-grade tourism. The city is also considering raising the tourist tax at peak times. . . . Mayor Femke Halsema has already said she wants to ban tourists from coffee shops.”


Man, talk about making a person feel unwelcome! Although Amsterdam has been a beacon of common sense and relative enlightenment on the marijuana issue for a long time now, the current batch of squares who are running things there are a different breed of human being altogether, much like the assholes in the white 1% who run our own country.

Now that America is beginning to wise up on the issue, thanks to the efforts of our marijuana activists and their fellow citizens who have voted in medical and recreational legalization by means of petition drives, it’s saddening indeed to hear this shit about Amsterdam today.

The years I spent in Amsterdam were delightfully free of government interference or police harassment of any kind, much unlike my experience in the United Snakes. I often say that I spent 15 years there without ever even speaking to a police officer, and I lived out every day in one or more coffee shops, of which there were hundreds at the turn of the century but now fewer than 250.

Weed was everywhere, available at less than 10 euros a gram, and you could buy your grass or hash in the civilized setting of a coffee shop, order a beverage, take a seat at the bar or at a table, and roll up your joints of choice. Then you could purchase five grams of your favorite smoke to carry with you, and if you needed more than that, you’d just move over to another coffee shop and get five more.

The other crazy thing about their amped-up war on marijuana smokers is that they are pushing away the money and prestige they gain by being a drug tourist destination and are trying to deny the coffee shops a profitable existence and drive them out of business.

This whole thing is like a scenario from a pipe smoker’s nightmare. Amsterdam tries to shut down the smokers’ paradise, while New York, Detroit and other American cities are opening up the door to legal consumption of weed.

As Shirin Ali has written in Slate, “New York legalized weed back in March 2021 and now, over a year later, finally, the state’s first licensed dispensary has opened in New York City.”

And here in Detroit, where the city council—led by a bunch of former police officers, clergy people and social workers—has held off licensing any recreational dispensaries for almost five years since legalization in 2018, they’ve finally allowed marijuana outlets to open in the city.

Before legalization there were a total of 283 dispensaries operating within the city limits, but the city council closed them all down and is just now allowing its citizens to buy a license—at ridiculously exorbitant rates—and do business.

I guess Amsterdam isn’t so different after all: Both there and here the squares are willing to throw away vast quantities of commercial income in order to preserve their antiquated cultural values. What the fuck?? FREE THE WEED!

—Detroit
January 17, 2023

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Is Your Doctor Cool With Cannabis?

The American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine (ASRA) consensus guidelines on the management of pain medicine for the perioperative patient on cannabis and cannabinoids have spurred conversations among the medical community and cannabis users. These are the first U.S.-based guidelines on perioperative (before, during and after surgery) management of cannabis. The new guidelines call for all patients to be screened for cannabis before surgery. Marijuana consumers reacted to the pain medicine update, reporting a variety of positive and negative interactions during prior discussions with their physicians. The following statements came from a discussion regarding the published guidelines:

“Late in 2021, I had surgery on my retina and had a very good conversation about my cannabis use with the anesthesiologist, who told me that with some of the anesthesia he uses, cannabis consumers often need more than nonusers. I was sure I’d be the exception to that—it doesn’t take much cannabis for me to get high, but I do consume every day. We talked for quite a while; he was actually engaged in hearing about the cannabis industry and asked some good questions. It was a very positive discussion. Sure enough, I needed twice the normal amount of anesthesia for that procedure. Last week, same eye with cataracts. The anesthesiologist comes in and I tell him that I use cannabis and might need more meds; it’s the same guy and he remembers our discussion in 2021. This procedure uses different anesthesia that metabolizes differently, and cannabis isn’t a factor. It’s something we all need to be forthright about for normalizing cannabis use and for our own good.”—R.K.

“Some of us (myself included) have gotten so jaded by the lies about cannabis promulgated by mainstream medicine and groups like the American Medical Association, we no longer take anything they say about cannabis seriously.”—T.B.

“Great progress has been made, but there are still some potential issues. Perhaps the most obvious issue is when an individual is being prescribed pain medications. Some offices have had ‘contracts’ the patient must agree to, and if the clinic learns that other medications or illicit substances are being used, the patient will be discharged. Over the years, I have heard the same thing many times—my doctor learned I smoke weed, and now he won’t see me/refill my scripts. Maybe that has changed? Kind of doubt it . . .”—D.G.

“I think everyone who has been in the cannabis field and had to deal with the medical profession knows, NEVER TELL YOUR DOCTOR. I mean I hope things change, but you will be treated completely differently as if you are a heroin addict. We know this as fact. Proven over and over and over again. ‘More pain relief needed after surgery’ . . . I almost fell on the floor laughing. SOP is to give less. Or maybe take four ibuprofen instead of three. You are a drug addict. That’s how cannabis users have been treated for, well, my entire life basically. Once that marijuana word hits your permanent records, you are screwed. Doctors refuse to treat you or prescribe medicine to you. They will advise how to address your health issues differently because you use marijuana. They will deny treatments because you use marijuana. That is the reality. That is what has happened for decades . . . Will it get better? Maybe a tiny bit. But in the real world, never tell your physician you use marijuana, or ask them to not put it on the record. It will follow you and negatively affect your recommendations and care forever.”—C.C.

“A personal experience and why I choose to keep my cannabis use private when it comes to doctors. I was in an appointment and went there after trimming; yes, I smelled like cannabis. When my doctor walked in, she immediately said you smell like marijuana. I told her I was just trimming some earlier. She then said I can’t treat you, I’m pregnant and THAT SMELL CAN AFFECT MY PREGNANCY AND THE HEALTH OF MY DEVELOPING CHILD. That was the day I swore to never discuss weed with a doctor again.”—C.M.

 Currently, it is illegal for doctors (even in states that have legalized medicinal marijuana) to prescribe marijuana because it is a schedule I drug, and prescribing it would constitute aiding and abetting the acquisition of marijuana, which could result in revocation of DEA licensure and even prison time. However, in states where medicinal marijuana is legal, doctors can write a recommendation for cannabis, after determining and certifying that the patient suffers from one of the conditions that the state’s law deems to warrant medicinal marijuana—i.e., generally debilitating conditions such as cancer, glaucoma, multiple sclerosis, and HIV/AIDS. This recommendation “loophole” was upheld by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Conant v. Walters, which decided that a physician’s discussing the potential benefits of medicinal marijuana and making such recommendations constitutes protected speech under the First Amendment.

 In states where medicinal marijuana is legal, a majority of physicians are reluctant to write recommendations, and an influx of “pot docs” becomes obvious. For some doctors who do not embrace medical marijuana, the contempt for pot smokers is undeniable. It is important to gauge your primary doctor’s opinion of cannabis use. Typically, doctors who practice in states that have legalized cannabis for adult use eventually accept it and don’t reject patients and deny services, but as these testimonies demonstrate, some still suffer from reefer madness.

 Pregnant persons who use cannabis need to be particularly cautious with these new guidelines’ recent publishing. “Mandated reporting” has resulted in many children being removed by child protective services, and even charges against the mother for crimes such as child abuse and endangerment.

 


[*WARNING! This graphic is being used to educate doctors and is not endorsed by The Marijuana Report]

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