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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

IMPORTANCE OF HEALTHY SOIL AND UTILIZATION OF VERMICOMPOST (WORM CASTINGS)


Detroit Nutrient Company


By Tommy

If you are one of many growers that use soil I have some very inexpensive advice that will help you grow healthy plants with improved yields.
It may sound very simple, but the first step in growing in soil is growing your soil.  Healthy soil grows healthy plants.  Using organic methods or chemical nutrient lines, you still couldn’t grow a garden in the desert.
Simply put, your plant receives all of the “food” it needs to grow through its roots.  In order to get this “food” you need a solid healthy root structure and nothing helps to promote root growth like good healthy soil.  Start at the bottom.  The soil you place in that pot is the cornerstone in your plant’s foundation.
An excellent component in any “soil recipe” is worm castings or vermicompost to be specific.  When people hear worm casting or vermicompost most folks have no idea what it is.  I will tell you – WORM POOP!

FREE THE WEED 29 A Column by John Sinclair



I love writing for this publication, edited and assembled in my home town of Flint. I’m sure I’ve mentioned here that I was born in Flint, where my dad worked for Buick Motors on Hamilton Avenue, and grew up in Davison, where my mother taught 8th-grade English at the public school.

Like the Paul Butterfield song says, I was born in 1941 and I grew up during the 40s and 50s—a whole different world than the one into which we have been thrust here in the 21st century.

The two greatest things about this period for me were that [1] television didn’t really establish itself until around 1952 as a fixture in all American homes and controller of public consciousness, and [2] when it did, radio was transformed from the primary source of popular entertainment of all kinds into a specialized transmitter of music both popular and obscure that could be heard nowhere else in its many recorded forms.

Inside Thoughts


Curtis Kile

By: Adam Brook 

A few news tid bits:

Professional pot farmers run an estimated 2,000 to 4,000 operations that grow marijuana legally. According to an industry publication, the legal pot farming industry raked in total sales of more than.Sl.2 billion in 2012.

A national chain of marijuana stores is "in the works," said Brad Tuttle at Time.com. Former Microsoft manager Jamen Shivley says he plans to import marijuana from Mexico and create "the first national retail brand focused on selling medical-use and adult-use (recreational) cannabis." Shivley said he is working on acquiring several professional cannabis dispensaries, and has named his business Diego Pellicer after his great-grandfather, a hemp magnate. Instead of young marijuana smokers, Shivley hopes to draw in an older crowd. "We're focused on Baby Boomers - basically wealthy Baby Boomers,'' he told a TV station in Seattle, with former Mexican President Vicente Fox at his side. "It's a $100 billion industry in search of a brand. Never in the history of capitalism - forget America, in the world - has such a giant vacuum existed."

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COLORADO MARIJUANA REPORT MAGAZINE

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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Michigan marijuana supporters to tout economic clout by spending $2 bills

(story via Freep.com)

Steven Greene watched through the clear partition of a credit union in Southfield, his smile growing to a grin as a teller counted out $200 in $2 bills.

“That’s a lot of twos — thank you, brother!” said Greene, 45, of South Lyon.

Teller Antonio Pritchard smiled back Tuesday as Greene walked out of the Family Service Center Credit Union, pocketing bills that he hopes will send a message that Michigan’s green economy of marijuana puts green into cash registers.

Starting today, leaders of medical marijuana and cannabis legalization groups in Michigan plan a quirky three-week campaign to demonstrate their economic clout. They want supporters to spend at least one $2 bill for every cash purchase.

“That translates into people saying, ‘Hey, we should get a piece of that, and we should start taxing it, too,’ ” said Greene, a state-registered user of medical marijuana and a caregiver licensed by the state to grow medical marijuana for others.

When $2 bills start popping up, “People will also realize, if you arrest us, you’re taking that same money out of circulation, and you’re spending tax dollars to put us in jail,” said Greene, who hosts the weekly Political Twist Up talk show on medical marijuana and other issues, carried on AM radio stations in Flint and Grand Rapids and on www.politicaltwistup.com.

It’s not the first time $2 bills are being used to highlight a particular group’s spending power. The odd denomination that never caught on for regular use has been harnessed elsewhere to draw attention to groups of spenders — from an embattled steel plant in Utah that in 1989 paid employees in $2 bills to show their value to the local economy; to gun rights bloggers who asked fellow gun owners last year to spend $2 bills at Starbucks branches to protest the coffee chain’s refusal to allow the open carrying of handguns.

In Michigan, with 130,000 registered users of medical marijuana and 30,000 caregivers licensed to grow the drug, cannabis advocates say they hope their economic argument gets traction among those willing to put jobs and the state economy ahead of moral arguments about drug use.

According to a study released this year by several researchers, including one from the prestigious RAND Corp. think tank in Santa Monica, Calif., Americans who use marijuana — both legally and illegally — spend about $30 billion per year just on the drug itself.

“Michigan has slightly over 3% of the U.S. population, so that should mean that Michigan’s marijuana users currently spend about $945 million a year on marijuana,” said Karen O’Keefe, director of state policies for the Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit Marijuana Policy Project.

Harvard researcher Jeffrey Miron found that in 2008 dollars, Michigan could see about $96 million in tax revenue from taxing and regulating marijuana, according to O’Keefe, a native of Grosse Pointe Farms.

About 13% of Michiganders reported using marijuana in the past year, according to annual federal surveys of nationwide drug use.

“We want this $2 drive to spark conversations in chambers of commerce and during business lunches of shop owners,” said Rick Thompson, editor of the Flint-based Compassion Chronicles website. “They’re going to start to realize they shouldn’t just dismiss this big segment of Michigan’s economy.”

Thompson also hopes to reach marijuana opponents who have not been swayed by other arguments for widening access to medical cannabis and to outright legalization of the drug.

“Some people continue to cling to the war on drugs and the morality argument,” he said. “What they don’t realize is that there’s a tremendous investment that the country is making in continuing that war, and it’s completely unproductive. It costs every taxpayer hundreds of dollars a year. We need to turn that money into jobs, into taxes and into productive activity.”

Carol Mastroianni, executive director of the Birmingham Bloomfield Community Coalition, said she was disappointed to hear of the $2 bill drive. Hers is one of dozens of similar nonprofit community groups throughout southeast Michigan that promote drug-free lifestyles for youth and say legitimizing medical marijuana entices young people into thinking marijuana is harmless.

“To me, the whole medical marijuana thing is not supposed to be about economic clout. It’s supposed to be about health and quality of life,” Mastroianni said.

The campaign launches two days after federal, state and local police executed 25 search warrants Monday as part of a seven-month investigation into a marijuana trafficking ring operating in Wayne, Oakland, Washtenaw and Jackson counties. Michigan State Police said Tuesday that officers seized $221,509, 736 marijuana plants, 31 vehicles, 10 recreation vehicles, eight firearms and large quantities of processed marijuana.

Those arrested during Monday’s raids were released pending further investigation and possible charges, according to Michigan State Police.

Medical marijuana user Christeen Landino of Eastpointe said she is delighted to find the portrait of one of her heroes, President Thomas Jefferson, on the $2 bill. Jefferson is from an era when the drug was an accepted part of farming, said Landino, 63, who has been promoting the $2 drive on Facebook.

Jefferson is credited with saying, “Hemp is of first necessity to the wealth & protection of the country.” Hemp is a plant widely used for thousands of years to make rope, paper, cloth and livestock feed, but it was banned in the U.S. in the 1930s because one variety of the hemp plant produces marijuana.

Jefferson also is thought to have smoked some of his crop, used then to make rope, on the veranda of Monticello, according to websites on early American history. “There’s a lot of quotes that I really like from him, so it’s fitting,” Landino said.

Contact Bill Laitner: blaitner@freepress.com

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Inside Thoughts By Adam Brook



Well folks I have to admit I was quite surprised by the latest decision from the Michigan Supreme Court. In People v Rodney L. Koon the Supreme Court in a unanimous opinion reversed the Court of Appeals. The opinion said that the Court of Appeals erroneously held that the Michigan Vehicle Code “ operating a motor vehicle with any amount of a schedule 1 controlled substance in the driver’s body, even if the driver used marijuana under the Michigan Medical Marihuana Act (MMMA).” Now I know that ALL the judges on the Court of Appeals have more education than I do. But what I don’t understand is how you can become a judge and not have the ability to read and comprehend? That befuddles me. They have had to have read the MMMA, or you would hope they had? It clearly says, as the Supreme Court pointed out, “All other acts and parts of acts inconsistent with this act do not apply to the medical use of marihuana as provided for by this act.” Now truth be told the MMMA also says that the “act shall not permit any person to “operate, navigate, or be in actual physical control of any motor vehicle, aircraft, or motorboat while under the influence of marihuana.” I will admit we have no test to measure “under the influence” when it comes to marijuana. That is not our fault. The law is clear and it’s a shame that judges on the Court of Appeals got it so wrong. I suspect they just did not read the MMMA, just as many of those who claimed that it was a poorly written had never actually read it. Another telling fact, besides the unanimous opinion, is that the Supreme Court agreed with the arguments made by Koon’s appellate attorneys and decided the case without even hearing oral arguments or allowing the Grand Traverse County Prosecutor to file a reply brief, a big FUCK YOU if you ask me. 

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

FREE THE WEED 28



A Column by John Sinclair


If all goes well, by the time you read this column I’ll have completed my 5-month residency at the New Orleans Institute for the Imagination and be back in Amsterdam to start the summer. I’ve had a great time in the crescent City, spending many quality hours and days with my daughter Celia and my hosts Frenchy the Painter (uptown by Oak Street) and Jimmy Cass (downtown in the 9th Ward), playing some gigs with Tom Worrell and with Carlo Ditta, sitting in with Henry Butler and Glen David Andrews, and smoking consistently excellent illegal weed provided by one of my oldest and dearest pals.