Tag Archives: medical-marijuana

Some #WeedSluts Roundup for #Weed Certification of the Day

I may be a drunk, and I don’t smoke weed, but I do know that the government shouldn’t be in control of whether you want to smoke weed or not, and I do think that the logic of a plant being banned is absurd, and clearly because it can’t be regulated or taxed because you can grow it in your damn backyard….where as with booze you need a facility and it is easy to control… I do believe that weed is from the earth and that there are health benefits to it and that everyone who needs to have access to their medicide should. That is why I partnered up with NuggMD to give you New Yorkers specifically more info on how you can use their service to get your cannabis card. I also posted pictures of slutty girls with weed to make this more up my alley… Find a New York Weed Doctor Online, Get a Certification Instantly Accessing medical marijuana in any state should be easy. Thanks to NuggMD, New Yorkers can finally get their hands on a medical marijuana certification at a fraction of the cost and time it would normally take. The telemedicine company has helped over 50,000 Californians become approved for medical marijuana, and they recently announced the expansion of their service to provide New York medical marijuana certifications. You can now consult with a doctor online and become approved for New York’s medical marijuana program through a 100% legal, online cannabis certification service. What Exactly Is NuggMD? NuggMD is a California-based service that serves as a hub for current and soon-to-be medical marijuana patients to get in touch with licensed doctors. The web-based platform works through a normal browser, like Google Chrome or Firefox, and allows you to skip the usual drag of leaving the house to visit a physical location for your evaluation and certification. NuggMD serves as a platform for licensed doctors to issue medical marijuana certifications exclusively online, without having to go through the complications of on-site exams. The consultation is absolutely free If the doctor does approve you for cannabis use, the fee for a first-time New York certification is $199 and renewals are $99. The certificate acquired through NuggMD is legally recognized by the official New York State Department of Health (DOH) Medical Marijuana Certification Program for one year. After approval, you aren’t completely cut off from the doctor either. You can revisit him or her for a second 420 evaluation NuggMD creates a platform that legally allows doctors to bypass on-site regulations and get straight to providing their cannabis card services over the web. NuggMD can provide you Empire State citizens with the same exceptional services that’ve helped connect over 50,000 California patients with licensed physicians for the purpose of acquiring a prop 215 card. In California, they even help you access marijuana delivery from local dispensaries, and the company has said briefly that they plan to do the same in New York, but no firm date for that is set. Here are those pics…#weedsluts How about some weed videos: One More The post Some #WeedSluts Roundup for #Weed Certification of the Day appeared first on DrunkenStepfather .

Originally posted here:
Some #WeedSluts Roundup for #Weed Certification of the Day

Medical Marijuana Card Registrations Available To GA Patients

View post:

Medical Marijuana Card Registrations Available To GA Patients The Georgia Department of Public Health has revealed Tuesday morning the state’s online registry for medical marijuana cards.…

Medical Marijuana Card Registrations Available To GA Patients

Medical Marijuana Card Registrations Available To GA Patients

See the original post:

Medical Marijuana Card Registrations Available To GA Patients The Georgia Department of Public Health has revealed Tuesday morning the state’s online registry for medical marijuana cards.…

Medical Marijuana Card Registrations Available To GA Patients

Doctor Oz show montel williams and doc oz fight about medical marijuana

what do you think http://www.youtube.com/v/bFgnx2ls8YM?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Link: Doctor Oz show montel williams and doc oz fight about medical marijuana

http://www.youtube.com/v/bFgnx2ls8YM?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

Read the original:
Doctor Oz show montel williams and doc oz fight about medical marijuana

Ease the pain, Mary Jane

Stick to the pipe, medical marijuana users: that’s the message from Canadian researchers who found that smoking even relatively low doses of cannabis can help reduce chronic pain, ease sleep and reduce anxiety. The findings were published Monday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal. http://www.latimes.com/health/boostershots/la-heb-marijuana-20100830,0,7791968.s… added by: JackHerer

Is The Washington Legislature Really ‘Too Busy’ To Protect Medical Marijuana Patients?

Artwork: Jimmy Wheeler The late Jimmy Wheeler, a medical marijuana patient in Washington, created this artwork. Now a proposed patient protection bill will be named in his honor. ​By Steve Elliott at Toke of the Town As most medical marijuana patients in the state already know, the current medical marijuana law in Washington doesn’t protect patients from search, arrest or prosecution. The recent Washington Supreme Court ruling in State v. Fry further highlighted how little protection — as in almost none! — the current law gives “legal” patients. Medical marijuana activists Ken Martin and Steve Sarich of patient advocacy group CannaCare contacted every Senator and Representative in Washington at the beginning of the current 2010 legislative session, attempting to find a sponsor for their new bill that would finally offer legal patients protection from arrest and prosecution. “We could not find a single sponsor for this bill,” Sarich told Toke of the Town . “Those I actually spoke with told me they were ‘too busy’ this session.” “This made us curious about what, exactly, these legislators were so busy working on (besides new taxes on just about everything),” Sarich said. “What we found amazed us.” “Here are just a few of the bills that our legislators believed were more important than protecting sick and dying patients in Washington,” Sarich said. XB 6255 Concerning mute swans. SB 5192 Allowing dogs in bars. SB 6207 Allowing local governments to create golf cart zones. SB 6284 Recognizing Leif Erickson day. HB 1024 Designating Aplets and Cotlets as the state candy. XB 6128 Concerning taxation of little cigars. HB 1137 Protecting landowners’ investments in Christmas trees. SB 5011 Prohibiting the sale or distribution of certain novelty lighters. HB 1638 Concerning colon hydrotherapy. HB 1993 Allowing fishing license holder to use two poles in selected state waters. “Perhaps these bills are truly important to some people,” Sarich allowed. “That said, I think it’s insulting to tell patients that making Aplets and Cotlets the official state candy is more important than keeping patients from being searched, arrested and prosecuted.” Medical Marijuana Lobby Day: Wednesday, February 24 “It’s time to send the message to our elected officials, and Medical Marijuana Lobby Day is the opportunity to do that!” Sarich said. “Show up and have your voice be heard.” “We are gathering at 1 p.m. on the north stairs of the Legislative Building,” Sarich said. “We’ll have white booths there with literature, posters and special medical marijuana patient scarves with buttons that say “STOP ARRESTING PATIENTS.” According to Sarich, the goal is to educate legislators, “let them know we are voters and activists,” to to gather legislative sponsors for the “Patient Protection Act” for the 2011 legislative session. “The bill will be named the ‘Jimmy Wheeler Memorial Patient Protection Act’ in honor of my friend and longtime activist who was providing medical marijuana to patients before there there was legal medical marijuana,” Sarich said. “Jimmy died recently without ever seeing patients free from arrest and prosecution in his lifetime,” Sarich said. “Please ask yourself how many more of us have to die before they realize we are not criminals.” “How many patients need to be persecuted before our elected officials provide us with the same protections offered to the rest of the disabled and terminally ill patients in this state?” Sarich asked. “I’m tired of being a second class citizen!” “We will do our best to arrange transportation for you to this historic event,” Sarich said. For more information, contact Ken Martin at (509) 235-5485 or Steve Sarich at (206) 407-3017.

Read more here:
Is The Washington Legislature Really ‘Too Busy’ To Protect Medical Marijuana Patients?

Victory In Washington: Jury Finds Medical Marijuana Patient Not Guilty

By Steve Elliott in Toke of the Town Once again, a jury has seen through the lies and distortions and found a medical marijuana patient not guilty. ​Washington state jurors Thursday afternoon found Cammie McKenzie, who grows marijuana to treat her chronic back pain, not guilty of all charges in a case where prosecutors tried to portray her as a drug dealer. The prosecution’s unsuccessful case was notably nasty, even for a medical marijuana arrest in a state where some law enforcement officials have been slow to adjust to the legalization of medicinal cannabis passed by voters in 1998. “This case is not about medicine. This case is about money,” Snohomish County Deputy Prosecutor Matthew Baldock said in his opening statements Tuesday. “The defendant was masquerading as a marijuana patient and was in reality a drug dealer, no question.” One can only imagine the incensed reaction of Snohomish County’s good voters when they realize their scarce tax dollars are being wasted on foolishness like this. Prosecutors and narcotics detectives claimed McKenzie, 24, was using her medical marijuana authorization as a front for an illegal pot farm at her home in Bothell, Washington, reports Diana Hefley of the Everett Herald Net . McKenzie said that prosecutors based their case on the word of her former roommate, a “known drug dealer” who was promised he wouldn’t be prosecuted if he testified against McKenzie. Jurors ultimately didn’t buy the prosecution’s claims and declared McKenzie not guilty of manufacturing marijuana, which is a felony. Baldock called two witnesses, both detectives with the Bellevue-based Eastside Narcotics Task Force in his case against McKenzie. Defense attorney Natalie Tarantino asked the judge to throw out the charge against McKenzie due to a lack of evidence, including the state’s failure to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that her client is, in fact, the person charged with the crime. Superior Court Judge George Appel denied that motion, instead allowing Baldock to bring a detective back on the stand to testify to the defendant’s identity. Jurors were shown a copy of a driver’s license picturing Cameron Scott Wieldraayer. That was the defendant’s name before she changed her gender and her name. The detective identified the person on the driver’s license as McKenzie. McKenzie herself took the stand Wednesday, testifying at length about marijuana growing methods. She currently runs an Internet business selling growing equipment. The defendant explained how medical marijuana alleviates her symptoms. Marijuana “stops the brain from acknowledging the pain,” allowing her to function, she said. McKenzie told jurors she consumes up to a quarter-ounce a day. She adamantly denied that she was selling marijuana or using her grow operation to make a profit.

More:
Victory In Washington: Jury Finds Medical Marijuana Patient Not Guilty

Washington Legislature Drops The Ball (Again) On Marijuana Decrim

Never mind what the people of Washington want. The Legislature thinks pot is just too scary. ​By Steve Elliott at Toke of the Town ​Cowardly career politicians, out of touch with their own constituents and terrified of being branded “soft on drugs,” have once again dropped the ball on decriminalizing marijuana. Senate Bill 5615, which would have freed up Washington’s criminal justice resources by making adult possession of small amounts of marijuana an infraction carrying a fine, rather than a misdemeanor carrying mandatory jail time, failed to get a vote in the Washington State Senate Tuesday. “This means efforts to address adult marijuana use through a civil, public health approach, rather than a failed criminalization approach, have died for the 2010 legislative session,” said Alison Holcomb, drug policy director, ACLU of Washington . “The ACLU of Washington is disappointed by the Legislature’s failure to pass this bill despite strong and consistent public support for it,” Holcomb said. “An overwhelming majority of Washington voters support the modest change proposed by SB 5615 — a change already made in 13 other states, 11 of them as long ago as the 1970s, with no adverse impact,” Holcomb said. According to Holcomb, studies in those states demonstrate no increase in marijuana use among adults or youth, results echoed in jurisdictions like Seattle, where adult marijuana possession has been the lowest law enforcement priority since 2003. “In 2008, police and prosecutors filed 12,428 cases involving misdemeanor marijuana possession by adults in Washington courts — using funds that would be far better spent addressing other priorities, including violent crime,” Holcomb pointed out. “The Washington State Office of Financial Management estimated that SB 5615 and its companion HB 1177 would have made approximately $15-16 million in scarce public safety dollars available to combat true public safety threats, and would have directed significant resources to sorely needed, state-funded treatment and protection services,” Holcomb said. “We applaud Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, prime sponsor of SB 5615, for her tireless efforts to advocate for sensible reforms grounded in reason, science, and fiscal responsibility,” Holcomb said. “And we hope our Legislature will get the electorate’s message in 2011 and pass marijuana decriminalization legislation.” “It’s time to stop wasting money on arresting and jailing adults for marijuana use and invest instead in proven prevention and treatment programs,” Holcomb said.

Read the original post:
Washington Legislature Drops The Ball (Again) On Marijuana Decrim

Congress Ends Ban On Medical Marijuana In D.C.

By Steve Elliott in Toke of the Town theskunk.org Congress respecting the will of the people? What’s next, democracy? ​ Eleven years later, it’s about time: The U.S. Senate today passed historic legislation to end the decade long ban on implementation of the medical marijuana law Washington, D.C., voters passed with 69 percent of the vote in 1998. “This marks the first time in history that Congress has changed a marijuana law for the better,” said Aaron Houston, director of government relations for the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), based in D.C. The “Barr Amendment,” a rider attached to appropriations for the District of Columbia, has forbidden D.C. from extending the legal protection of Initiative 59, the “Legalization of Marijuana for Medical Treatment Initiative of 1998,” to qualified medical marijuana patients. The amendment has long been derided as an unconscionable intrusion by the federal government into the District’s affairs, according to MPP. Read the rest at the new Village Voice Media cannabis blog, Toke of the Town : Congress Ends Ban On Medical Marijuana In D.C.

View original post here:
Congress Ends Ban On Medical Marijuana In D.C.

The Volcano Vaporizer Getting many Positive Reviews

A vaporizer is a machine that uses heat to release certain medicinal drugs and other therapeutic compounds from plants and herbs. It is also commonly used in aromatherapy or phyto-inhalation

Originally posted here:
The Volcano Vaporizer Getting many Positive Reviews