420 Girls

Medical marijuana for kids is a touchy subject at the moment because of cannabis' history as a schedule 1 drug. Many people are still informing themselves on the topic but those that are experiencing the wonder first hand know that medical marijuana is a viable alternative to harsh treatments. The evidence speaks for itself and it will only be a matter of time until science echoes what we already know. These Medical Marijuana success stories are now being covered by mainstream media, and although many doctors don't agree with the treatment some have made a full 180 on the subject like Dr. Sanjay Gupta. - Karma Jello

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This is Hemp History Week, and hundreds of events are occurring across the country to promote hemp products for our belly and our body, and the economy. Premiering this week is the documentary Bringing It Home, showing the benefits of industrial hemp, a variety of cannabis that does not contain psychoactive chemicals. It's legal to eat hemp seeds (full of Omega-3 and Omega-6 essential fatty acids) in your salads, wear hemp woven into chic clothing, to rub it into your skin by using an organic body care product, and to use it in building materials. But U.S. farmers are no longer able to grow industrial hemp. The 1937 Marihuana Tax Act defined hemp as a narcotic drug, just like it's cousin marijuana. Technically, this law and the Controlled Substances Act of 1970 (CSA) do permit the growing of hemp, but place strict controls and taxes on the commodity. The DEA has been turning down all permit requests to set up commercial production.

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The heavy majority of the Irish think weed and potatoes has a much luckier ring to it than cabbage and potatoes, as it would stimulate an ever stifling economy with One Billion Euros of Tax Revenue. While a long shot to come to fruition any time soon, it's wonderful to see countries like Ireland start to press for much needed reform.

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In case you didn't know, according to Hemp History Week, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Henry Ford and many other notable Americans were actively engaged in, and openly advocated for, the commercial hemp industry, while Thomas Jefferson grew hemp in his Monticello resort. If all the buzz is not enough to convince you of the thousands of planet friendly uses of hemp, there are even plenty of resources and suggestions for taking action online to support hemp growing worldwide. - GlobalVoices

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From at least the 5th century B.C. until the late 19th century, 90 percent of all ships' sails were made from hemp. The other 10 percent were usually flax or minor fibers like ramie, sisal, jute, abaca, etc. The word canvas is the Dutch pronunciation (twice removed, from French and Latin) of the Greek word Kannabis. In addition to canvas sails, virtually all of the rigging, anchor ropes, cargo nets, fishing nets, flags, shrouds, and oakum (the main protection for ships against salt water, used as a sealant between the outer and inner hull of ships) were made from the stalk of the marijuana plant. Even the sailors' clothing, right down to the stitching in the seamen's rope soled and (sometimes) canvas shoes, were crafted from cannabis. An average cargo, clipper, whaler, or naval ship of the line, in the 16th, 17th, 18th, or 19th centuries carried 50 to 100 tons of cannabis hemp rigging, not to mention the sails, nets, etc., and needed it all replaced every year or two, due to salt rot. Additionally, the ships' charts, maps, logs, and Bibles were made from paper containing hemp fiber from the time of Columbus (15th century) until the early 1900s in the Western European/American World, and by the Chinese from the 1st century A.D. on. Hemp paper lasted 50 to 100 times longer than most preparations of papyrus, and was a hundred times easier and cheaper to make. - Jack Herer

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When the patriotic, real life, 1776 mothers of our present day blue blood Daughters of the American Revolution (the DAR of Boston and New England) organized spinning bees to clothe Washington's soldiers, the majority of the thread was spun from hemp fibers. Were it not for the historically forgotten (or censored) and currently disparaged marijuana plant, the Continental Army would have frozen to death at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. The common use of hemp in the economy of the early republic was important enough to occupy the time and thoughts of our first U.S. Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton. - Jack Herer

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The covered wagons went west (to Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, Oregon, and California) covered with sturdy hemp canvas tarpaulins, while ships sailed around the Horn to San Francisco on hemp sails and ropes. The original, heavy duty, famous Levi pants were made for the California '49ers out of hempen sailcloth and rivets. This way the pockets wouldn't rip when filled with gold panned from the sediment. Homespun cloth was almost always spun, by people all over the world, from fibers grown in the family hemp patch. In America, this tradition lasted from the Pilgrims (1620s) until hemp's prohibition in the 1930s. In the 1930s, Congress was told by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics that many Polish Americans still grew pot in their backyards to make their winter long johns and work clothes, and greeted the agents with shotguns for stealing their next year's clothes. The age and density of the hemp patch influences fiber quality. If a farmer wanted soft linen quality fibers he would plant his cannabis close together. As a rule of thumb, if you plant for medical or recreational use, you plant one seed per five square yards. When planted for seed, four to five feet apart. One-hundred-twenty to 180 seeds to the square yard are planted for rough cordage or coarse cloth. Finest linen or lace is grown up to 400 plants to the square yard and harvested between 80 to 100 days. - Jack Herer

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By the late 1820s, the new American hand cotton gins (invented by Eli Whitney in 1793) were largely replaced by European made industrial looms and cotton gins (gin is short for engine), because of Europe's primary equipment machinery technology (tool and die making) lead over America. Fifty percent of all chemicals used in American agriculture today are used in cotton growing. Hemp needs no chemicals and has few weed or insect enemies, except for the U. S. government and the DEA. For the first time, light cotton clothing could be produced at less cost than hand retting (rotting) and hand separating hemp fibers to be hand spun on spinning wheels and jennys. However, because of its strength, softness, warmth and long lasting qualities, hemp continued to be the second most used natural fiber until the 1930s. In case you're wondering, there is no THC or high in hemp fiber. That's right, you can't smoke your shirt! In fact, attempting to smoke hemp fabric, or any fabric, for that matter, could be fatal! - Jack Herer

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Even the most arduous stoners insisting cannabis isn't medicine are getting the benefits of the plant warding off stroke, heart, and lung disease unknowingly, just by smoking. If they are dealing with neurological disorders such as depression, anxiety, or anything under the ever widening autistic spectrum, they will be unwittingly helped by smoking. Those with chronic pain and stiffness have long known about medicating in the morning. For those that need a neurological lift there is nothing that compares to the ritual of cutting up bud and loading up the morning bowl. The plant lifts endorphins like a morning jog, lifts you up out of bed and helps you to have a good day. If bronchial issues from carbon keep you from enjoying smoking, a vaporizer will do the trick, giving relief for Asthma and COPD patients, replacing steroid inhalers. - tokesignals

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What is the difference between hemp and marijuana? The short answer is semantics. The longer answer? The difference is a largely misunderstood distinction that now has two correct answers, a legal one and a scientific one. Like all things proven by scientists, it is somehow up for public and political debate. Hemp refers to strains of Cannabis Sativa that have been bred specifically for fiber used for clothing and construction, oils and topical ointments, nutritional benefits and a wide and growing variety of other purposes that don't involve intoxication. Marijuana is a slang term used to describe strains of Cannabis Sativa specifically bred for the potent resinous glands (trichomes) that grow on the flowers and some leaves (buds). While there is some dispute over the origins of the term marijuana, it was introduced into popular use by Hearst era newspapers as a way to instill fear of pot smoking Mexicans. Wording aside, both hemp and marijuana are, in fact, the same thing. Although both "hemp" and "marijuana" as we know them are from the same genus, Cannabis, they are also part of the same species, Cannabis Sativa. The scientific difference between what we refer to as hemp and marijuana comes from the purpose the strain was bred for. - San Diego Free Press

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In one sense marijuana plants are like people, because they have separate sexes. There are male plants that produce pollen and female plants that produce eggs and seeds. Male plants contain the anther (pollen producing/containing organ) and the filament hair-like stalk the anther rests on. On the female plants you will find a stigma (a sticky bulb found in the middle of flowers that will catch the pollen), the style (a stalk the stigma rests on), the pistol (a tube leading to the ovary), the ovary (the part of the plant that houses the seeds and will become the bud containing high densities of Delta 9 tetrahydrocannabinol or THC), and lastly, the ovule which will become the seeds. Although most plants are either male or female, some marijuana plants will possess both sets of organs. These plants are referred to as Hermaphrodites. - Bio Web

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Public opinion on marijuana, and much scientific research, could not be further from the federal government's opinion on the plant. Official federal policy still considers cannabis to be among "the most dangerous drugs of all the drug schedules with potentially severe psychological and physical dependence," alongside substances like heroin and LSD. "At this point, it's astonishing that anyone still thinks marijuana is more harmful than alcohol," Mason Tvert, communications director for marijuana policy reform group the Marijuana Policy Project, told The Huffington Post. "Only on a flat earth experiencing no climate change is alcohol the safer substance. The folks working to maintain marijuana prohibition need to take a good, hard look at the evidence surrounding these two products and ask themselves why they prefer adults use the one that causes far more damage to the consumer and society." - Hemp Beach TV

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A new research paper was recently released which found a demographic shift of near daily cannabis consumers to the over 50 crowd and away from the 12 - 21 crowd. This would suggest that when marijuana becomes legal nationwide, there will be a huge increase in consumption in the middle-age demographic, not the teenager demographic. I think as this information becomes widely known, it will increase support for reform among older Americans, which will be very significant! - The Weed Blog

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Studies have shown cannabis to be far less addictive than alcohol, and even caffeine. That's not to say that marijuana isn't always habit forming. Between four and nine percent of regular pot users can develop dependence on the drug, according to a frequently cited survey supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. That's compared to about 15 percent of drinkers who develop a dependence for alcohol. At the same time, "not all abuse and dependency is created equal," as the authors of Marijuana Legalization, "What Everyone Needs to Know", write. The authors of the 2012 book point out that while some heavy marijuana users do experience symptoms of clinical dependency and feel discomfort or withdrawal when trying to quit, kicking a pot addiction doesn't lead to the same type of intense, dangerous physical and psychological pain that often accompanies alcohol, nicotine or heroin dependency. - Hemp Beach TV

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At the societal level, a report from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism showed that alcohol is a much more significant factor when it comes to violent crime in the U.S., suggesting that 25 to 30 percent of violent crimes are linked to alcohol use. The journal Addictive Behaviors noted more than a decade ago that alcohol is clearly the drug with the most evidence to support a direct intoxication to violence relationship, and that cannabis reduces likelihood of violence during intoxication. THC, the main psychoactive ingredient in cannabis associated with the high sensation, may even decrease aggressive and violent behavior in chronic users, a study from the National Academy of Sciences found. A recent study from researchers at the University of Texas at Dallas looked at states that have legalized medical marijuana and found that not only does legalization for medical use cause no increase in crime, it may actually reduce the incidence of some violent crimes, including homicide. - Hemp Beach TV

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After the 1937 Marijuana Tax law, new DuPont "plastic fibers," under license since 1936 from the German company I.G. Farben (patent surrenders were part of Germany's World War I reparation payments to America), replaced natural hempen fibers. (Some 30% of I.G. Farben, under Hitler, was owned and financed by America's DuPont.) DuPont also introduced Nylon (invented in 1935) to the market after they'd patented it in 1938. Finally, it must be noted that approximately 50 percent of all chemicals used in American agriculture today are used in cotton growing. Hemp needs no chemicals and has few weed or insect enemies, except for the U.S. government and the DEA. - Jack Herer

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Public opinion on marijuana, and much scientific research, could not be further from the federal government's opinion on the plant. Official federal policy still considers cannabis to be among "the most dangerous drugs of all the drug schedules with potentially severe psychological and physical dependence," alongside substances like heroin and LSD. "At this point, it's astonishing that anyone still thinks marijuana is more harmful than alcohol," Mason Tvert, communications director for marijuana policy reform group the Marijuana Policy Project, told The Huffington Post. "Only on a flat earth experiencing no climate change is alcohol the safer substance. The folks working to maintain marijuana prohibition need to take a good, hard look at the evidence surrounding these two products and ask themselves why they prefer adults use the one that causes far more damage to the consumer and society." - Hemp Beach TV

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