Archive for category Medical Marijuana

California Medical Assn. calls for legalization of marijuana

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By Anthony York, Los Angeles Times

6:01 PM PDT, October 15, 2011

The state’s largest doctor group is calling for legalization of marijuana, even as it pronounces cannabis to be of questionable medical value.

Trustees of the California Medical Assn., which represents more than 35,000 physicians statewide, adopted the position at their annual meeting in Anaheim late Friday. It is the first major medical association in the nation to urge legalization of the drug, according to a group spokeswoman, who said the larger membership was notified Saturday.

Dr. Donald Lyman, the Sacramento physician who wrote the group’s new policy, attributed the shift to growing frustration over California’s medical marijuana law, which permits cannabis use with a doctor’s recommendation. That, he said, has created an untenable situation for physicians: deciding whether to give patients a substance that is illegal under federal law.

“It’s an uncomfortable position for doctors,” he said. “It is an open question whether cannabis is useful or not. That question can only be answered once it is legalized and more research is done. Then, and only then, can we know what it is useful for.”

The CMA‘s new stance appears to have as much to do with politics as science. The group has rejected one of the main arguments of medical marijuana advocates, declaring that the substance has few proven health benefits and comparing it to a “folk remedy.”

The group acknowledges some health risk associated with marijuana use and proposes that it be regulated along the lines of alcohol and tobacco. But it says the consequences of criminalization outweigh the hazards.

Lyman says current laws have “proven to be a failed public health policy.” He cited increased prison costs, the effect on families when marijuana users are imprisoned and racial inequalities in drug-sentencing cases.

The organization’s announcement provoked some angry response.

“I wonder what they’re smoking,” said John Lovell, spokesman for the California Police Chiefs Assn. “Given everything that we know about the physiological impacts of marijuana — how it affects young brains, the number of accidents associated with driving under the influence — it’s just an unbelievably irresponsible position.”

The CMA’s view is also controversial in the medical community.

Dr. Robert DuPont, an M.D. and professor of psychiatry at Georgetown Medical School, said the association’s call for legalization showed “a reckless disregard of the public health. I think it’s going to lead to more use, and that, to me, is a public health concern. I’m not sure they’ve thought through what the implications of legalization would be.”

Dr. Igor Grant, head of the Center for Medicinal Cannabis at UC San Diego, defended the drug’s therapeutic use.

“There’s good evidence that it has medicinal value,” he said. “Can you say it’s 100% bulletproof? No. But the research we’ve done at the center shows it’s helpful with certain types of pain.”

The federal government views cannabis as a substance with no medical use, on a par with heroin and LSD. The CMA wants the Obama administration to reclassify it to help promote further research on its medical potential.

But Washington appears to be moving in the other direction. As recently as July, the federal government turned down a request to reclassify marijuana. That decision is being appealed in federal court by legalization advocates.

In recent weeks, the Obama administration has begun cracking down on California’s medical marijuana industry, threatening to prosecute landlords who rent buildings to pot dispensaries.

California’s marijuana laws have eased over the last 15 years. State voters passed Proposition 215 in 1996, decriminalizing it for medicinal purposes. Federal law still prohibits the sale or possession of the drug for any reason.

The CMA opposed Proposition 215, and it argues that doctors have been placed unwillingly in the center of the feud over the drug.

“When the proposition passed, we as an organized medical community got thrown into the middle of this issue, because the posture of the proposition and its proponents found that cannabis is a medicinal product that is useful for a long list of specific ailments,” Lyman said.

The state has since softened its laws on even recreational use of the drug. In 2010, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a bill that reclassified possession of less than an ounce from a misdemeanor to an infraction.

At the same time, the number of marijuana dispensaries was skyrocketing, to between 1,000 and 2,000 statewide, according to estimates by law enforcement officials. In January, the Los Angeles City Council set strict limits on pot outlets, ordering the closure of hundreds of them.

Opinion polls show that state voters continue to be in favor of medical marijuana but are divided on the question of total legalization. A recent survey by the Public Policy Institute of California found 51% opposed to complete legalization and 46% in favor.

Last November, California voters rejected Proposition 19, which would have legalized the possession and cultivation of limited amounts of cannabis and permitted local governments to regulate it and tax sales. The CMA took no public position on the measure, its leaders said.

Across the country, physicians have called for more cannabis-related research. The CMA’s parent organization, the American Medical Assn., has said the federal government should consider easing research restrictions.

Meanwhile, Lyman said, “there is considerable harm being done.”

anthony.york@latimes.com

Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times

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Medical marijuana and arthritis

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There are more than 31 million Americans that suffer from arthritis.  The two common types of arthritis are rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis.  Both types affect the joints and cause pain swelling, and limiting movement.

There are nearly 100 medications listed by the Arthritis Foundation website for use with arthritis or other related conditions, such as fibromyalgia, psoriasis, osteoporosis, and gout.  Aspirin is commonly used for arthritis and is believed to cause more than 1,000 deaths annually in the United States.  Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), which also are routinely used for arthritis treatment cause more than 7,600 annual deaths and 70,000 hospitalizations.  The gastrointestinal complications of NSAIDs are the most commonly reported serious adverse drug reaction.  Long-term use of Tylenol (acetaminophen) is thought to be one of the common causes of end-stage renal disease.  To effectively control arthritis, aspirin must be taken in large, continuous doses (1000-5400 mg daily), which can cause stomach pain or damage; it is believed to cause more than 1,000 deaths annually in the United States.  For that reason, some doctors prescribe one of several chemical variations referred to as nonacetylated salicylates, such as CMT, Tricosal, and Trilisate, which can cause deafness or ringing in the ears in large doses.

There are also some much stronger analgesics that are also prescribed for arthritis, sometimes along with acetaminophen.  These are: codeine (Dolacet, Hydrocet, Lorcet, Lortab); morphine (Avinza, Oramorph); oxycodone (Vicodin, Oxycontin, Roxicodone); propoxyphene (Percocet, Darvon, Darvocet) and tramadol (Ultram, Ultracet).  These medicines can cause psychological and physical dependence, as well as constipation, dizziness, lightheadedness, mood changes, nausea, sedation, shortness of breath and vomiting.  Taking high doses or mixing with alcohol can slow down breathing, a potentially fatal condition.  Marijuana, used several times a day is often as effective as NSAIDs or acetaminophen in arthritis treatment, and has had 0 reported deaths to date. Marijuana has been reported as a more effective and preferred medicine for pain sufferers.

The use of marijuana as a treatment for musclo-skeletal pain in western medicine dates to the 1700’s.  Evidence from recent research suggests that cannabis-based therapies are effective in the treatment of arthritis and the other rheumatic and degenerative hip, joint, and connective tissue disorders.  Since these are frequently extremely painful conditions, the well-documented analgesic properties of cannabis make it useful in treating the pain associated with arthritis, both on its own and as an adjunct therapy that enhances the efficacy of opioid painkillers.

Human studies have shown medical marijuana to be an effective treatment for rheumatoid arthritis, one of the many recognized conditions for which many states allow legal medical use.  Cannabis has a demonstrated ability to improve mobility and reduce morning stiffness and inflammation.  Research has also shown that patients are able to reduce their usage of potentially harmful Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) when using marijuana as an adjunct therapy.

If you or someone you know is suffering from arthritis pain and would like to learn more about using marijuana as an alternative medicine, please call 626-344-7596 or visit http://www.TheCannabisDoctors.com

To learn more about arthritis and medical marijuana, please visit http://www.safeaccessnow.org/article.php?id=4560#research

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Is Your Medical Marijuana Doctor Legit?

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Is Your Doctor Legit?
By LARRY LECHUGA

According to recent reports, there have been a growing number of fake doctors issuing invalid medical marijuana recommendations in California and Colorado. These “doctors” hand out phony recommendations under the name of board-certified physicians who are clueless as to what is taking place behind their backs.

The presence of fake doctors understandably presents a problem for potential medical marijuana patients. How can patients verify that their doctor is, in fact, legitimate? Which doctors are allowed to recommend medical marijuana? What are some signs of a good doctor?

“I have definitely run across some medical marijuana physicians whose operations were a bit sketchy,” said Will Oppenheim, a medical marijuana patient from Orange County. “But their prices were so low that i was tempted to go their way.”

As you will soon find out, consulting with a good, caring doctor will not only help you choose the correct treatment for your condition, but it will also help you avoid legal troubles down the road. They might be more expensive, but the extra money spent just might pay dividends later on.

Is Your Dr. Legit?
It is legal for any board certified physician to suggest the use of medical marijuana. The first step, then, in verifying the legitimacy of your doctor is to make sure that your doctor is board certified. You can ask for their license number over the phone and verify online that he or she is licensed with the State of California. You can do that by going to the Medical Board of California’s website: http://www.medbd.ca.gov/lookup.html.

You should also ask over the phone to make sure that you will be examined firsthand by the doctor whose name is advertised — don’t settle for a consultation with an “assistant.” “Many of these clinics are advertising that an M.D. will sign the recommendation, but many times they are not physically present and simply fax their signature to the office where someone else takes their vital signs and may or may not do an examination,” said Dr. Sean Breen, a marijuana-recommending physician from Orange County.

But Does Your Doctor Care?
But even if your doctor is board-certified, you want to make sure that you find a doctor that cares. Doing so will help you avoid legal problems down the road.

While caring can manifest itself in many forms, there are two in particular that concern us: you want to make sure that consultations are thorough and that your doctor would show up to court on your behalf if the need should arise.

Thorough Examinations
The Medical Board of California sanctions the use of medical marijuana for approved conditions as long as doctors arrive at their decision to recommend in accordance with the board’s “accepted standards of medical responsibility.”

These standards include the following:
1. History and good faith examination of the patient.
2. Development of a treatment plan with objectives.
3. Provision of informed consent including discussion of side effects.
4. Periodic review of the treatment’s efficacy.
5. Consultation, as necessary.
6. Proper record keeping that supports the decision to recommend the
use of medical marijuana.

As you can see, before recommending any medicine — medical marijuana included — physicians have to methodically evaluate their patients. Thus, as a general rule of thumb, you want to avoid doctors who spend minimal amounts of time with patients. This is important because a quick, slipshod evaluation means that your doctor is probably not adhering to the Medical Board’s guidelines, which can jeopardize the license of your doctor and the legitimacy of your recommendation.

“[A] two to five minute visit doesn’t represent an appropriate evaluation, and one should be suspect about whether such a doctor even if he or she has a legitimate license,” said Dr. William Eidelman, a Los-Angeles-based physician who recommends medical marijuana.

And remember that you must have record of a previously diagnosed condition in order for a doctor to provide a valid medical marijuana recommendation. Some doctors might try to sidestep this important step, thus throwing into question their own legitimacy — and that of your recommendation. “Any doctor that truly cares about his license is going to comply with the state patients must have been previously diagnosed and worked up for their symptoms,” said Dr. Breen.

Will Your Doctor Fight For You?
Another question to consider is whether or not your recommending doctor would appear at court on your behalf. After all, a physician who performs thorough examinations should have no qualms defending their diagnoses in court.

“The main questions patients need to ask of their potential doctor is this: are they available to verify the letter with law enforcement and would they come to court if necessary?” said Dr. Eidelman. “Most cannabis doctors, and especially the low-budget ones, are not doing anything else besides the cannabis recommendation, and not even enough to back up the recommendation should one have law enforcement problems,” he continued.

A New Industry
Maybe it was inevitable that money-hungry phonies would find their way into the medical marijuana industry. But moving forward, how can the industry weed out the fakes? Some suggest that some due diligence on the part of dispensaries can help remedy the problem.

“[A]ll dispensaries should research and contact the clinic if they are not familiar with the doctor who signed the recommendation. They should at least do one on-site visit to introduce themselves to the staff and doctor to make sure the clinic is being run above board and in complete complains with the state medical board,” said Dr. Breen. “This alone would solve many of the issues with fake clinics where doctors are not on-site,” he continued.

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Medical Marijuana Recommendations Overview

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According to California state law, a patient can legally consume, carry, and grow marijuana once they have received a marijuana recommendation from a licensed physician. A marijuana recommendation is written approval from a patient’s doctor stating, that the doctor has reviewed the case and determined that the patient may benefit from the use of marijuana; that the patient has discussed the pros and cons of the treatment with the doctor, and that the doctor will continue to monitor the patient.

Some ailments that are frequently treated with a marijuana recommendation are: migraines, nausea, chronic pain, insomnia, glaucoma, chemotherapy side-effects, AIDS, and anxiety. This is a short list and it should be noted that each case must be carefully evaluated by a licensed physician before a marijuana recommendation may be made.

Because the laws can be confusing, and sometimes conflicting jurisdictions over-lap, many general practitioners are reluctant to go on record regarding a marijuana recommendation. As a result, clinics specializing in marijuana recommendations are increasing in number. As with most other specialists, a reputable doctor who specializes in marijuana recommendations should want to review a patient’s medical history, discuss other types of treatment that have been tried, and address any concern about drug interactions and side-effects. A medical marijuana recommendation specialist can also advise patients regarding concerns somewhat unique to marijuana: dosage consistency, purity of the medication, etc.

While a marijuana recommendation is not technically legal on the federal level, recent guidelines put forth by federal agencies have decreed that those authorities will not get involved in cases where the patient is in compliance with state law. Thus, a medical marijuana recommendation is an excellent way for a patient to help protect themselves from unwanted attention from law enforcement.

Obtaining a medical marijuana recommendation is relatively easy for most qualifying patients. After a few preliminary questions, reputable clinics that specialize in marijuana recommendations can often help patients locate existing medical records or refer them to primary care treatment for examination and diagnosis, before setting up an appointment for an evaluation for the marijuana recommendation.

If you have questions regarding medical marijuana recommendations in Southern California, contact Roger A. Barnes MD at 626-344-7596 to schedule a confidential evaluation.

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Why Hemp?

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Excerpted from Hempseed Nutrition by Lynn Osburn

Because no other single plant on earth can compete with the nutritional value of hemp.

The nutritive properties of the hemp seed are astounding. Rich in essential fats and oils, the seeds could provide a nutritional boost to a food-culture which mistakenly perceives all fat as a bad thing; which is more and more lacking in the important fats oils; and which is being inundated with downright dangerous fats, oils, and synthetic substitutes. The seeds can be ground into a flour, not unlike other strictly cereal crops like wheat or oats.

Cannabis hemp seeds contain all the essential amino acids and essential fatty acids necessary to maintain healthy human life. No other single plant source provides complete protein in such an easily digestible form, nor has the oils essential to life in as perfect a ratio for human health and vitality.

Hempseed is the highest of any plant in essential fatty acids (EFAs). Hempseed oil is among the lowest in saturated fats at 8% of total oil volume. The oil pressed from hempseed contains 55% lineolic acid (LA) and 25% lineolic acid (LNA). Only flax oil has more LNA at 58%, but hempseed oil is the highest in total EFAs at 80% of total oil volume.

“These essential fatty acids are responsible for our immune response. In the old country the peasants ate hemp butter. They were more resistant to disease than the nobility.” The higher classes wouldn’t eat hemp because the poor ate it. — R. Hamilton, ED.D., Ph.D. Medical Researcher-Biochemist UCLA Emeritus.

LA and LNA are involved in producing life-maintaining energy from food and the movement of that energy throughout the body. EFAs govern growth, vitality and state of mind. LA and LNA are involved in transferring oxygen from the air in the lungs to every cell in the body. They play a part in holding oxygen in the cell membrane where it acts as a barrier to invading viruses and bacteria, neither of which thrive in the presence of oxygen.

The bent molecular shape of the EFAs keeps them from dissolving into each other. They are slippery and will not clog arteries like the sticky, straight-shaped saturated fats (SFs) and the trans-fatty acids (TFAs) in cooking oils and shortenings that are made by subjecting polyunsaturated oils like LA and LNA to high temperatures during the defining process.

LA and LNA possess a slightly negative charge and have a tendency to form very thin surface layers. This property is called surface activity, and it provides the power to carry substances like toxins to the surface of the skin, intestinal tract, kidneys, and lungs where they can be removed. These acids’ very sensitivity causes them to break down rapidly into toxic compounds when refined with high heat, or improper storage exposes them to light or air.

Nature provides seeds with an outer shell that safely protects the vital oils and vitamins within from spoilage. It’s also a perfectly edible container. Hempseed can be ground into a paste similar to peanut butter only more delicate in flavour.   Udo Erasmus, Ph.D. nutritionist says: “hemp butter puts our peanut butter to shame for nutritional value.” The ground seeds can be baked into breads, cakes, and casseroles. Hempseed makes a hearty addition to granola bars.

Pioneers in the fields of biochemistry and human nutrition now believe cardiovascular diseases (CVD) and most cancers are really diseases of fatty degeneration caused by the continued over-consumption of SFs and refined vegetable oils that turn EFAs into carcinogenic killers. One out of two Americans will die from the effects of CVD.  One out of four Americans will die of cancer. Researchers believe cancers erupt when one’s immune system response is weakened. And, more Americans are succumbing to immune deficiency diseases than ever before. Promising studies are now under way using the essential oils to support the immune systems of HIV patients.

The complete protein in hempseed gives the body all the essential amino acids required to maintain health, and provides the necessary kinds and amounts of amino acids the body needs to make human serum albumin and serum globulins like the immune enhancing gamma globulin antibodies.

The body’s ability to resist and recover from illness depends upon how rapidly it can produce massive amounts of antibodies to fend off the initial attack. If the globulin protein starting material is in short supply, the army of antibodies may be too small to prevent the symptoms of sickness from setting in.

The best way to insure the body has enough amino acid material to make the globulins is to eat foods high in globulin proteins. Hempseed protein is 65% globulin edestin plus quantities of albumin (present in all seeds) so it’s easily digestible protein is readily available in a form quite similar to that found in blood plasma.

Hempseed was used to treat nutritional deficiencies brought on by tuberculosis, a severe nutrition-blocking disease that causes the body to waste away. (Czechoslovakia Tubercular Nutritional Study, 1955.)

The energy of life is in the whole seed. Hempseed foods taste great and will insure we get enough essential amino acids and essential fatty acids to build strong bodies and immune systems, and to maintain health and vitality.

Excerpted from Hempseed Nutrition by Lynn Osburn.

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DECARBOXYLATION EXPLAINED

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Some THC in resin is present in the form THC-A, also called THC acid.  This form of THC has a carbonate molecule (COOH) attached to it, which is also called a carboxyl group or acid.  THC is only marginally psychoactive when a carboxyl group is attached.

To decarboxylate is to remove the carbonate molecule.  This simply means breaking the bond between the COOH molecule and the THC molecule.  This is usually accomplished through mild heat.

When the carbonate molecule is removed from THC acid, the COOH evaporates away in the form of water vapor (H2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2), and THC is left behind.  Coverting THC-A through decarboxyltion improves the available THC content, sometimes called “potentiating” the THC.  The potency is increased because more psychoactive elements are available.

Decarboxylation:  Simply means the removal of a carboxyl.  A carboxyl is a carbonate molecule (COOH).  Carboxyl molecules are sometimes attached to the THC molecule which is then called THC-A, or THC acid.  In this form, THC lacks most of its psychoactivity.  Decarboxylation removes the COOH acid molecule, leaving behind THC.  Mild heat is often used to convert THC-A to THC.  This happens during drying, vaporization and smoking.

Marijuana Gold”  Rosenthal

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Can a physicians assistant or chiropractor evaluate a patient for the use of medical marijuana?

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A physicians assistant can evaluate a patient consistent with the Physicians Assistants delegation of services agreement. However, ONLY A PHYSICIAN IS AUTHORIZED TO RECOMMEND MEDICAL USE OF MARIJUANA pursuant to Health and Safety code section 11362.5.

Health and Safety code section 11362.7 (a) sets forth the definition of “attending physician” for purposes of the Compassionate Use Act. It states that the attending physician shall complete a medical examination before providing a recommendation for medical marijuana (emphasis added). A physician assistant may perform an examination and give an evaluation of the patient. In addition to personally completing the medical examination, the attending physician himself or herself must record int he patient’s medical record their assessment of whether the patient has a serious medical condition and whether the medical use of marijuana is appropriate. It is the Physician Assistant Committee’s understanding that THESE RESPONSIBILITIES MUST BE PERFORMED BY THE ATTENDING PHYSICIAN AND CANNOT BE DELEGATE TO A PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT.

For additional information about Medical Marijuana Program, please visit the Department of Public Health website at http://www.cdph.ca.gov/programs/mmp/pages/medical_marijuana_program.aspx

To schedule a confidential evaluation to see if you qualify to use marijuana as medicine, please visit http://www.TheCannabisDoctors.com

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Chronology of Cannabis

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12,000BC: Hemp was first used for paper and medicine by Emperor Shen

2737 BC: Cannabis referred to as a “superior” herb in the world’s first medical text, or pharmacopoeia, Shen Nung’s Pen Ts’ao, in China

1500 BC: Cannabis-smoking Scythians sweep through Europe and Asia, settling and inventing the scythe.

1400 BC: Cultural and religious use of ganja or cannabis, and charas or hashish (resin) recorded used by Hindus in India.

c600 BC: Zend-Avesta, Indian scripture, speaks of hemp’s intoxicating resin.

c500 BC: Gautama Buddha said to have survived by eating hempseed. Cannabis used in Germany (Hochdorf Hallstatt D wagon burial site).

450 BC: Herodotus records Scythians and Thracians as consuming cannabis and making fine linens of hemp.

300 BC: Carthage and Rome struggle for political and commercial power over hemp and spice trade routes in the Mediterranean.

100 BC: Chinese make paper from hemp and mulberry.

70 BC: Roman Emperor Nero’s surgeon, Dioscorides, praises cannabis for making the stoutest cords and for its medicinal properties.

c30 AD: Jesus teaches :Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth a man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth a man (Matthew 15:11). The Gospels refer to the New Wine and declare that it is best when the clusters are ripe.

100 AD: Roman surgeon Dioscorides names the plant cannabis sativa and describes various medicinal uses. Pliny reported of industrial uses and wrote a manual on farming hemp.

400 AD: Cannabis cultivated for the first time in the UK at Old Buckenham Mere

500 AD: First botanical drawing of hemp in Constantinopolitanus

600 AD: Germans, Franks, Vikings etc all use hemp fiber.

800 AD: Mohammed allows cannabis but forbids the use of alcohol.

1000 AD: The English word “hempe” first listed in a dictionary. Moslems produce hashish medicine and social use.

1150 AD: Moslems use hemp to start Europe’s first paper mill. Most of the paper is made from hemp for the next 750 years, including Bibles.

1379 AD: Emir Soudon Sheikhouni of Joneima prohibits cannabis consumption amongst the poor, destroys the crops, and punishes offenders by pulling out their teeth.

14 AD48: Inquisitor Pope Innocent VIII outlaws hashish.

1494 AD: Hemp paper industry starts in England.

1545 AD: Hemp agriculture arrives in China.

1554 AD: The Spanish grow hemp in Peru.

1563 AD: English Queen Elizabeth I decree that land owners with more than 60 acres must grow hemp or be fined 5 pounds.

1564 AD: King Philip of Spain orders hemp grown throughout his empire from modern Arhentina to Oregon.

1600 AD: Dutch achieve the “Golden Age” through hemp commerce. Explorers find “wild hempe” in North America.

1606 AD: The British take cannabis to Canada for maritime uses.

1611 AD: The British start growing cannabis in Virginia.

1619 AD: Virginia colony makes hemp cultivation mandatory, followed by most other colonies. Europe pays hemp bounties.

1621 AD: The Anatomy of Melancholy claims cannabis is a treatment for depression.

1631 AD: Hemp used as money throughout American colonies.

1632 AD: The Pilgrims take cannabis to New England.

1637 AD: The General Court at Hartford, Conneticut, orders that all families plant one teaspoon of cannabis seeds.

1639 AD: Massachusetts Courts follow Hartford.

1753 AD: Cannabis Sativa classified by Linneaus.

1763 AD: New English Dictionary says cannabis root applied to skin eases inflammation.

1776 AD: Declaration of Independence drafted on hemp paper.

1791 AD: President Washington sets duties on hemp to encourage domestic industry. “Make the most of the Indian Hemp Seed” ……..President George Washington. (Library of USA Congress 1794 vol. 33 p.270). President Jefferson calls hemp a necessity and urges farmers to grow hemp instead of tobacco.

1800 AD: Cotton gins make cheaper fiber than hemp. Napoleon prohibits his men in Egypt from using cannabis, but to little effect.

1835 AD: The Club de Hashichines is founded.

1839 AD: Homeopathy journal ‘American Provers’ Union’ publishes first report on effects of cannabis.

1840 AD: “Prohibition… goes beyond the bounds of reason in that it attempts to control mans’ appetite through legislation and makes a crime out of things that are not even crimes… A prohibition law strikes a blow at the very principles upon which our Government was founded”………..Abraham Lincoln (December 1840)

1841 AD: Dr. W.B.O’Shaughnessy,”On the Preparation of the Indian Hemp or Ganja” introduces cannabis to western science.

1845 AD: Psychologist and inventor of modern psychopharmacology and psychotimimetric drug treatment, Jacques-Joseph Moreau de Tours documents physical and mental benefits of cannabis.

1850 AD: Petrochemical age begins. Toxic sulphite and chlorine processes make paper from trees: steamships replace (hemp) sails; tropical fibers introduced.. USA census records 8327 hemp plantations of over 2000 acres each.

1854 AD: Bayard Taylor essay Visions of Hashish.

1857 AD: Fitz Hugh Ludlow publishes “The Hasheesh Eater”

1857 AD: Smith Brothers of Edinburgh market cannabis indica extracts.

1860 AD: First governmental commission study of cannabis and hashish conducted by Ohio State Medical Society. It catalogues the conditions for which cannabis is beneficial: neuralgia, nervous rheumatism, mania, whooping cough, asthma, chronic bronchitis, muscular spasms, epilepsy, infantile convulsions, palsy, uterine hemorrhage, dysmenorrhea, hysteria, alcohol withdrawal and loss of appetite.

1868 AD: The Emir of Egypt makes the possession of cannabis a capital offence.

1869 AD: Tales of Hashish by A.C. Kimmens

1870 AD: Cannabis listed in US Pharmacopoeia as a medicine.

1870 AD: South Africa worried about cannabis use among Indian workers, passes a law forbidding the smoking, use or possession of hemp by Indians.

1876 AD: Hashish served at American Centennial Exposition.

1877 AD: The Sultan of Turkey makes cannabis illegal, to little effect.

1894 AD: British Indian Hemp Drugs Commission studies social use of cannabis and comes out
firmly against its prohibition.

1895 AD: First known use of the name “marijuana” for smoking, by Pancho Villa’s supporters in Sonora, Mexico.

1909 AD: Shanghai Conference: first international meeting on drugs is held to discuss opium. The USA passes an act to prohibit the buying or selling of opium for non-medicinal purposes.

1910 AD: African-American “reefer” use reported in Jazz Clubs in New Orleans, said to be influencing white people. Mexicans smoking marijuana in Texas. South Africa prohibits cannabis.

1911 AD: Hindus reported to be using ganja in San Francisco.

1911 AD: South Africa bans cannabis.

1912 AD: “Essay on Hasheesh” by Victor Rolson. Possibilities of putting controls on cannabis use is first raised.

1912 AD: Hague Conference; second international meeting on drugs. 46 nations discuss opium, morphine, *******, ****** and cannabis. The Hague Convention for the Suppression of Opium and Other Drugs, was drawn up, requiring parties to confine to medical and legitimate purposes the manufacture, sale and use of opium, ******, morphine and *******; Cannabis was not included. (From Mandeson, D. From Mr Sin to Mr Big, A history of Australian Drug Laws, Oxford University Press Melbourne 1995)

1912 AD: First suggestions that cannabis should be banned internationally, at the First Opium Conference.

1915 AD: Utah State, then California and Texas outlaw cannabis. ******* banned in the USA.

1916 AD: USDA Bulletin 404 calls for a new program of expansion of hemp to replace uses of timber by industry.

1919 AD: Texas outlaws cannabis. Alcohol is prohibited throughout the USA. Cannabis is still legal in most States.

1920 AD: DuPont experiments with petrochemicals. Gang war takes over the alcohol industry, homicides increase drastically.

1923 AD: South African delegate at League of Nations calls for international controls on cannabis, claiming that it makes mine workers less active. Britain insists on further research.

1923 AD: Louisiana, Nevada, Oregon and Washington outlaw cannabis.

1924 AD: At the Second International Opiates conference Egyptian delegate claims serious problems are associated with hashish use and calls for immediate international controls. Sub-committee listens to Egypt and Turkey. Cannabis declared a narcotic. Cannabis Ruderalis identified by Lamarck.

1927 AD: New York outlaws cannabis.

1928 AD: UK Dangerous Drugs Act (September 28th) 1925 becomes law and makes cannabis illegal.

1929 AD: The Panama Canal Zone Report concludes that there is no evidence that cannabis use is habit-forming or deleterious, recommending no action be taken against cannabis use or sale.

1929 AD: South West states make cannabis illegal as part of a move to oust Mexican immigrants.

1930 AD: Henry Ford makes his motor cars out of hemp with hemp paint and hemp fuel. New machines invented to break hemp, process the fiber and convert the pulp or hurds into paper, plastics etc. 1200 hash bars in New York City. Racist fears of Mexicans, Asians and African-Americans lead the cry for cannabis to be outlawed.

1930′s AD: New mechanized hemp harvesting methods invented

1930 AD: Louis Armstrong arrested in Los Angeles for possession of cannabis.

1931 AD: Federal Bureau of Narcotics formed with Anslinger at the head. By now 29 US states have banned non-prescription cannabis

1934 AD: Anslinger refers to “ginger-haired ******s” in FBI official circulars.

1936 AD: South Western states call for FBI to ban cannabis.

1937 AD: Marijuana Tax Act forbids hemp farming. The Act was based on the Machine Gun Transfer Act which made it illegal to pass on machine guns without a government stamp – there being no such stamps available. By applying this strategy to marijuana, Anslinger was able to effectively ban hemp without contravening constitutional rights.

1937 AD: DuPont files patents for nylon, plastics and a new bleaching process for paper. Anslinger testifies to congress that Marijuana is the most violence-causing drug known to man. The objections of the American Medical Association are ignored. The Marijuana Transfer Tax Bill (14th April) introduced to US House, Ways and Means Committee, passed December, prohibits industrial and medical uses and calls flowering tops a narcotic. Violations attract 200 dollar fines. Birdseed, rope and cordage are exempted from tax.

1937 AD: DuPont patents plastics, seizing the opportunity created by cannabis hemp prohibition

1939 AD: LaGuardia Report started

1941 AD: Cannabis dropped from USA Pharmacopoeia

1941 AD: Henry Ford’s car is made from and runs on cannabis.

1943 AD: Hemp for Victory program urges farmers to grow hemp to help war effort.

1943 AD: US Military Surgeon magazine declares that smoking cannabis is no more harmful than smoking tobacco.

1944 AD: New York Academy of Medicine reports marijuana use does not cause violent behavior, provoke insanity, lead to addiction or promote opiate usage. Anslinger describes the authors as dangerous and strange.

1944 AD: New York Mayor’s La Guardia Report “The Marijuana problem in the City of New York” concludes that smoking marijuana does not lead to addiction in the medical sense of the word, that juvenile delinquency is not associated with marijuana smoking and that the publicity concerning the catastrophic effects of marijuana smoking in New York is unfounded.
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1944 AD: Anslinger threatens doctors who carry out cannabis research with imprisonment.

1945 AD: USA ‘Newsweek’ reports over 100,000 Americans use cannabis.

1948 AD: Anslinger now says cannabis users are peaceful and that cannabis could be used during a communist invasion, to weaken American will to fight.

1948 AD: United Nation’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights

1948 AD: Hollywood star Robert Mitchum arrested for cannabis.

1951 AD: UN Bulletin of Narcotic Drugs states over 200 million cannabis users in the world.

1952 AD: First UK cannabis arrest at Number 11 Club, Soho, London.

1955 AD: Hemp farming outlawed again.

1960 AD: Hippies, Vietnam Veterans, pop fans adopt cannabis.

1961 AD: UN Treaty 406 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs seeks to outlaw cannabis use and cannabis cultivation worldwide and eradicate cannabis smoking within 30 years (by 1991). USA representative is Anslinger.

1962 AD: President Kennedy sacks Anslinger. Kennedy using cannabis as a pain relief.

1963 AD: Kennedy assassinated.

1964 AD: Thelin Brothers open first US ‘Head Shop’.

1964 AD: THC, tetrahydracannabinol, first isolated

1966 AD: Donovan becomes first UK celebrity to be busted for cannabis.

1967 AD: SOMA Times Petition in the UK urges legalization of cannabis. The Beatles sign it. 3,000 people hold a ‘smoke-in’ in Hyde Park.. Keith Richards and Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones are arrested and imprisoned for cannabis. This prompts a Times editorial ‘Who breaks a butterfly on a wheel?’. The convictions are quashed on appeal.. In the UK 2,393 persons arrested for cannabis offences.. In the USA over 3,000 joints mailed to addresses at random by Abbie Hoffman and the Yippies.

1968 AD: John Lennon arrested for cannabis possession.

1968 AD: 1 November, UK Government Wootton Report recommends cannabis possession should not be an offence. “Having reviewed all the material available to us we find ourselves in agreement with the conclusion reached by the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission appointed by the Government of India (1893-94) and the New York Mayor’s Committee (1944 – LaGuardia) that the long-term consumption of cannabis in moderate doses has no harmful effects.”

1968 AD: Campaign to stop US soldiers in Vietnam from taking cannabis – they switch to ******.

1969 AD: James Callaghan, UK Labour Prime Minister, rejects the findings of the Wootton Report.

1969 AD: George Harrison arrested for cannabis.

1970 AD: Social use of cannabis receives widespread acceptance despite illegality; policy of decriminalization sweeps across USA and Britain.

1970 AD: LeDain Report (Canada) recommended that serious consideration be given to the legalization of personal possession of marijuana. It finds that cannabis use increases self-confidence, feelings of creativity and sensual awareness, facilitates concentration and self-acceptance, reduces tension, hostility and aggression and may produce psychological but not physical dependence. The report recommends that possession laws be repealed

1970 AD: R. Keith Stroup founds NORML ‘National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws’, in UDSA.

1970 AD: USA Marijuana Transfer Tax declared unconstitutional.

1971 AD: British Misuse of Drugs Act classifies cannabis as a Class B drug with stiff sentencing. This bans the medical use of cannabis, ignoring the Wootton Report.

1971 AD: UN Convention on Psycho topic Substances

1972 AD: US President Richard Nixon says ‘I am against legalizing marijuana’.

1972 AD: Baan Commission presents report to Dutch Minister of Health and suggests that cannabis trade below a quarter of a kilo ought to be considered as a misdemeanor only.

1973 AD: Oregon considering legalization

1973 AD: US Shafer Commission, appointed by Nixon, declares that personal use of marijuana should be decriminalized as should casual distribution of small amounts for no or insignificant remuneration

1973 AD: UN Convention of Psychotropic Substances: cannabis is a narcotic.

1974 AD: US Senate report on Marijuana-Hashish Epidemic and its Impact on US Security claims that cannabis use cause brain damage, a-motivation and genetic and reproductive defects

1975 AD: Hundreds of US doctors call for more research on cannabis.

1975 AD: Alaska legalizes cannabis for personal use. Limit on amount is one ounce.

1975 AD: After 3 years of campaigning to abolish penal sanctions for the consumption of drugs, Pannella forces the police to arrest him, by smoking a joint in public.

1975 AD: Jamaica Studies reveal good health amongst prolific cannabis users. “No impairment of physiological, sensory and perceptual performance, tests of concept formation, abstracting ability, and cognitive style, and tests of memory.”

1976 AD: Holland adopts tolerant attitude to cannabis and many coffee shops and youth centers allowed to sell cannabis.

1976 AD: USA New York Times (Jan 5) declares ‘Scientists find nothing really harmful about pot’.

1976 AD: Ford administration bans medical research on cannabis. Research on synthetic cannabis analogues allowed to continue. Robert Randal is the first US citizen to receive cannabis from Federal supplies made under the Investigational New Drug (IND) Program.

1976 AD: DuPont declares cannabis is less harmful than alcohol or tobacco and calls for its decriminalization.

1977 AD: President Carter thinks cannabis should be legalized.

1977 AD: The Australian Senate Standing Committee on Social Welfare (the Baume Committee) recommends treating drug use as a social / medical rather than legal problem. Also that criminal sanction of possession of cannabis be replaced by fines while retaining penalties for possession of hashish, oil and purified THC.

1978 AD: New Mexico allows cannabis sale for medical use.

1978 AD: The New South Wales Joint Parliamentary Committee upon Drugs recommends eliminating criminal sanctions for personal use of cannabis, implementing bond and probation penalties for first offenders and expunging records upon successful completion of these punishments. Also suggest retaining penalties for trafficking in cannabis.

1980 AD: Paul McCartney arrested for cannabis and spends 10 days in prison in Japan.

1980 AD: Costa Rica study reports good health in cannabis users.

1980 AD: May 10, Smokey Bears in Hyde Park

1981 AD: The Coptic Study claims ‘No harm to human brain or intelligence’ through cannabis use.

1982 AD: An Analysis of Marijuana Policy, National Research Council of the National Academy of Science, concludes that “a policy of prohibition of supply is preferable only to a policy of complete prohibition of supply and use”

1983 AD: In the UK over 20,000 convictions for possession.

1983 AD: The USA government (Reagan / Bush)orders American Universities to destroy all 1966-76 research work on cannabis.

1985 AD: Winters and DiFranza reveal radioactive material in tobacco may account for half the lung cancer deaths; no radioactive material in cannabis.

1986 AD: 8 July, UK Drug Trafficking Offences Act introduced to enable confiscation of assets from drug dealers

1987 AD: The USA Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy says: “Cannabis can be used on an episodic but continual basis without evidence of social or psychic dysfunction. In many users the term dependence with its obvious connotations, probably is mis-applied… The chief opposition to the drug rests on a moral and political, and not toxicologic, foundation”.

1988 AD: 6 September : DEA chief administrative judge, Judge Young, rules the US government should allow the medicinal use of cannabis. He says “Marijuana in its natural form, is one of the safest therapeutically active substances known to man”. DEA rejects report.

1988 AD: 20 December, UN Convention against illicit traffic in narcotic and psychotropic substances, Vienna, includes cannabis

1988 AD: UK 23,229 people arrested for cannabis offences.

1989 AD: Presidents Reagan and Bush declare war on cannabis; shops selling smoking apparatus outlawed. Urine testing introduced. Recriminalization, asset and property seizure, armed forces, prison camps, ‘Just Say No’ campaign, PFDA, DARE, tobacco and nuclear subsidies. Price – per – ounce cannabis worth more than gold. Worldwide prohibition entices organized crime to take control of the cannabis market and make huge profits. Reagan declares victory in War on Drugs. Secretary of State James A Baker reports global war on narcotic production is ‘clearly not being won’.

1990 AD: Jack Herer, in his book ‘The Emperor Wears No Clothes’ offers $10,000 reward to anyone who can disprove his assertion that hemp can ‘save the planet’.

1990 AD: Alaska recriminalizes cannabis possession

1990′s AD: USA voters pass regional measures to allow medicinal use of cannabis. Interest in this and other uses of hemp add new support to campaign for the legal right to social / recreational use of cannabis.

1991 AD: THC receptors found in the brain.

1991 AD: UK 40,000 people arrested for cannabis.

1991 AD: ‘Mr. Marijuana’, Howard Marks, arrested, taken from Spain to USA, and given 25 years imprisonment for trafficking in cannabis.

1991 AD: UK Judge Pickles advocates legalization of drugs..

1991 AD: UK MP Tony Banks (labor) advocates legalization of cannabis.

1991 AD: IND program dropped in USA.

1992 AD: January 22, California Research Advisory Panel reports that prohibition has a more harmful effect on society and the individual than illegal drugs themselves.

1992 AD: February 19, UK Government issue licenses to grow cannabis for industrial uses or scientific research

1992 AD: “Medicines often produce side effects. Sometimes they are physically unpleasant. Cannabis too has discomforting side effects, but these are not physical they are political”… The Economist March 28th 1992

1992 AD: USA over 340,000 arrests for cannabis.

1992 AD: Australia licenses hemp farm.

1992 AD: US Investigational New Drug (IND) Program dropped.

1992 AD: USA President Clinton admits he smoked cannabis but did not inhale. Howard Marks admits that he smoked cannabis but never exhaled.

1992 AD: 17 European Cities sign Frankfurt Charter agreeing to tolerate social use of cannabis.

1992 AD: USA Jim Montgomery, a paraplegic who smoked cannabis to relieve muscle spasm, busted for two ounces of marijuana in Oklahoma, arrested and sentenced to life plus 16 years.

1993 AD: Britain eases restrictions on hemp farming. Hemp core is first British company to get a license. Hemp clothes sold in High Street shops. February 19th.

1993 AD: Commander John Grieve of the Metropolitan Police calls for decriminalization of cannabis.

1993 AD: Raymond Kendall, Head of Interpol, calls for decriminalization of cannabis.

1993 AD: British Law Lord, Lord Woolf calls for legalization of cannabis

1993 AD: 22 British MP’s call for the establishment of a Royal Commission.

1993 AD: 44 British MP’s call for a Royal Commission.

1993 AD: German High Court in Kruhe rules that cannabis prohibition is unconstitutional.

1993 AD: 19 British MP’s ‘welcome’ the German court ruling.

1993 AD: 55 British MP’s call for cannabis to be recognized and allowed for treatment of Multiple Sclerosis.

1993 AD: British Home Secretary Michael Howard declares ‘War on drugs’ and increases maximum fine for possession of cannabis to 2,500.

1993 AD: Over 72,000 UK citizens arrested for cannabis offences.

1993 AD: Canada permits a hemp farm in Ontario province.

1995 AD: Holland lowers the amount one can possess without prosecution to 5 grams (from 30) as a result of powerful international pressures from neighboring countries.

1995 AD: UK Channel 4 Pot Night (March) and BBC Panorama’s High Risk (April).

1995 AD: UK Home secretary Michael Howard increases penalties for cannabis offenses.

1995 AD: Clare Short MP (Labor) calls for a Royal Commission on Cannabis and is reprimanded by her party bosses. (October)

1995 AD: European Cannabis Consumers’ Union founded in Amsterdam.

1995 AD: USA Dan Perron forms Cannabis Buyers Club to distribute cannabis to the sick.

1995 AD: The European Council which defines political guidelines, orders a study of drug legislation and practice in the Union.

1995 AD: September 16, First CHIC (Cannabis Hemp Information Club) conference in London.

1995 AD: Under the Clinton administration 1,450,751 people had been arrested for cannabis, 86 being for possession only

1995 AD: November 11, British journal of the medical profession, The Lancet, states that “The smoking of cannabis, even long term, is not harmful to health”.

1995 AD: Dutch Policy in the Netherlands Studies

1995 AD: Henrion Commission Report, the official French State Commission in charge of drug policy supports decriminalization of cannabis and calls for a two-year trial period of regulated retail trade in cannabis. The French Government rejects these proposals.

1996 AD: Victoria (Australia) State Council urges decriminalization of cannabis.

1996 AD: May 17, Sow the Seeds Day, London. 1996 AD: CLCIA announce parliamentary candidates in forthcoming General Election

1996 AD: UK Liberal Democrats Party calls for a Royal Commission on cannabis.

1996 AD: Lord McCluskey calls for consideration of decriminalization in UK.

1996 AD: The Institute for the Study of Drug Dependence – Drug Notes – Cannabis 1996, p.8 says:
“All that can be said definitely is that 1) Cannabis use generally precedes the use of other illegal drugs. 2) Cannabis use does not necessarily (or even usually) lead to the use of other illicit drugs.”
1996 AD: UK Janet Paraskeno, magistrate and director of National Youth Agency calls for ‘legalization and not decriminalization’.

1996 AD: George Howarth MP (Labor) says his parties do not want a Royal Commission because it might conclude that cannabis should be legalized which a Labor Government would not do anyway.

1996 AD: The Parliament of Luxembourg passes a motion calling for a program ‘of common measures for the liberalization of cannabis and its derivatives’ along with Belgium and the Netherlands, and the harmonization of drug laws in Benelux countries.

1996 AD: UK Cannabis Awareness Month (September) on 68th anniversary of the law.

1996 AD: Ireland announces their plans to use cannabis as fuel to replace the use of the dwindling supplies of peat

1996 AD: Dutch town council at Delfzij decides to sell cannabis through their own coffee shop. They name the shop ‘Paradox’. Profits used to provide information campaigns against ‘soft drugs’ in Dutch schools. Meanwhile the Dutch close many coffee shops, bowing to pressures from Germany and France.,br 1996 AD: The Canton of Zurich calls for legalization of cannabis.

1996 AD: UK Crown Prosecution Service dropping cases of possession and cultivation against some ill people (MS) as ‘not in the public interest to proceed’.

1996 AD: California and Arizona pass Propositions allowing the use of cannabis in the treatment of certain illnesses, Clinton is re-elected and the FBI threaten Doctors with prosecution.

1996 AD: A Swiss man, Zimmermann, is given a life sentence in the Maldives, for importing three cannabis seeds, found in his luggage as he flew in from India.

1996 AD: Legalize Ganja Jamaica formed.

1996 AD: In the New Zealand general election the legalize cannabis candidate in Mittertond received 30f the vote. Overall they received 1.4f the votes, insufficient to gain a seat under proportional representation.

1996 AD: 100 Italian MP’s call for legalization of cannabis in Italy.

1996 AD: The Sunday Times, 1 Dec, says that out of 45 UK judges questioned 16 wanted to see cannabis legalized.

1996 AD: CLCIA offices are destroyed by fire

1996 AD: June, Scottish Nationalist conference votes to allow cultivation for personal use and research into medical uses of cannabis
Sates “Relatively few adverse clinical effects from the chronic use of marijuana have been documented in humans. However, the criminalization of marijuana use may itself be a health hazard, since it may expose the users to violence and criminal activity.”

1997 AD: An 8-year study at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Medicine, concluded that long-term smokers of cannabis do not experience a greater annual decline in lung functions than non-smokers.
Researchers said: “Findings from the present long-term follow-up study of heavy, habitual marijuana smokers argue against the concept that the continuing heavy use of marijuana is a significant factor for the development of [chronic lung disease]”
“No difference were noted between even quite heavy marijuana smoking and nonsmoking of marijuana.”
Volume 155 of the American Journal of Respiratory and Clinical Care Medicine

1997 AD: January16, A court in Texas, USA, sentences medical marijuana user, William J. Foster to 93 years imprisonment for cultivation of one plant.

1997 AD: Two Swiss Cantons decide to legalize possession of cannabis in small amounts and ask the national Government to do the same.

1997 AD: The German State of Schlewig-Holstein legalizes possession of up to 5 grams of cannabis.

1997 AD: After appeals for clemency from the Swiss Government and letters from CLCIA supporters, the Maldives releases Zimmermann, the man given life for three seeds.

1997 AD: Norwich City Council ban the CLCIA from more stalls because seeds had been given out at previous stalls, the seed being fishing bait. After a letter campaign the council agrees that CLCIA can have the stall provided they agree not to give out ‘anything which can be used to grow or take an illegal substance’.

1997 AD: In the USA a $2 million study to prove cannabis smoking can cause cancer fails and announces that it does not. The release of the report is delayed due to ‘lack of supplies’.

1997 AD: Paul Flynn MP introduces an early Day Motion calling on the Government to recognize the medicinal uses of cannabis and to make it available in tablet form, also congratulating the citizens of California and Arizona.

1997 AD: February 11, USA Federal Government Authorities, led by Barry R. McCaffrey, Director of National Drug Control Policy, resists the medical supply or cannabis in California and Arizona, threatening to prosecute Doctor’s who prescribe or supply it.

1997 AD: UK Legalize Cannabis Party, sponsored by the CLCIA, nominates Howard Marks as Parliamentary Candidate for Legalizing Cannabis in the General Election. He receives an average 1.3f the vote over the four constituencies where he stands.

1997 AD: The UK elects a new Labor Government and the Prime Minister, Tony Blair, says he will not legalize cannabis.

1997 AD: Scottish Kirk (Church) comes out in favor of legalizing cannabis

1997 AD: Rob Christopher, founder of CHIC – the Cannabis Hemp Information Club – in London, changes his name to Free Rob Cannabis and invites arrest by distributing cannabis cookies on the steps of the Department of Heath in London. He is not arrested.

1997 AD: USA marines use helicopters to destroy marijuana crops in Hawaii despite objections from the people.

1997 AD: The Kaiser Permanente Study (USA) – “Marijuana Use and Mortality” April 1997 American Journal of Public Health concludes “Relatively few adverse clinical effects from the chronic use of marijuana have been documented in humans. However, the criminalization of marijuana use may itself be a health hazard, since it may expose the users to violence and criminal activity.”

1997 AD: Researchers at the University of California (UCLA) School of Medicine announced the results of an 8 – year study into the effects of long-term cannabis smoking on the lungs. In Volume 155 of the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Dr. D.P. Tashkin reported: “Findings from the present long-term, follow-up study of heavy, habitual marijuana smokers argue against the concept that continuing heavy use of marijuana is a significant risk factor for the development of [chronic lung disease. ..Neither the continuing nor the intermittent marijuana smokers exhibited any significantly different rates of decline in [lung function] ” as compared with those individuals who never smoked marijuana. Researchers added: “No differences were noted between even quite heavy marijuana smoking and nonsmoking of marijuana.”

1997 AD: June, A plaque placed on a park bench in Chapelfield Gardens in Norwich, commemorates Howard Marks stand as a Legalize Cannabis Candidate

1997 AD: July, The British Medical Association (BMA) recommends the provision of medicinal cannabis in the UK.

1997 AD: July, The Attorney General and Minister for Industrial Relations, Australia, JW Shaw QC MLC, announced the end of prison sentences for young cannabis offenders, saying that “I believe many parents would see the imprisonment of their son or daughter for using cannabis as particularly harmful.”

1997 AD: July, SYDNEY MORNING HERALD July 21 1997 p5 reports “A survey of a traditionally conservative NSW electorate has shown overwhelming community support for the decriminalization of cannabis.” New South Wales then decriminalizes possession of cannabis – up to 5 plants, 30 grams of leaf, 3 grams of resin and 2 grams of oil.

1997 AD: August, UK, After the shooting of a five-year old boy in Bolton in a drug-related attack, Labor MP Brian Iddon calls for a Royal Commission on drugs with a view to decriminalization. The Sun conducts a poll that showed that over 40f its readers are in favor of decriminalization. Labor Home Office spokesman George Howarth says on Radio 4 News that cannabis causes harm and that Labor will never have dialogue on legalization and that the only solution is to stamp it out.

1997 AD: On September 19th, Marco Pannella is sentenced by the Rome Court to 4 months imprisonment commuted to 8 months on probation, for distributing hashish at the Porta Portese.

1997 AD: September, Sir Paul McCartney, ex-Beatle, reconfirms his call to decriminalize cannabis.

1997 AD: September 28th, UK newspaper The Independent on Sunday, starts their committed campaign to decriminalize cannabis backed by over 100 names of celebrities, doctors, academics etc.

1997 AD: September 28th, A picnic in Chapelfield Gardens, Norwich, to commemorate the sad prohibition laws is attended by over 100 people and cannabis is openly smoked on film by TV cameras. On this the 69th anniversary of the Dangerous Drugs Act, Rob Christopher and some 300 others gather in Hyde Park, London, to distribute cannabis cakes free to medical users. Rob then unsuccessfully attempted to turn himself in to the police.

1997 AD: October 8, Lord Bingham of Cornhill, the most senior judge in England and Wales backed calls for a public debate on the legalization of cannabis. Just days after Jack Straw, the Home Secretary, ruled out moves to legalize cannabis

1997 AD: November 5, EU Parliament Committee on Civil Liberties suggests that soft drugs should be legalized

1997 AD: December 3, The French secretary of State for Public Health, Bernard Kouchner, in favor of the supply of ****** to people suffering from severe ****** addiction. He also supports the medical application of cannabis, according to an interview with Dr Kouchner MD in the newspaper Liberation.

1997 AD: December 11, Independent on Sunday holds their “Should cannabis be decriminalized?” conference in Westminster, London. Although all the MPs have been invited only 5 turn up. The conference was overwhelmingly in favor of legalization

1997 AD: December 19th, DEA formally asked the Department of Health and Human Services to conduct “a scientific and medical evaluation of the available data and provide a scheduling recommendation” for marijuana and other cannabinoid drugs. This DEA request of HHS means that the DEA has for the first time made its own determination that sufficient grounds exist to remove marijuana from Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). Schedule I is supposed to be limited to hard drugs with addictive propensities and with no legitimate medical usage.

1997 AD: December 20, British Home Secretary, Jack Straw (Labor) is told by the Daily Mirror that his son, William, sold 10 pounds worth of cannabis to a reporter Dawn Alford. Straw immediately escorts his own son to a police station to turn himself in. The lad is cautioned several weeks later.

1998 AD: March, Madrid – European and American scientists defended medical marihuana at an International Symposium on Cannabis and the Brain held at the Foundation Ramon Areces. According to them, the plant is effective in treating people with cancer and multiple sclerosis, but is not addictive.

1998 AD: Australia, March, Victoria’s police commissioner, Mr Neil Comrie, has admitted the fight against drugs has failed and is set to introduce a radical statewide plan to keep drug users out of courts.

1998 AD: Conservative MP David Prior becomes the third British MP to publicly admit having smoked cannabis. He is against legalization.

1998 AD: MORE than 100 French artists and intellectuals signed a petition admitting to taking soft drugs and offering themselves for prosecution.

1998 AD: March 28 About 20,000 people marched from Hyde Park to Trafalgar Square in the Decriminalize Cannabis March organized by the Independent on Sunday, CLCIA and others. Speakers in the Square included Howard Marks,Rosie Boycott, Paul Flynn MP and Caroline Coon. The new UK Anti-Drugs Coordinator, Keith Hallawell, arrogantly stated that the march was a Red Herring (irrelevant).

1998 AD: UK, Times 24 March 1998, A judge allowed a liver transplant patient to go free after he admitted growing and using cannabis to ease his pain. Sympathizing with him, Judge John Hopkin said: “I accept that’s why you were growing it; to relieve the considerable pain you must suffer. That is against the law as it stands at the present time, but there is very substantial mitigation in your case.” Richard Gifford, 49, a father of 6 was given a two year conditional discharge at Nottingham crown court after pleading guilty to producing and possessing cannabis. The judge said “Whether this substance should be obtained by prescription is a matter for parliament, but it does seem from a number of cases that appear before me that it is benefit to a number of persons.” Paddy Tipping, PPS to Jack Straw, the Home secretary said the government has no plans to decriminalize cannabis “People like Judge Hopkin say the acknowledge there is a valuable medical effect, but there has been no compelling research done to suggest that”.

1998 AD: April, Czech Republic – President Vaclav Havel vetoes a law banning possession of drugs for personal use and sent it back to Parliament, citing human rights concerns. “The President reached the opinion that the law would lead to the prosecution of victims rather than culprits,” said spokesman Ladislav Spacek. Drug experts have warned that the legislation could lead to an increase in crime and drug prices and a decline in the willingness of addicts to be cured. – Reuters

1998 AD: 4 April, A man accused of growing and giving cannabis to his wife, a multiple sclerosis sufferer, was cleared by a jury’s majority verdict of cultivating, cultivating with intent to supply, and supplying cannabis. Cab driver Alan Blythe, 52, of Runcorn, Cheshire, had used the defense of duress of circumstances, which the jury at Warrington Crown Court accepted. He claimed he had grown the cannabis and supplied it to his wife Judith, 48, because he was afraid that without it the acute symptoms of MS could trigger her suicide. The jury ignored the judge’s suggestion that Mr Blythe had failed to prove duress of circumstances for the charge of cultivation. But they followed this advice in relation to possession, for which Mr Blythe was fined 100.

1998 AD: 21 April, Belgium officially decriminalizes cannabis after a decision by Minister de Clerk of Justice. That is you will not be prosecuted for possession for personal consumption.

1998 AD: SAN FRANCISCO April 22, 1998 — A San Francisco marijuana club reopened under another name just a day after a court order shut down its predecessor.

1998 AD: Italy decriminalizes possession of drugs and permits small scale cultivation of cannabis for own use.

1998 AD: Danny Tungate polled 7.6f the vote as a Legalize Cannabis Candidate in the UK local elections, Catton Grove ward, Norwich

1998 AD: June 12, The UK Government has granted a license to grow and possess cannabis for the purposes of medical trials, to Dr Geoffrey Guy of GW Pharmaceuticals. The crop at a secret location in south-east England, is guarded by electrified razor-wire fences, security cameras and guard dogs.

1998 AD: Whilst US Federal Authorities make threats and arrests of Californian doctors who recommend cannabis and force the closure of most medical marijuana clubs in the state, Oakland by-pass federal law by appointing medical marijuana suppliers as deputies thereby making them immune from arrest.

1998 AD: Germany, A petition of 30 thousand signatures organized by the “Selbsthilfegruppe Cannabis als Medizin” in Berlin was handed in to the Senat of Berlin in March 1998. All governing parties (CDU, SPD, PDS and Bndnis 90 / Die Grnen) discussed the issue and unanimously support it!
The signatures being collected currently, will be handed to the “Petitionsausschuss des Deutschen Bundestages” together with the 30 thousand from Berlin.. ACM, Arbeitsgemeinschaft Cannabis als Medizin (Association for Cannabis as Medicine ) 1998 AD: June 5; Colin Davies acquitted of cultivation in the UK after informing the jury of his medical need and despite instructions from the judge that they had to rule on law and evidence alone. See Rights of Jurors.

1998 AD: A group of Welsh Cannabis Smokers headed by Chris Rawley lays prosecution papers upon Jack Straw, Tony Blair, Lord Bingham, a Crown Court Judge and Tenby Magistrates, in the process of a public prosecution for crimes against humanity and peace, and crimes against children, for upholding an illegal prohibition of cannabis.

1998 AD: September 5, Release and The Lindesmith Instituteorganise the symposium “Options for Control in the 21st Century”, with experts from around the world gathering in London.

1998 AD: October, CLCIA Chairman challenges local Judge on cannabis safety

1998 AD: November 11, UK. The House of Lords rule that based upon the evidence presented for them the Government should make cannabis available to the sick without further delay, but that they are against legalization for recreational use. Jack Straw, Home Secretary, immediately rejects the House of Lord’s Report saying that cannabis will not be made available until a suitable pharmaceutical standard preparation has been thoroughly tested.

1998 AD: November, “We.. say that on the medical evidence available, moderate indulgence in cannabis has little ill-effect on health, and that decisions to ban or legalize cannabis should be based on other considerations.”: The Lancet, vol 352, number 9140, November 14 1998

1998 AD: December 24: Prince Charles tells a sufferer of Multiple Sclerosis that he has heard that cannabis can help.

1999 AD: January 21, USA: Medicinal Marijuana Advocate, Steve Kubby and Wife Busted

1999 AD: February 23, UK: 55-year-old arthritis sufferer jailed for one year for using cannabis to relieve his pain.

1999 AD: March 4, ALASKA: Medical Marijuana Law Starts

1999 AD: March 15, USA: Federal Judge Gives OK to Pot Case

1999 AD: March 21, USA: Government Study Labels Marijuana A Useful Medicine

1999 AD: March 21, Only 8 People Can Legally Use Pot As Medicine

1999 AD: March 23, GERMANY: Health Minister Supports Medical Marihuana

1999 AD: March 30, CANADA: Pot Users Take Fewer Road Risks Than Drunks Study Says

1999 AD: April 1, USA: Farmers Lobby to Legalize the Growing of Hemp

1999 AD: April 7, USA: Florida Supreme Court Hears Medical Marijuana Case

1999 AD: March, The LEGALISE CANNABIS ALLIANCE becomes an official political party in the UK. 1999 AD: April 9, UK: Pro-Cannabis Lobby To Stand in Norwich

1999 AD: April 23, SWITZERLAND: Legalizing Cannabis

1999 AD: May 1, Many thousands march for legalization around the world

1999 AD: May 6, UK: Local Election Results, May 6 1999, Legalize Cannabis Alliance candidates poll average 3.5BR>1999 AD: May 10, USA: NV Assembly Bill Eases Marijuana Penalties

1999 AD: May 20, UK Government objects to cannabis bill 95 MPs support MM bill. Eric Mann’s parole revoked to silence him.

1999 AD: June 9, CANADA: Two Patients Get Federal Go-Ahead To Smoke Pot

1999 AD: June 11, US Kentucky: Hemp Museum Opens Doors To History Of Versatile Plant

1999 AD: June 11, NEW ZEALAND: Advice To Review Dope Law Repeated

1999 AD: June 13, UK: Cannabis Inhalers In First Legal Health Test

1999 AD: June 21, CANADA: Compassion Club To Grow Pot In Homes Of Members

1999 AD: June 21, SCOTLAND: Doctors Back Legalizing Cannabis

1999 AD: June 24, JAMAICA: Official Encourages Cultivation Of Hemp

1999 AD: June 30, UK: Jails Chief Says Drug Test Regime Is Useless

1999 AD: September 6, UK: MS Patients Recruited To Test Cannabis Pill

1999 AD: Oct. 14, Kingston, Jamaica, The Jamaican Senate has unanimously approved a resolution establishing a commission to explore the decriminalization of marijuana.

1999 AD: Nov 25, The Legalize Cannabis Alliance candidate in the Kensington and Chelsea By-election, Colin Paisley gained 141 votes, 8th out of 18 candidates.

2000 AD: Jan 12, CANADA: Hepatitis C Patient Wins Right To Smoke Pot

2000 AD: March 6, UK: First Conference Of The Legalize Cannabis Alliance

2000 AD: March 25, UK: Inquiry Calls For Softer Line On Hard Drugs – But Blair Says No

2000 AD: March 29, SWITZERLAND: Swiss Parliament Legalizes Cannabis

2000 AD: March 30, Malaysian Gets Life For Growing Cannabis Plant

2000 AD: April 4, MALAWI: Minister Steps Up Campaign To Legalize Marijuana

2000 AD: May 4, The Legalize Cannabis Alliance fields 5 candidates in Norwich local elections (Sarah Homes, Mick Pryce, Hugh Robertson, Trevor Smith, Tina Smith), one in Peterborough (Marcus Davies). Derrick Large receives over 400 votes in the Romsey by-election won by a Liberal Democrat.

2000 AD: May 6, Hundreds of thousands of people march for the end of the War on Cannabis

2000 AD: June 28, CANADA: Medical Pot Grower Cleared

2000 AD: June 28, NETHERLANDS: Dutch cannabis vote irks cabinet

2000 AD: July 17, USA CA: Federal Judge Clears Way for Oakland Club to Distribute Pot to
Seriously Ill Patients

2000 AD: July 31, CANADA: Pot Prohibition Unconstitutional, Rules Court Of Appeals

2000 AD: August 1: UK: Rheumatoid Arthritis Treatment From Cannabis

2000 AD: August 15, USA CA: Appeals Court Approves Marijuana As Medicine

2000 AD: September 6, EUROPE: Dutch, Swiss and German Governments To Act on Marijuana

2000 AD: September 8, USA CA: Doctors’ Rights Backed Under Pot Law

2000 AD: September 9, GUAM: High Court Ruling Backs Rastafarian’s Sacrament – Cannabis

2000 AD: September 14, USA CA: Feds Rule Doctors May Recommend Pot

2000 AD: September 28, UK: MS Sufferer Cleared Of Cannabis Charge

2000 AD: October, Canadian Government Will Legalize Medical Marijuana Use

2000 AD: October 20, UK: Cannabis Less Harmful Than Aspirin, Says Scientist

2000 AD: November 24, USA: CA: Study Of Pot’s Benefits To AIDS Patients Gets DEA’s Blessing

2000 AD: December 22, CANADA: Legal Marijuana Operation Opens

2001 AD: 4 January, CANADA: Firm Grows Medical Pot In Mine Shaft

2001 AD: 19 January, BELGIUM: Seen Decriminalizing Cannabis Use

2001 AD: 10 March, SWITZERLAND: Move To Legalize Cannabis

2001 AD: 21 March, MEXICO: Leader Backs Call To Legalize Drugs

2001 AD: 22 March, UK: Lords Urge Legal Use Of Cannabis

2001 AD: 7 April, CANADA: Gravely Ill To Get Medical Pot

2001 AD: 26 April, USA: Legalize Marijuana, New Mexico Governor Urges

2001 AD: 11 June, Pot Smokers Just As Healthy – Study

2001 AD: 25 June, UK: Home Secretary Praises Cannabis Scheme

2001 AD: 1 July, UK: Drug Czar Recants: Cannabis Use Does Not Lead To ******

2001 AD: 4 July, CANADA: Legal-Marijuana Users To Get Photo Id Cards

2001 AD: 5 July, UK: In One Part Of London, Police Turn Blind Eye To Marijuana To Target Harder Crime

2001 AD: 19 August, FIJI: Marijuana a Fiji Election Issue: A Fijian high chief has said his people should be shot dead if found planting marijuana

2001 AD: 13 September, FRANCE: Koucher Opposes Drugs Law

2001 AD: 20 October, THE NETHERLANDS: Dutch Government Plans To Put Cannabis On Prescription

2001 AD: 14 December, INDONESIA: Marijuana Trafficker Gets Death Sentence

2001 AD: 16 December, UK: Study Finds No Cannabis Link To Hard Drugs

2002 AD: 25 January, NORWAY: Commission Set To Call For Decriminalization

2002 AD: 16 February, KENYA: Hashish Traffickers Jailed For 45 Years

2002 AD: 9 March, UK: Lib Dems back radical drug reforms

2002 AD: 12 March, CANADA: Doctors Want Marijuana Decriminalized

2002 AD: 14 March, UK: Reclassify Cannabis, Says Official Report

2002 AD: 1 June, MEXICO: Chihuahua Considers Legalizing Pot

2002 AD: 29 June, PHILIPPINES: Death For Marijuana

2002 AD: 10 July, David Blunkett’s Announcement of reclassification of Cannabis, and Oliver Letwin’s reply in Parliament

2002 AD: July, Australian Police Close Cannabis Cafe.

2002 AD: July, UK Drugs Tsar Hellawell Resigns Over Plans To Reclassify Cannabis Possession.

2002 AD: July, Canadian Judge Says Medical Cannabis Is Not Illegal.

2002 AD: August, Israeli Government Approves Use Of Cannabis By Terminally Ill.

2002 AD: October, Colin Davies Who Opened The Dutch Experience Cannabis Cafe In Stockport, UK, Is Sentenced To Three Years In Prison For Cannabis Offences.

2002 AD: November, Kenya Considers Legalizing Bhang.

2002 AD: November, UK Doctors Announce Cannabis Extracts Used In Trials On MS And Pain Patients Proving Effective.

2002 AD: November, Czech Doctors Claim Cannabis Helps Sufferers of Parkinson’s Disease.

2002 AD: December, US Study Defies Gateway Theory That Cannabis Use Leads To Use Of Hard Drugs.

2002 AD: December, Canadian Judge Orders Police To Return Medical Cannabis.

2002 AD: December UK, Oakland, US, City Authorities Deputize Medical Marijuana Club Founders.

2003 AD: February, US Jurors Become Angry That Trial Judge Had Not Informed Them That Ed Rosenthal Was Deputized by City Authorities in Oakland, after they convicted him of cultivation.

2003 AD: February, UN Narcotics Control Board Questions Canada’s Policy On Use Of Marijuana.

2003 AD: February, US Police Arrest 55 Suppliers Of Cannabis Paraphernalia.

2003 AD: March, Pharmacies in The Netherlands Sell Medical Cannabis More Expensive Than Many Coffee shops.

2003 AD: March, Danish Drug Dealers Go On Strike

2003 AD: March, JAMAICA: Bill To Legalize Ganja For Private Use

2003 AD: April, RUSSIA: Nostalgic Small Town Puts Cannabis On Its Flag

2007 AD: Hemp and Marijuana remain Illegal to possess and cultivate for medicine and natural resources. In some countries, there is even a death penalty for growing or possessing over a certain amount.

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Medical cannabis consumers should avoid High Fructose Corn Syrup

OAKLAND, CA - JANUARY 28:  iGrow employee Zeta...

Image by Getty Images via @daylife

Medical cannabis consumers (and everybody else) should limit high fructose corn syrup. Obesity and metabolic disease menace Americans (and much of the world’s people). Consuming high fructose corn syrup is a risk factor in these degenerative diseases. And it may well be that medical cannabis consumers are at even greater risk.

New research out of Princeton University found that High-fructose corn syrup causes characteristics of obesity in rats: Increased body weight, body fat and triglyceride levels. As the title indicates, rats fed water sweetened with high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) got fatter; heavier and had more fatty triglycerides in their blood than those whose water was sweetened with sugar. Even when consuming equal calories, the HFCS rats got fatter. Worse yet, the researchers note, “This increase in body weight with HFCS was accompanied by an increase in adipose fat, notably in the abdominal region, and elevated circulating triglyceride levels.” So in addition to obesity, these last two symptoms characterize Metabolic Syndrome, a dangerous but common medical condition associated with cardiovascular disease.

The Princeton study is only the last to implicate HFCS as a special villain in the ongoing obesity epidemic. Michael Pollan, in The Omnivore’s Dilemma documents how American propensity to grow corn, the Farm Bill, and fuel-based fertilizers produce a river of corn calories from the country’s farmlands. A convenient, profitable and vast market is enabled when the corn calories are converted into HFCS and added to any number of foods, greatly upping the caloric intake of the average person, especially Americans. If, as the Princeton and other research suggests, consuming more HFCS not only just ups calories but also has special properties for causing fat tissue, especially abdominal fat, then it must be minimized in the diet.

Medical marijuana users should closely monitor their own weight and physical condition, and work to avoid over weight and excess fat. Cannabis is known to stimulate appetite, and is very useful against wasting diseases. But that is the opposite problem for most of us. All people living in an obesogenic environment of little physical labor and easy access to calorie dense food are at risk of excess fat. Cannabis consumers might be at extra risk.

A possible problem is that activation of the endocannabinoid receptor system is associated with some negative cardio-metabolic indicators. This receptor system is activated in response to consumption of cannabis, especially by THC. Although many of THC’s actions as an anti-inflammatory, antioxidant and perhaps anti-tumor properties are welcome, some of its cardio-metabolic effects are more in question. This topic will be covered more in future posts. In any case the medical cannabis user is wise to guard against obesity and abdominal fat.

Specific ways medical cannabis users and anyone else interested in avoiding (or reducing) obesity and metabolic syndrome are:

Consume no soft drink calories. Soft drinks sweetened with HFCS are especially damaging, but sugared beverages are chocked with calories. If you drink soft drinks, drink only 0 calorie drinks.

Eliminate fast food. Nearly all fast food is filled with extra calories from HFCS.

Eat nutrient dense food, especially nuts, fruits and vegetables. Walnuts are incredibly nutritious; so are hemp seeds.

Walk at least 10,000 steps per day, measured with a pedometer. Interval training with some faster steps, such as running, is optimal.

Don’t sit too much or too long. Activity breaks are essential for your metabolic health.

Article originally available at: http://yourbrainonbliss.com/Blog/?p=1106

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Marijuana is safer than Aspirin

When Bayer introduced aspirin in 1899, cannabis was America’s number one painkiller. Until marijuana prohibition began in 1937, the US Pharmacopoeia listed cannabis as the primary medicine for over 100 diseases. Cannabis was such an effective analgesic that the American Medical Association (AMA) argued against prohibition on behalf of medical progress. Since the herb is extremely potent and essentially non-toxic, the AMA considered it a potential wonder drug.

Instead, the invention of aspirin gave birth to the modern pharmaceutical industry and Americans switched away from cannabis in the name of “progress.” But was it really progress? There can be no doubt that aspirin has a long history as the drug of choice for the self-treatment of migraines, arthritis, and other chronic pain. It is cheap and effective. But is it as safe as cannabis?

History:

  • Marijuana has been used for over 5,000 years.
  • No one has ever overdosed on marijuana.
  • Aspirin has been used for 108 years.
  • Approximately 500 people die every year by taking aspirin

The Law:

  • Marijuana is a Schedule 1 drug, meaning the US government believes it is extremely dangerous, highly addictive, and of no medical value.
  • Aspirin is available for pennies and can be purchased by children at any drug, grocery, or convenience store. Often they are just handed out free by people with no medical education.

Marijuana side effects and dangers:

  • The dangers of marijuana include possible respiratory problems caused by the deposition of burnt plant material on the lungs. This danger can be eliminated with alternate forms of consumption such as eating or vaporizing the medicine.
  • For two to four hours, marijuana causes short-term memory loss, a slight reduction in reaction time, and a reduction in cognitive ability. (It makes you stupid for a little while.)These conditions DO NOT persist after the herb wears off.
  • Hunger
  • Paranoia
  • Depression
  • Laughter
  • Introspection
  • Creative Impulse
  • Euphoria
  • Tiredness
  • Forgetfulness

Aspirin side effects and dangers:

  • When taken with alcohol, aspirin can cause stomach bleeding.
  • Reye Syndrome in children: fat begins to develop around the liver and other organs of the child, eventually putting severe pressure on the brain. Death is common within a few days.
  • People with hemophilia can die.
  • People with hyperthyroidism suffer elevated T4 levels.
  • Stomach problems include dyspepsia, heartburn, upset stomach, stomach ulcers with gross bleeding, and internal bleeding leading to anemia.
  • Dizziness, ringing in the ears, hearing loss, vertigo, vision disturbances, and headaches.
  • Heavy sweating
  • Irreversible liver damage
  • Inflamation and gradual destruction of the kidneys
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Abdominal pain
  • Lethargy
  • Hyperthermia
  • Dyspepsia: a gnawing or burning stomach pain accompanied by bloating, heartburn, nausea, vomiting and burping.
  • Tachypnea: Abnormally fast breathing
  • Respiratory Alkalosis: a condition where the amount of carbon dioxide found in the blood drops to a level below normal range brought on by abnormally fast breathing.
  • Cerebral Edema: Water accumulates on the brain. Symptoms include headaches, decreased level of consciousness, loss of eyesight, hallucinations, psychotic behavior, memory loss and coma. If left untreated, it can lead to death.
  • Hallucinations, confusion, and seizure.
  • Prolonged bleeding after operations or post-trauma for up to 10 days after last aspirin.
  • Aspirin can interact with some other drugs, such as diabetes medication. Aspirin changes the way the body handles these drugs and can lead to a drug overdose and death.

If you think that cannabis is actually safer than aspirin, you are not alone. In October 2000, Dr. Leslie Iversen of the Oxford University Department of Pharmacology said the same thing.

In her book, ‘The Science of Marijuana,’ Dr. Iversen presents the scientific evidence that cannabis is, by-and-large, a safe drug. Dr. Iversen found cannabis had “an impressive record” when compared to tobacco, alcohol, or even aspirin.

“Tetrahydrocannabinol is a very safe drug,” she said. “Even such apparently innocuous medicines as aspirin and related steroidal anti-inflammatory compunds are not safe.”

So if safety is your concern, cannabis is clearly a much better choice than aspirin. If you eat it or vaporize it, it just might be the safest painkiller the world has ever known.

comparingdangers.jpg

Dependence: How difficult it is for the user to quit, the relapse rate, the percentage of people who eventually become dependent, the rating users give their own need for the substance and the degree to which the substance will be used in the face of evidence that it causes harm.

Withdrawal: Presence and severity of characteristic withdrawal symptoms.

Tolerance: How much of the substance is needed to satisfy increasing cravings for it, and the level of stable need that is eventually reached.

Reinforcement: A measure of the substance’s ability, in human and animal tests, to get users to take it again and again, and in preference to other substances.

Intoxication: Though not usually counted as a measure of addiction in itself, the level of intoxication is associated with addiction and increases the personal and social damage a substance may do.

This chart originally appeared on DrugWarFacts.org.

Source: On Marijuana

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