cannabis

  • More than 2,700 years ago, worshipers at a "holy of holies" shrine in Israel may have gotten high on weed. Researchers discovered burnt cannabis and frankincense at the site, which was located in the Kingdom of Judah. Researchers made the discovery after analyzing ancient residues left on two altars at the shrine. The burnt cannabis is "the first known evidence of [a] hallucinogenic substance found in the Kingdom of Judah," a region that now includes parts of the West Bank and central Israel, the researchers wrote in the study. The cannabis finding indicates that people may have purposefully used the plant for its "hallucinogenic ingredients," to stimulate ecstasy during cultic ceremonies.

  • Paderu is the main town in the area and the cannabis produced in the entire belt is popularly called Paderu ganja. This region is quickly becoming the cannabis capital of India, say officials. While cannabis is grown in several parts of the country, this region and the neighbouring Malkangiri district of Odisha has seen a spurt in cultivation. In the eight mandals, the area under cannabis cultivation is estimated to be 10,000 acres spread across 1,000 (of the total 3,000) villages, according to data available with the office of deputy commissioner of prohibition and excise (enforcement) of Visakhapatnam district. (See also: Modern technology to end ganja cultivation in Visakhapatnam Agency areas)

  • Daniela LudwigGermany's center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) is openly considering a momentous u-turn in their party's attitude to the legalization of cannabis."Cannabis could be freed for personal use, of course with controlled production and distribution," CDU interior policy spokesman Marian Wendt told the RND network. "The resources freed in the police and judiciary should be used to fight the illegal trade." Wendt's statement came after the German government's drug commissioner Daniela Ludwig also signaled a more liberal new drug policy in the conservative party. Ludwig, of the CDU's Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU), said in an interview, "We need to stop with the ideologically-charged black-or-white debates, because we won't get any further."

  • tunisia cannabisTunisian human rights activists and social media users on Sunday slammed the sentencing of three people, all aged under 30, to 30 years each in prison for cannabis use. Mohamed Faouzi Daoudi, a spokesman for the court in Kef in northern Tunisia, said that the decision was "not just about drug use, but also the use of a sports field for their consumption." He said Tunisian law reserved harsh penalties for drug use in public spaces, and cited "law 52". Amna Guellali, from campaign group Amnesty International, said such sentences for drug use and possession were "unacceptable on principle". Social media users also denounced the court decision and called for demonstrations and changes to the law. (See also: Tunisian PM pledges review of 'harsh' sentences in cannabis cases)

  • brasil guerra drogasA cantora Anittadefendeu a legalização da maconha durante uma transmissão ao vivo com o rapper Filipe Rett. Para apoiar essa pauta política, ela também pediu ajuda a Lula, o pré-candidato do PT à Presidência em quem ela já anunciou que vai votar recentemente. "Acho que proibir as drogas não faz com que as pessoas parem de usar. Em vez de estarem colaborando com essa guerra na favela que só mata o pobre, gente que não tem nada a ver com isso e só deixa rico esse povo que não paga imposto e que lava dinheiro, tinha que virar empresa, gerar emprego", disse a cantora. "Eu sou a favor de virar tudo empresa legalizada", concluiu ela.

  • medmenLast week was a wild one for MedMen, the multistate cannabis retailer based in Culver City, California. As CEO Adam Bierman was getting ready to do a Reddit AMA ("Ask Me Anything") a character named Jason Spatafora tweeted out copies of emails that, Spatafora claimed, showed that the company was unable to pay vendors in cash, and was offering to give them shares of its depleted stock instead. Like a lot of cannabis companies, MedMen grew too big, too fast, as Bierman himself reluctantly admitted. Now, he said, the goal is "sustainability." The company, 10 years old, runs about 30 stores across the country, as well as large cultivation facilities. (See also: Nickeled and Dymed - The collapse of Dionymed Brands (DYME) highlights the factors at work in the great cannabis crash)

  • mexico supremoLa Suprema Corte de Justicia de la Nación (SCJN) anuló las prohibiciones para el uso recreativo de la mariguana, con lo cual la hierba se podrá consumir sin necesidad de tramitar un amparo. El fallo ordena a la Secretaría de Salud (Ssa) y a la Comisión Federal para la Protección contra Riesgos Sanitarios (Cofepris) emitir normas con el fin de regular el consumo de cannabis, y se hizo un nuevo exhorto al Congreso de la Unión para que legisle sobre su producción y comercio. El Pleno de Ministros apenas alcanzó la mayoría calificada de ocho votos, necesaria para eliminar los últimos párrafos de los artículos 235 y 247 de la Ley General de Salud (LGS) que aún prohibían el uso de la mariguana con fines que no fueran estrictamente médicos o científicos.

  • thailand anutinA new announcement categorising flowers or buds of the cannabis plant as "controlled herbs" is a temporary measure to curb the proliferation of recreational cannabis use in Thailand while the deliberation of the bill on cannabis and hemp continues to drag on, Deputy Prime Minister and Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said. This latest announcement is only one of the many small legal measures being used to control the recreational use of cannabis that has increased rapidly following the decriminalisation of cannabis in June. The problem of the increasing recreational use of cannabis continues while Thailand waits for the cannabis and hemp bill -- an all-in-one legal mechanism to ensure better control of cannabis use in the country and limit it to medicinal purposes -- to be passed into law.

  • colombia dosis minima policiaFue aprobado en primer debate el proyecto que busca regular el cannabis de uso adulto en Colombia. Al tratarse de un acto legislativo, pasó el primero de los ocho debates que le quedan en el Congreso. El proyecto, entre otras cosas, pretende modificar el artículo 49 de la Constitución Política, que prohíbe el porte y el consumo de sustancias estupefacientes o psicotrópicas. Con la modificación, se adicionaría al texto constitucional un inciso que diga que la prohibición prevista no aplicaría o tendría excepción para el caso de las personas mayores de edad que porten o consuman el cannabis y sus derivados. En consecuencia, el proyecto solo permitiría el consumo a adultos, por lo que, según el documento, se “restringirá el cannabis o sus derivados en entornos escolares” y se podrá “limitar en espacios públicos y zonas comunes”.

  • colombia marijuanaEn la Comisión Primera del Senado, se aprobó con 11 votos a favor y 3 en contra, la ley que busca regular el consumo de marihuana de manera recreativa en Colombia. La iniciativa establece una nueva reglamentación en torno al “uso adulto” del cannabis. El senador Luis Fernando Velasco, ponente de la propuesta, explicó que lo que se pretende es quitarle el control de este negocio ilícito a las mafias que operan en el país. Además, los promotores de la iniciativa insistieron en que no buscan promover el consumo del cannabis y mucho menos entre los menores de edad. Un proyecto de marihuana recreativa no consiguió votos en la Cámara. (Véase también: Proyecto para regular marihuana en adultos pasó su primer debate)

  • Adolescents and young adults who use electronic cigarettes are far more likely to also use marijuana, according to new research.The study, published online in JAMA Paediatrics, said the odds of marijuana use among young people who used e-cigarettes was 3.5 times greater than among those who said they had not used e-cigarettes.The research examined marijuana use among 10- to 24-year-olds through a compilation of 21 studies from the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand.The authors, who include researchers from Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, say policymakers should pay attention to this connection.

  • argentina legalizacion marchaLa ley de drogas de Argentina cumple 30 años este fin de semana, y a pesar de que la Corte Suprema de Justicia recomendó hace una década dejar de perseguir a los usuarios de sustancias psicoactivas con el trascendental fallo Arriola, las estadísticas muestran que hay casi tantos detenidos por tenencia de sustancias o cultivo de cannabis que por comercialización. El ministerio de Seguridad que dirige Patricia Bullrich es sólo un eslabón más del mecanismo de fondos públicos que en los últimos tres años gastó 122 millones de dólares en perseguir a usuarios de drogas y cultivadores de marihuana, según un informe realizado por RESET, una organización compuesta por abogados, psicólogos, trabajadores sociales, sociólogos, politólogos, licenciados en comunicación y estudiantes.

  • argentina cannabis flagVarios centenares de personas desafiaron a las altas temperaturas en Buenos Aires en una concentración para pedir una ley que legalice el consumo de marihuana en todos sus usos en Argentina. Durante la concentración, que terminó con una marcha hasta el Congreso, se recogieron firmas para presentar un proyecto de ley al Parlamento que despenalice el consumo de la marihuana recreativa y legalice el autocultivo de plantas de cannabis en los hogares particulares. Según un portavoz de la organización Flores de Libertad, una de las organizadoras de la marcha, el proyecto de ley crearía un registro de autocultivadores y un consejo consultivo que se encargaría de regular el tipo de cultivo permitido así como se formaría en los beneficios medicinales del cannabis al personal sanitario.

  • jamaica flag ganjaAurora, a Canadian listed cannabis company, has sold its Jamaica asset for less than its CDN$4.5 million ­valuation in order to get cash. “The company also accepted an offer to sell its Jamaica property for gross proceeds of CDN$3.4 million,” said Aurora in a market filing. The property in Jamaica was idle but would have formed the base for its local operations. Across the local sector, sales between licensed ­dealers in Jamaica – for instance, farmers selling to herb houses – have been falling. The CLA has issued some 60 licences since October 2017 and 15 export authorisations to seven licensees since November 2018. All licensees that have applied to export cannabis have been granted export authorisations.

  • dollar cannabisFederal law still treats cannabis as an illegal substance, and traditional banks have been wary of getting involved. Wealthy financiers have moved in to fill the void — including a growing cast of investors from Russia and former Soviet Union countries who have helped shape the industry's growth. One of the nation’s largest cannabis companies, Curaleaf, is led by one of Russia’s most influential financiers and backed by another, allowing the company to pursue rapid expansion and hefty acquisitions. Investment firms have taken their own stakes: A San Francisco-based venture capital fund run by the Russian tech entrepreneur Pavel Cherkashin, backed largely by investors from Russia and the former Soviet Union, has put $2 million into Pure Spectrum, a Colorado-based business marketing CBD products.

  • femke halsemaIn the Netherlands, we used to look on the international “war on drugs” with a certain amount of disdain. Its solutions were prohibition, criminalisation, stiff penalties and sentences; our national drug policy, on the other hand, focused for decades on reducing the health risks for users – and was relatively successful. Amsterdam, as an international financial hub, now serves as a marketplace where the demand for drugs is being determined, and negotiations and payments are being made from all over the world. It has become a destination for drug lords to launder their money or channel it to tax havens. Their money is increasingly contaminating the legal economy, especially in real estate, business services and hospitality. (See also: Amsterdam mayor wants Europe to decriminalize cocaine: “War on drugs isn’t working)

  • A pesar de que la legalización del cannabis medicinal está avanzada en la región, todavía hay muchas trabas que impiden su producción y comercialización. Así lo reveló el estudio realizado por Alfredo Pascual y publicado por el Marijuana Business Daily International, titulado ‘Cannabis en América Latina: regulaciones y oportunidades’. El estudio revisa el estado del marco legal del cannabis en Argentina, Brasil, Chile, Colombia, México, Paraguay, Perú y Uruguay. Por ahora Argentina, Chile, Colombia, México, Paraguay y Uruguay ya tienen regulada la ley para el cannabis medicinal, mientras que Perú tiene implementada una ley, pero no hay acceso a ningún producto. (Véase también: Hay 386 licencias para producción y transformación de cannabis en Colombia)

  • uruguay bandera cannabisLa regulación del mercado de cannabis hoy no habilita la venta a turistas en Uruguay, pero el gobierno de Luis Lacalle Pou viene trabajando en los últimos meses para activar esta opción. Mientras unos sostienen que desde 2014 ya existe un turismo vinculado a la marihuana ilegal, otros plantean que fomentar el consumo no es el objetivo de un cambio normativo. Eso sí, nadie en el gobierno quiere hablar o presentar el paso que se dará a corto plazo como “turismo cannábico”. Porque en el gobierno entienden que la reglamentación de regulación y control del cannabis presenta una “inequidad de base” al permitir el acceso al cannabis solo a ciudadanos uruguayos y extranjeros residentes. (Véase también: Uruguay: el Gobierno evalúa vender marihuana a los turistas)

  • canada dollar cannabisAs cannabis companies eye expansion in European and South American markets, Asia is poised to be a new frontier for some major Canadian pot players. Despite being the world’s most populous continent, it is estimated that Asia’s cannabis usage is about two per cent, or 85.5 million people, according to London-based cannabis data provider Prohibition Partners. However, several Asian countries are on the cusp of embracing medical cannabis and the continent could see its marijuana market grow to as much as US$5.8 billion by 2024, Prohibition Partners said in a recent report. That’s caught the attention of some Canadian cannabis players including Canopy Growth Corp.

  • cannabis shop uruguayUruguay fue pionero en la regulación de la producción y venta de cannabis. La legalización de esa actividad, a través de las vías previstas, marcó un ejemplo a nivel mundial y numerosos países se han fijado en el espejo uruguayo para emprender un camino similar. Sin embargo, ciertos factores derivados de una mayor punitividad hacen que esa realidad sea hoy bastante diferente. La advertencia corresponde a la Asociación de Grow Shops y Comercios Afines, integrada por 25 empresas, tiendas de cultivo, distribuidoras y fabricantes de sustratos y productos para ese cultivo. Claudia de Mello, una de las integrantes de ese colectivo, marcó en el Parlamento un descenso en esa actividad. No solo por aspectos económicos, sino por el "aumento del miedo".