on 20-06-2014 09:49 AM
A huge plume of marijuana smoke is hovering over an Albanian town after a police crackdown on its notorious drug trade.
Heavily armed police were pelted with gunfire, grenades and even mortars as they tried to rid the town of Lazarat, Europe's biggest producer of marijuana, of its main crop, the Associated Press reports.
The hills of the village in the country's south yields around 900 tons of cannabis a year, worth close to $6.5 billion – or nearly half the small country's GDP.
The operation in the village, population 5000, is in its fifth day has seen the destruction of 80,000 plants and more than 12.8 tons of cannabis while 80 houses have been searched.
Residents have reportedly seen the events unfold on live television, burning their own crops as authorities close in.
"What did I do wrong? I just wanted five plants like everybody else," Lumturi Koli, a 42-year-old widower, told Reuters.
"I should have been first to plant them because I have to care for my children."
While thirteen people have been arrested for drug offences and firing on police, miraculously no-one has been killed despite long blasts of gunfire.
Four have been slightly wounded, including two shepherds who were hit by stray rounds.
The raids have been part of an overhaul push by Albania and its new Socialist government to gain entry into the European Union.
Read more Here
Heavily armed police were pelted with gunfire, grenades and even mortars
People living in small towns have guns, grenades and mortars? So they really are protecting their plantations!
"What did I do wrong? I just wanted five plants like everybody else," Lumturi Koli, a 42-year-old widower, told Reuters.
"I should have been first to plant them because I have to care for my children."
Sheesh, what happened to using land for growing food crops and keeping goats and chickens?
on 24-06-2014 05:14 AM
http://www.fda.gov/forconsumers/consumerupdates/ucm251830.htm
The FDA... you mentioned IF
...... their stance on opoid derivatives currently produced distributed and controlled by BIG PHARMA is interesting
...yesirree......doing a great job that Big pharma....doing a great job enhancing their bottom line.....sans duty of care
http://www.fda.gov/forconsumers/consumerupdates/ucm251830.htm
The White House on Tuesday unveiled a multi-agency plan aimed at reducing the “epidemic” of prescription drug
abuse in the U.S.—including an FDA-backed education program that zeros-in on reducing the misuse and
misprescribing of opioids.
FDA experts say extended-release and long-acting opioids—including OxyContin, Avinza, Dolophine, Duragesic, and eight other brand names
—are extensively misprescribed, misused, and abused, leading to overdoses, addiction, and even deaths across the United States.
FDA says a 2007 survey revealed that more than half of opioid abusers got the drug from a friend or relative.
Opioids—such as morphine and oxycodone—are used to treat moderate and severe pain.
Over the past few decades, drug makers have developed extended-release opioid formulas to treat people in pain over
a long period.
Widespread Problem
FDA estimates that more than 33 million Americans age 12 and older misused extended-release and long-acting
opioids during 2007—up from 29 million just five years earlier.
And in 2006, nearly 50,000 emergency room visits were related to opioids.
on 24-06-2014 06:38 AM
I think medical marijuana, would be a more attractive alternative pain relief option to some patients who don't want to take numerous
opiods..... or it could work in combination to reduce the amount they require.
on 24-06-2014 06:50 AM
A multi-party group of federal MPs will on Thursday launch a push to make cannabis legally available for medicinal purposes.The
parliamentary group on drug policy and law reform, convened by Labor, Liberal and Green MPs will begin advancing the issue with a
discussion in Parliament House including Lucy Haslam, whose 24-year-old son Dan has terminal cancer and takes cannabis –
illegally – to treat the nausea associated with his chemotherapy.
One of the convenors of the group, Liberal MP Sharman Stone, said the nation should seriously consider how cannabis might be
provided to people to promote health or reduce suffering.''If this product really works in the sense of reducing pain or improving the
mobility or other health outcomes for some people and it can be administered under medical supervision, then it would be terrible to
think we denied people access to that product,'' she told Fairfax Media.Dr Stone also said the nation should explore the potential of
hemp – a variety of cannabis plant which produces, oil, seeds and fibre – as an alternative crop for farmers.''It's one of those things
that should be almost a no-brainer, instead of being too hot to handle, and so our growers miss out on an opportunity to make
themselves less dependent on a single crop and to make more money,'' Dr Stone said.Agriculture Minister Barnaby Joyce, whose seat
of New England is home to the Haslams, recently met the family and formed the view that just as opium had long been used to relieve
pain, ''there may now be a place for the medicinal properties of cannabis''.''Provided it is approved by the Therapeutic Goods
Administration and is medically supervised it should be considered,'' Mr Joyce said.Labor MP Melissa Parke, a co-convenor of the
group of MPs, said it was ''time for Australia to move forward on this issue''.''There is substantial and growing evidence of the
medicinal value of cannabis, particularly as symptomatic relief in circumstances where no other drug is effective, but also for its
curative potential,'' Ms Parke said.''We can't allow a cultural stigma to prevent fair recognition and properly regulated use of a
naturally derived substance that provides relief to people in terrible pain, or the prospect of a reprieve from serious illness.''Another
co-convenor of the group, Greens Senator Richard Di Natale, who is also a medical doctor, said cannabis had been shown to be
effective in relieving nausea, stimulating appetite and treating muscle spasms.''It's a drug, like any other drug, that needs to be tightly
regulated, but to deny somebody who is suffering with a terminal illness effective medication . . . is shameful,'' Senator Di Natale
said.''It's done because people are too worried by the stigma associated with cannabis. They don't have the courage to look at the
science and the evidence, which is very clear.''Senator Di Natale said the federal government could licence growers of cannabis and
allow the drug to be dispensed by pharmacies.Mrs Haslam said cannabis had been a ''game changer'' for her son, relieving his
extreme nausea and allowing him to regain weight.''This is the one and only thing giving him an element of hope,'' she said.
The
Australian Medical Association acknowledges that cannabis ''has constituents that have potential therapeutic uses,'' and these
should be made available to patients if clinical trials established that they were safe and effective
.Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/mps-of-all-stripes-in-push-to-make-medicinal-m...
Indeed......some are becoming more educated on the matter....
on 24-06-2014 07:08 AM
http://www.jackherer.com/thebook/chapter-twelve/
Marijuana Medicine in 19th Century America
From 1850 to 1937, cannabis was used as the prime medicine for more than 100 separate illnesses or diseases in U.S.
Pharmacopoeia.
During all this time (until the 1940s), science, doctors, and drug manufacturers (Lilly, Parke-Davis, Squibb, etc.) had no
idea of its active ingredients.
Yet from 1842 until the 1890s, marijuana, generally called Cannabis Indica or Indian Hemp extractums, was one of the three items (after alcohol and opium) most used in patent and prescription drugs (in massive doses*, usually by oral ingestion).
*Doses given during the 19th century to American infants, children, youth, adults, women in childbirth, and senior citizens, in one day, were, in many cases, equal to what a current moderate-to-heavy American marijuana user probably consumes in a month or two, using U.S. government’s 1983 guidelines for comparison.
(so how come the bulk of those did not end up schizoid basket cases???)
( a glass of champagne???)
Violence was equated with alcohol use; addiction to morphine was known as the “soldiers’ illness.”
And so, during that era, cannabis gained favor and was even recommended as a way of helping alcoholics and addicts
recover.
However, cannabis medicines had been largely lost to the West since the days of the Inquisition.
(See Chapter 10, “A Look at the Sociology”)
Until, that is, W. B. O’Shaughnessy, a 30-year-old British physician serving in India’s Bengal* province, watched Indian
doctors use different hemp extracts successfully to treat all types of illness and disease then untreatable in the West,
including tetanus.
*”Bengal” means “Bhang Land,” literally Cannabis Land.
O’Shaughnessy then did an enormous (and the first known Western) study,* in 1839, and published a 40-page paper on the uses of cannabis medicines.
At the same time, a French doctor named Roche was making the same rediscovery of hemp in Middle Eastern medicines.
*O’Shaughnessy used patients, animals, and himself for his research and experiments.
Incidentally, O’Shaughnessy went on to become a millionaire and was knighted by Queen Victoria for building India’s
first telegraph system in the 1850s.
O’Shaughnessy’s medical paper and findings on hemp extracts stunned and swept through the Western medical
world. In just three years, cannabis was to become an American and European “superstar.”
Papers written by first-time American users (novices) and doctors using, treating, or experimenting with cannabis, told
straight forward accounts of its usually euphoric, and sometimes disphoric, mind and time-expanding properties for
both child and adult, as well as hilarity and increased appetites, especially the first few times they tried it.
Interestingly, during this whole period of time (1840s to 1930s) Eli Lilly, Squibb, Parke-Davis, Smith Brothers, Tildens,
etc., had no effective way to prolong its very short shelf life and had great difficulty standardizing dosages.
As noted before, marijuana medicine was so highly regarded by Americans (including some Protestant theologians) during the 19th century, that in 1860, for example, the Committee on Cannabis Indica for the Ohio State Medical Society reported and concluded that,
“High Biblical commentators [scholars]” believe “that the gall and vinegar, or myrrhed wine, offered to our Saviour,
immediately before his crucifixion, was in all probability, a preparation of Indian hemp [marijuana], and even speak of its earlier use in obstetrics.”*
*Reprinted from the transcripts of the 15th annual meeting of the Ohio State Medical Society, at White Sulphur Springs, Ohio, June 12-14, 1860, pg. 75-100.
The main reasons that cannabis medicines fell into disuse in America was the difficulty of identifying and standardizing dosage, e.g., in 1964, 27 years after America outlawed cannabis in 1937, Dr. Raphael Mechoulam of Tel Aviv University first discovered the THC delta molecules as the active ingredients in cannabis.
Also, doctors in the late l9th century could not find a way to inject it into humans with their brand new hypodermic needles…and still haven’t.
on 24-06-2014 07:15 AM
Yet from 1842 until the 1890s, marijuana, generally called Cannabis Indica or Indian Hemp extractums, was one of the three items (after alcohol and opium) most used in patent and prescription drugs (in massive doses*, usually by oral ingestion).
So Cannabis has in 130 years gone from the 3rd most prolific prescribed
medicinal drug used by man to at best a minimally prescribed drug
misunderstood and victimized by a legal drug market that much prefers profit
over proper prescription.
on 24-06-2014 09:10 AM
As "The Australian Medical Association acknowledges that cannabis ''has constituents that have potential therapeutic uses,'' and
these should be made available to patients..." hopefully we are not too far from it being made available by prescription to those who
Could benefit from using it.
on 24-06-2014 09:17 AM
http://www.theherald.com.au/story/2089701/plea-to-use-marijuana-oil-to-treat-cancer-pain/
on 24-06-2014 04:11 PM
My Hometown - give's it a whole new (happy) menaing
on 25-06-2014 05:17 PM
"A Greens senator says it's cruel to deny the ill access to medical cannabis because of the stigma associated with it.Senator Richard
di Natale, who is a doctor, says there's clear evidence that medical cannabis can be very effective for prescribed medical purposes.'I
just think it's cruel to deny people the option just because there's some stigma associated with it,' he told the Nine Network on
Sunday, amid a renewed push to legalise the drug for medical use.'We're going to push to try and get people on all sides of politics to
back this reform.'The science and the evidence is very, very clear
.'The recently re-established Parliamentary Group on Drug Policy
and Law Reform, convened by federal Labor, coalition and Green MPs, discussed the issue in Canberra on Thursday.Liberal co-
convenor Sharman Stone said trials had shown the value of using medicinal cannabis in relieving suffering associated with some
terminal conditions.'As a compassionate society we must join other developed nations in allowing the regulated use of medicinal
cannabis,' Ms Stone said in a statement.The NSW parliament is expected to consider legislation to give terminally ill patients access
to cannabis after senior cabinet ministers voiced support for a Private Members Bill to be introduced in August.Australia's largest
doctors' union, the Australian Medical Association, has acknowledged cannabis has 'therapeutic potential'.Senator di Natale said
politicians tend to shy away from controversial issues, but they had to be guided by science and evidence.He wants to see cannabis
growers licensed in the same way as poppy growers.'It's a very, very effective drug,' he said.'Medical marijuana is much less addictive
than some of the opiate-type painkillers we already give.'He said medical cannabis helped cancer patients manage their weight, pain
and nausea
.Share this:- See more at: http://www.skynews.com.au/news/politics/national/2014/06/22/senator-says-denying-medical-cannabis--c...
on 27-06-2014 09:34 AM
Are you following this thread?
http://community.ebay.com.au/t5/Community-Spirit/My-brother-and-Self-Defense/m-p/1341203#U1341203
Still think it's sad that all that MJ was destroyed?