TREMBLE, KING ALCOHOL

I wonder what SSS thinks about this? Personally I’d rather share the world and the road with stoners than drunks any day of the week.** I still don’t agree with legalizing weed (as opposed to decriminalization) because it just invites Uncle Sugar to become even more involved in people’s lives, but the results, if accurate, indicate changes that few, if any, predicted prior to legalization.

“A report by the Cannabiz Consumer Group (C2G) found that more than a quarter of the 40,000 people surveyed are already substituting bud (or would if they lived in weed-friendly territory) for beer. Overall beer sales dipped in 2015, and the C2G study predicts that cannabis could eventually “canna-balize” 7.1 percent of its current retail market revenues (resulting in a drop of more than $2 billion in beer sales).

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MARIJUANA TRUTH

Almost two years ago SSS made a prediction………..

Taken from:

COLORADO AND MARIJUANA – THE BUBBLE WILL BURST

Posted on 11th January 2014 by SSS

“Legal marijuana sales in Colorado, undoubtedly spurred by the initial high demand, is already selling for 2-3 times the price you would pay on the black market. Just like New York and NYC, which enjoyed an initial explosion in cigarette tax revenues when they enacted Draconian taxes, this will not last. The Mexicans who control the marijuana black markets in Colorado will see to it. “In 2012 the Mexican Competitiveness Institute issued a report saying that Mexico’s cartels would lose as much as $1.425 billion if Colorado legalized marijuana.” That’s not pocket change, and the people you’re trying to take that money from carry guns. Guns with high capacity magazines, which are against the law in Colorado. Heh. Don’t you just love the irony?”

“I have said repeatedly in the past that these violent organizations will not go quietly into that good night. Over time, I will be proven right. And it will be sooner rather than later because the stakes are so much higher. Avoid the rush and express your appreciation for this keen market analysis with your effusive praise as soon as possible.”

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PRICES
Well, well, well! I wasn’t going to address the price aspect of weed because my own personal experience with weed prices is a bit dated. I intended to address the Big Bad Mexican Drug Cartel influence on legal weed that SSS claimed would come to pass. I’ll get to that in a moment but since it’s so easy to destroy his “price of weed” nonsense I’ll do that first.

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WOULD YOU LIKE SOME THC WITH THAT COOKIE?

IT’S TGIF. LET’S KICK IT OFF WITH THIS HEARWARMING STORY. I LOVE HAPPY ENDINGS. DEDICATED TO OUR DEAR FRIEND FROM COLORADO, BLOTTOMATIK.

A teenager in Colorado died after consuming an entire marijuana cookie that contained 6 servings of marijuana’s active ingredient, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). The 19-year-old man had received a marijuana cookie from his friend, a 23-year-old who bought the product from a store. The sales clerk instructed the friend to divide the cookie into six pieces, with each piece containing about 10 mg of THC, the recommended serving size established by Colorado authorities.

At first, the 19-year-old followed these instructions, and ate just part of the cookie. But after about 30 to 60 minutes, he didn’t feel any effects, so he ate the rest of the cookie, according to the report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment. Over the next few hours, the man showed erratic speech and hostile behaviors. About 2.5 hours after he ate the whole cookie, he jumped off a balcony on the fourth floor of his building, and died from trauma from the fall. Officials determined that marijuana intoxication was the chief contributing factor to the man’s death.

P.S. from SSS: You Stoners in Colorado have a nice weekend. Watch those cookies. Heh.

WOULD YOU LIKE SOME PESTICIDE WITH YOUR WEED?

It just keeps getting “better” (heh) for the legal pot industry.

According to Kristen Wyatt, reporting for the Associated Press, legal and commercial marijuana growers in states like Colorado and Washington must be on the lookout for two things that can quickly wreck havoc on their plants: mildew and spider mites. (The same is also true for illegal growers, of course.) Both pests can create a multi-million headache very quickly for commercial growers if not treated properly.

But there’s a problem. Some growers, including those in states where medical marijuana use is legal, are turning to industrial-strength pesticides to treat their plants. No wait, there are two problems. Marijuana is considered an illicit crop by the federal government, so there is no roadmap on the use of pesticides on marijuana plants. And chemists and horticulturists can’t help much either because marijuana is used in various ways such as smoked, eaten, and as an oil rubbed on the skin. There’s virtually NOTHING available in the scientific community to tell growers how to grow and maintain an illegal crop for sale safely to the general public. Nothing.

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HILLARY HITTING CHIPOTLE AFTER SMOKING WEED IN HER VAN

Poor Hil. She’s trying to act like the plebs by cruising around Iowa in a van. After getting the munchies from smoking weed, she had to have a chicken burrito at Chipotle. And no one recognized her. Not one person. I bet she was bummed.

Here is her actual arrival at Chipotle.

PARTY ON, GARTH

Oh, my.  This article is going to upset the people at NORML, in Colorado and Washington, and more than a few here on TBP. The Tucson shooter, Jared Loughner, killed 6 people and injured 13 others. From his early teens, he is a known, documented heavy marijuana smoker who dropped out of high school in the 11th grade and descended into a self-made, hellish world of isolation. I’m sure he started out as a casual marijuana smoker.

Do you know a young (pre-25) male who is a casual marijuana smoker? Will he end up like Jared Loughner? Oh, my.

Casual marijuana use may come with some not-so-casual side effects.

For the first time, researchers at Northwestern University have analyzed the relationship between casual use of marijuana and brain changes – and found that young adults who used cannabis just once or twice a week showed significant abnormalities in two important brain structures.

The study’s findings, to be published Wednesday in the Journal of Neuroscience, are similar to those of past research linking chronic, long-term marijuana use with mental illness and changes in brain development.

Dr. Hans Breiter, co-senior study author, said he was inspired to look at the effects of casual marijuana use after previous work in his lab found that heavy cannabis use caused similar brain abnormalities to those seen in patients with schizophrenia.

“There were abnormalities in their working memory, which is fundamental to everything you do,” Breiter, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, told FoxNews.com. “When you make judgments or decisions, plan things, do mathematics – anything you do always involves working memory. It’s one of the core fundamental aspects of our brains that we use every day. So given those findings, we decided we need to look at casual, recreational use.”

For their most recent study, Breiter and his team analyzed a very small sample of patients between the ages of 18 and 25: 20 marijuana users and 20 well-matched control subjects. The marijuana users had a wide range of usage routines, with some using the drug just once or twice a week and others using it every single day.

Utilizing magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), the researchers analyzed the participants’ brains, focusing on the nucleus accumbens (NAC) and the amygdala – two key brain regions responsible for processing emotions, making decisions and motivation. They looked at these brain structures in three different ways, measuring their density, volume and shape.

According to Breiter, all three were abnormal in the casual marijuana users.

“For the NAC, all three measures were abnormal, and they were abnormal in a dose-dependent way, meaning the changes were greater with the amount of marijuana used,” Breiter said. “The amygdala had abnormalities for shape and density, and only volume correlated with use. But if you looked at all three types of measures, it showed the relationships between them were quite abnormal in the marijuana users, compared to the normal controls.”

Because these brain regions are central for motivation, the findings from Northwestern help support the well-known theory that marijuana use leads to a condition called amotivation. Also called amotivational syndrome, this psychological condition causes people to become less oriented towards their goals and purposes in life, as well as seem less focused in general.

Given these eye-opening results, Breiter said that more research is needed to look into marijuana’s effects on the brain – even in those who use the drug only once or twice a month.

“We need to see what happens longitudinally,” Breiter said. “What happens as you follow people over time? What happens if they stop using – do these bad effects continue? What happens if you can intervene early?…My worry is we haven’t studied this compound and here we are looking to change legislation on it.”

Although Breiter’s team members did not examine the patients’ cognitive symptoms, they do believe that the brain abnormalities seen in their study could lead to substantial effects on brain development and behavior, especially given the young ages of the participants. Breiter also acknowledged the problems of analyzing a very small study sample – but said that their findings should still serve as a wake-up call to others.

“This study is just a beginning pilot study, but at the same time, the results that came out are the same as a canary in a coal mine,” Breiter said. “…The interaction of marijuana with brain development could be a significant problem.”