Tumgik
#legalize cannabis
Text
Tumblr media
607 notes · View notes
wiltedrosebouquet · 3 days
Text
I’m SO curious, if you have OSDDID or a dissociative disorder, please vote on this and share it around. Smoking in this context is interchangeable with any THC consumption method (edibles, tinctures etc are included).
20 notes · View notes
incitingincidents · 25 days
Text
Tumblr media
Ethereal Hollows
21 notes · View notes
smeetlinglord · 3 months
Text
🏴🗞️🎥 KEEP THIS SAME ENERGY AFTER THE CEASEFIRE, BECAUSE GENOCIDE WILL CONTINUE TO HAPPEN AS LONG AS CAPITALISM STILL EXISTS.
THE FIGHT DOESN'T END ANYWHERE - YOUR CIVIC DUTY WILL BE LIFELONG, BUT YOU WILL NEVER BE ALONE. 🏴🗞️🎥
15 notes · View notes
thetruemek · 26 days
Text
Weed is now (somewhatttt) legal in my country.
Stilllll not sure if it's an elaborate April fool's joke or not lol
10 notes · View notes
ennacostello · 25 days
Text
Tumblr media
13 notes · View notes
Text
Minnesota's Democratic Governor, Tim Walz, today reiterated his promise to sign a marijuana legalization bill that arrived at his desk on Saturday. That will make Minnesota, which legalized medical marijuana in 2014, the 23rd state to allow recreational use.
The Minnesota House and Senate, both of which are controlled by Democrats, had previously approved slightly different legalization bills. H.F. 100, which both chambers passed last week, reconciles those differences.
Adults 21 or older will be allowed to possess two ounces or less of marijuana in public, share that amount with other adults, keep two pounds or less at home, and grow up to eight plants, four of which are mature. Those provisions take effect on August 1.
The bill also establishes an Office of Cannabis Management to license and regulate commercial production and distribution. Marijuana products will be subject to a 10% retail tax, in addition to standard state and local sales taxes (which total about 8% in Minneapolis, for example). Local governments will be allowed to regulate retailers and cap their number but will not be allowed to ban them entirely. Rep. Zack Stephenson (DFL–Coon Rapids), a co-author of the bill, said licensed sales should begin in 12 to 18 months.
Cannabis consumption initially will be limited to private residences. But the law eventually will allow marijuana use at specially licensed businesses and events.
Driving under the influence of marijuana will remain illegal. But Minnesota does not have a per se standard that makes a driver automatically guilty based on THC in his blood. Its law requires evidence of impairment.
H.F. 100 eliminates some marijuana offenses and downgrades others. It requires automatic expungement of misdemeanor marijuana possession records, a process that the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension says may take until August 2024 to complete. The bill creates a review board to consider resentencing of people with marijuana felony records.
A recent SurveyUSA poll found that 64% of Minnesota voters support marijuana legalization, including 81% of Democrats and 49% of Republicans. That is similar to the national breakdown among American adults that Gallup reported last fall.
"The system that we have right now is not working," state Sen. Lindsey Port (DFL–Burnsville) said before the vote on the marijuana bill in her chamber, where she was the lead sponsor. "The best way that we can protect our kids from access to cannabis is by legalizing and regulating."
38 notes · View notes
phinilez · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
35 notes · View notes
Text
😈🔥😈
3 notes · View notes
bobbycollector · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
Healing with Cannabis
With cannabis approved in a growing number of states, the District of Columbia, and two U.S. territories; medical cannabis approved in at least 37 states; and hemp (very-low-THC cannabis) off the controlled substances list, millions now treat their ills with medical cannabis or non-intoxicating cannabinoids like CBD. But lots of them don't know why or how cannabis works in the body.   Healing with Cannabis tells readers about an ancient biological system newly discovered in every vertebrate on the planet--the endocannabinoid system. This system is the only reason cannabis works in the body, and it's why cannabis is effective in a broad range of disorders.   The book offers an informal tone, humor, interviews with some of the world's most knowledgeable cannabinoid scientists, color images, and a selection of research and clinical trials to recount the story of the endocannabinoid system, its origins in the earliest forms of life on Earth, the evolution of its elements, and the discoveries, millions of years later, of more of its elements over time.   Healing with Cannabis explains the surprising reasons evolution conserved the endocannabinoid system over a billion years, and tells specifically how cannabis has positive effects on some of society's most devastating illnesses, including neurodegenerative diseases, posttraumatic stress disorder, pain, movement disorders, cancer and chemotherapy, and addiction.   The book also shows how medical cannabis, widely available, will change the face of public health, and how nearly everyone can benefit from this versatile medicine that has a 5,000-year history of safe and effective use.
[bobbycollector] is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com
6 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
109 notes · View notes
cosmicstoner · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Jilly Bean Is Amazing. Very uplifting and great mood booster! 💕
77 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
49 notes · View notes
reggie-gayflx · 8 months
Text
Well as the saying goes "Better late than never"
4 notes · View notes
sharontheganja · 1 year
Text
youtube
Mega baked
7 notes · View notes
Text
Marijuana was the big topic at the Capitol on Thursday, with a hearing on two bills that would legalize recreational use and sales in Nebraska.
LB 22, by Sen. Justin Wayne of Omaha, would decriminalize use and possession of the drug.
LB 634, by Sen. Terrell McKinney of Omaha would allow for the sale of cannabis to anyone over 21.
“The federal government continues to cling on, as it does today, to a policy that has origins in racism, xenophobia, and whose principal effect has been to ruin the lives of many generations of people,” McKinney said.
LB 634 would also focus on helping people of color and low-income individuals, who McKinney said are disproportionately targeted for possession of marijuana by law enforcement.
Some testifiers said Nebraskans have wanted these bills for years.
“The polls show consistently, the people of the state want cannabis legal in some form,” said Spike Eickholt with the American Civil Liberties Union of Nebraska. “You may not like the forms of these bills, but ultimately, what might happen is that the voters are just going to approve something you really don’t like, and then you’re going to be stuck with it.”
One concern brought up by the opposition was how the black market contributes to marijuana sales.
“The black market is alive and well in states that have legal marijuana and in states that have illegal marijuana,” said Col. John Bolduc, the superintendent of the Nebraska State Patrol. “I believe one of the testifiers suggested that it’s easy to access and it’s affordable. That’s true.”
Bolduc said if the bills are passed, the black market would undercut legitimate businesses.
Lorelle Mueting of Heartland Family Service said legalization would put the safety of everyone in the state at risk.
“When people use it more, we will inevitably see more impairment problems that affect more than just the person using,” Mueting said. “Marijuana is a psychoactive substance, which means it causes a high, and when under the influence of THC, a person does not have the ability to make good decisions.”
Under the legislation, the drug would be taxed, which supporters said could bring millions in revenue to the state.
“Prohibitionists must understand that prohibition isn’t working, hasn’t worked and never will work,” Jerry Moler said.
The Judiciary Committee only heard testimony on the bills, but it could vote on them as early as next week.
45 notes · View notes