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Legalising the sale of cannabis in specialist shops would generate £1bn a year in tax revenue and reduce the harm done to users and society, according to the most detailed plans ever drawn up for the liberalisation of UK drug laws.
The study, which was carried out by a panel of experts including scientists, academics and police chiefs, calls for the UK to follow the lead of some US states and allow the sale of cannabis to over-18s in licensed retail stores.
The report’s conclusions will form the basis of a new drugs policy being drawn up by the Liberal Democrat Party, which is expected to debate the issue at its spring conference later this week.
Cannabis legalisation in UK 'would raise £1bn a year in taxes'
In a major victory for state’s rights Monday, the Supreme Court rejected an effort by Nebraska and Oklahoma to have Colorado’s pot legalization declared unconstitutional.
The final ruling came out at 6-2 and although the justices have not publicly commented, their dismissal of the case puts an end to the lengthy lawsuit launched against Colorado by the two neighboring states.
Their argument purported that the plant, while legal in Colorado, is spilling across into their states where it is still very much an illicit substance, thereby hindering their anti-drug efforts and massively draining state resources.
However, Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, who would have heard the lawsuit, did not think this was justifiable ground to impose a reversal on Colorado’s state right to legalization. Since the justices have remained silent, one can only imagine the ruling the pair of justices may have handed down.
In December, The Obama Administration asked the Supreme Court to ignore this lawsuit. Although this was a great sign for Colorado, the final decision wasn't made until today. Needless to say, Colorado cannabis consumers are breathing a sigh of relief.
Does this backwards way of thinking have any implications for legalization in Nebraska and Oklahoma? We certainly hope not, but it's too early to tell. Although the federal ban on marijuana still stands, this ruling reinforces individual states’ right to legalize locally and provides one more step, no matter how tiny, on the road to the full repeal of national prohibition.
Rsearchers have concluded that MDMA ”” otherwise known as Molly; otherwise known as methylenedioxymethamphetamine; otherwise known as Millennial aspirin ”” is one of several psychedelic drugs useful in the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder. As Phase 2 of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies’ MDMA-assisted psychotherapy study comes to an end, the non-profit research and educational organization plans to meet this spring with the FDA to plan crucial Phase 3 clinical trials, which could lead to a new kind of prescription. And the application likely won’t end with PTSD. Because MDMA is known for increasing feelings of trust and compassion towards others, it’s an ideal adjunct to psychotherapy.
In 2013, Patrick and Beth Collins were desperate. 13-year-old Jennifer, the younger of their two children, faced a life-threatening situation. In response, the Collins family took extreme measures””sending Jennifer thousands of miles away in the company of her mother. Beth and Jennifer became refugees from a capricious government whose laws threatened Jennifer’s health, the family’s safety, and the life they had built together.
Beth and Jennifer did not run from crime or war or famine. They did not flee from some country ruled by a murderous despot to a less dangerous place. They are Americans who found it necessary to move from their home in Virginia to another state in order to seek treatment for Jennifer’s serious medical condition””a treatment that was illegal according to the laws of both Virginia and the federal government.
And so, in Dec. 2013, Beth and Jennifer said goodbye to Patrick and to Jennifer’s older sister, Alexandra. They moved to Colorado, joining thousands of other people who’d gone there wanting to avail themselves of one version or another of this taboo treatment: marijuana-based medicine. Their hope? That Colorado cannabis would do what prescription drugs could not””treat Jennifer’s epilepsy.
Sales of legalized recreational marijuana would surpass combined sales of beer, wine, and spirits, it says.
Legalized recreational marijuana promises to spark a $22.6-billion industry in Canada, eclipsing combined sales of beer, wine, and spirits, a new study suggests.
The Deloitte report ”” titled Recreational Marijuana: Insights and Opportunities ”” being released soon concludes that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s legalization of cannabis next year could jolt the economy.
“There hasn’t been anything like this ”” and granted it wasn’t legislated ”” but you think of the dot-com … flurry,” Mark Whitmore, vice-chair of Deloitte, said in an interview Wednesday.
“It has that kind of feel to it. There’s a lot of froth, a lot of interest in this space and a lot of people think there’s going to be an opportunity,” said Whitmore.
Deloitte estimates that satisfying the recreational weed market will mean producing 600,000 kilograms of marijuana annually ”” far more than the existing 36 licensed producers grow for medicinal purposes.
The consulting firm warns there will be challenges as recreational pot is legalized.
What do you call giving someone a month's free supply of a powerful, highly addictive, dangerous drug? If someone is at the point of truly needing fentanyl they require it with or without the free supply. And then how do you know the drug has been legitimately medically prescribed, as opposed to just finding a doctor who will prescribe it after the patient saw the ad and the lure of free supply and shopped around?
Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, making her most expansive remarks on an opioid epidemic that’s ravaging American communities, indicated the problem is so pervasive it is holding back the nation’s labor market.
“I do think it is related to declining labor force participation among prime-age workers,” Yellen said of the opioid epidemic while answering questions during testimony before the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday. “I don’t know if it’s causal or if it’s a symptom of long-running economic maladies that have affected these communities and particularly affected workers who have seen their job opportunities decline.”
Yellen’s comments come as overdose deaths are surging across the country. The opioid epidemic is the legacy of a major increase in painkiller prescriptions during the late 1990s, though it has transitioned to illicit drugs including heroin and fentanyl in recent years. Employers often cite it as a workforce readiness issue and its footprint spans age and socioeconomic demographics, though it has hit working- and middle-class communities in Appalachia and the Northeastespecially hard.
The epidemic seems to be one reason that middle-age mortality is climbing for white Americans with less education, according to research by Princeton University economists Anne Case and Angus Deaton.
“We are seeing, as I mentioned, an increase in death rates -- which is extremely unusual,” Yellen said today, noting that the trend is “partly reflecting opioid use, and it is obviously a very serious and heartbreaking problem.”
...
Asked whether there is a clear connection between opioids and an opportunity to go to a job, get employed, and have purpose in life, Yellen said that “all of those things are bound up in this opioid crisis,” and are “interacting in ways that are really quite devastating for these individuals and their communities.”
In the Fed’s regional survey known as the “Beige Book” released Wednesday, the St. Louis Fed reported that some manufacturers were citing “candidates’ inability to pass drug tests or to consistently report to work.”
Wow.
Canada
Canada Legalizes Marijuana For Those 18 And Older
So what about Cannabis and driving?
It would seem that the current tests used by police may detect cannabis ~24 - 48hrs after consumption
NO LEVEL is legal.
~1 in 6 random tested are failing
Will they set a threshold? Do they do this where it is "legalised"
I have no doubt that cannabis impairs driving substantially, while its effects are upon the user,
however it wears off in a few hours, and 24-48 hrs makes a mockery of the law (although it is illegal to use cannabis at all)
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