Thursday, December 18, 2025
Home Blog Page 1096

Watch This Public Official Lose It During Marijuana Legalization Hearing

Losing your temper is one thing. But when you are the mayor pro tem and you lose your cool during a city council meeting and it is caught on tape, the outburst goes viral.

Folks in Colfax, a small northern California town, have been debating whether to allow marijuana retail sales within the city boundaries. And the discussion got a little bit out of hand last month when Colfax Mayor pro tem Tony Hesch lost his cool.

Mark Younggren, a citizen who wants to open a dispensary in the town, stood up and began asking questions to council members. Apparently, he interrupted Hesch a few times and the conversation turned into a shouting match.

“I was the one speaking, you idiot!” Hesch shouted as he slammed his fist on the table. “You shut the [expletive] up when somebody’s talking.”

When asked by fellow councilmembers to calm down, Hesch got even more heated. “I’m not going to settle down,” he said. “That’s just plain ridiculous, childish, unbelievable activities by you guys.”  Hesch has served on the city council for five years.

But his tantrum didn’t end there. “All you’re doing is wanting to make money,” Hesch said. “You don’t give a damn about anybody in this community, you just want to make money. You should be ashamed of yourself.”

According to a report in the Sacramento Bee:

Hesch referred to pro-marijuana advocates as “people who have wasted our freaking time” over the last three years. He and Mayor Steve Harvey repeatedly called for order as audience members objected to that characterization. When Younggren continued to question the council, Hesch flew into a rage.

Younggren wasn’t exactly surprised by the outburst. “I was but I kind of wasn’t, because I’ve seen him get mad before,” he told Fox40 News.

Watch the video of the outburst:

What You Need To Know About Marijuana And Glaucoma

The ability to reduce eye pressure and ease the effects of glaucoma was the first scientifically confirmed health benefit of medical marijuana, and it may still be the most well known argument supporting medical marijuana. However, this effect was discovered quite by accident. In the early 1970s, a group of UCLA researchers, who were studying the telltale marijuana “red eye” in hopes of somehow using the phenomenon to help the DEA to narc out stoners, incidentally found that cannabis reduced eye pressure by about 25 percent. That result was as good as any produced by an FDA approved glaucoma medication. (In fact, it still is today.)

Cannabis really does counteract glaucoma. It’s a medical fact.

Cannabis really does counteract glaucoma. It’s a medical fact. Unfortunately, the effects only last about three hours, and it seems that the most effective cannabinoids are also the most psychoactively potent. Thus, to be completely treated, you’d need to smoke six or seven joints a day. In other words, you’d be high all the time. Very high.

As fun as that might seem at first, it’s clearly an untenable way to live. For the elderly, who are most effected by glaucoma, a prolonged cannabis high can be downright dangerous, since it can depress blood pressure and cause heart attack. So for now, the cannabis cure is impractical but grounds for further research.

In 1978, reggae man Peter Tosh immortalized the UCLA clinical findings in the single “Bush Doctor” (you know how lab reports are just so sing-able), thus giving generations of college students still decades away from material risk of degenerative eye disease both an anthem and a medically sound defense for their recreational use of marijuana.

White House Opioid Commission Blows A Teachable Moment

The White House opioidcommission released its final report on Nov.1. The report contained a range of recommendations including increasing the number of drug courts and launching a public campaign to prevent abuse of opioids and to challenge the stigma associated with its use.

While much of the focus on the Commission’s final report is understandably on critiquing its recommendations, there is a larger issue at play—what is absent from the report altogether. The Commission blew an opportunity to share with the public what is well-known and understood by public health and addiction experts on the frontlines of the opioid epidemic—that there are proven harm reduction and treatment interventions that will be far more effective at curbing overdose fatalities than any supply reduction or enforcement strategy.

By adopting an integrated approach to prevention, education, harm reduction, including ensuring widespread distribution of naloxone, and evidence-based treatment it is possible to dramatically reduce the number of deaths related to opioid use.

Prevention programs should focus on empowering and educating people, especially young people who are dying preventable deaths, about opioids. While understanding the root causes of problematic drug use is complicated, educating and empowering those who use or may be considering using opioids is a move away from the hopelessness that appears to be driving opioid use in young people.

What we do know is that campaigns based on orders to “just say no” fail in part because they do not engage young people or provide realistic and safe options for people who may choose to use despite potentially negative consequences.

Harm reduction strategies and programs have a strong track record of improving the health of people using opioids and preventing overdose deaths.  There are a wide range of well-established harm reduction practices.  Some are as simple of teaching young people how to stay safe when partying. Other proven measures are setting up safe consumption sites, enacting Good Samaritan laws that encourage people to seek help when someone is in distress without fear of punishment and ensuring that people in the best position to reverse an overdose—people who use drugs themselves or their friends and families—have easy access to the overdose antidote medication naloxone.

Another life-saving harm reduction technique is to give people who use opioids a means of testing the substance they are using to see if it has been adulterated with fentanyl or some other substance that could lead to an overdose or other adverse reaction.

Harm reduction programs enable people with expertise in drug use to engage with those who are using problematically, earn their trust, and potentially guide them toward voluntary treatment programs. Judgment and the threat of being punished for drug use drives people who use drugs underground and into greater danger of an overdose or other adverse reaction. Harm reduction, on the other hand, saves lives.  And yet, the term “harm reduction” is not even mentioned throughout the Commission’s 100+ page report.

There were, however, some glimmers of hope in the Commission’s recommendations, such as calling for increased access to evidence-based addiction treatment with medications such as methadone and buprenorphine. But, there are serious reservations about how President Trump’s analysis will influence the implementation of even the best recommendations and legitimate concerns that ramping up a failed war on drugs will lead to more preventable deaths.

Punitive responses to opioid drug use, including the promotion of drug courts which are integrated into the criminal justice system, not only fail to protect the lives of people who use drugs, but by portraying opioids and fentanyl as “bad” drugs, people seeking palliative care are also made to suffer. Opioids, including fentanyl, can be used to great effect therapeutically. Opioids can also lead to deadly overdoses. Doubling down on a punitive approach to drug use will impact both people’s access to pain medicines as well as their willingness to voluntarily seek help and treatment for any problematic drug use. Creating drug policies that are grounded in public health principles and informed by compassion, not judgment, means that the government can implement measures that save lives and reduce suffering.

Widney Brown is the Drug Policy Alliance’s Managing Director of Policy.

13 Life Lessons From Seinfeld

Let’s get this straight: Seinfeld is a “show about nothing,” a sitcom that examined those infinitely small life moments that perhaps matter most.

It’s why Seinfeld so often felt revelatory. Heck, it continues to feel revelatory. Every time you watch an episode you can’t help connecting with a social faux pas or a deep-rooted emotional response to something small like eating at a Chinese restaurant.

RELATED: Here Are 7 Ways Jerry Seinfeld Refuses To Play Nice

All this is to say that Seinfeld taught us a lot—about the characters, but also about ourselves. That’s why Hash Night asked users on social media what Seinfeld taught them. It turns out, more than you think. In fact, here are 13 lessons from Seinfeld which are still relevant.

Maybe Don’t Wear Skinny Jeans

How to Say “Hello”

https://twitter.com/myknighttweets/status/926287610577899520

Good Naked vs. Bad Naked

On Dancing

How To Enter A Room

“It’s Not A Lie If You Believe It”

Don’t Be A “Close Talker”

Be Ready With The Comeback

Napping At Work

Eating Pretzels? Have A Beverage On Hand

On Reservations

https://twitter.com/Gem_N_Holograms/status/926329547322093568

Be Wary Of Family Members On Holidays

…But The Only Holiday You Should Celebrate Is Festivus

https://twitter.com/house_owens/status/926430417678462978

6 Cannabis Stocks We’re Watching Today:November 7th, 2017

Out of over 200 cannabis stocks, there’s six that we’re going to be watching as the markets open due to breaking news out this morning.

Here’s six cannabis companies to watch today including Aurora Cannabis Inc. (TSX:ACB) (OTC:ACBFF) and more.

Aurora Cannabis Inc. (TSX:ACB) (OTC:ACBFF)

Today, Aurora Cannabis Inc. announced that it’s partnership with Namaste Technologies Inc. is off to a good start, with over 200 orders in the first three days since the launch.

CannaRoyalty Corp. (CSE:CRZ) (OTC:CNNRF)

This morning, CannaRoyalty Corp. announced that it signed a letter of intent with Æther Gardens for the launch of CR Brands products into the Nevada marketthrough AEG with a focus on Las Vegas.

Canopy Growth Corp. (TSX:WEED) (OTC:TWMJF)

This morning, Canopy Growth Corp. announced that it has signed a definitive licensing agreement with Farm to Farma Inc. for FTF’s innovative Trokie® lozenges. Under this licensing agreement, Canopy Growth will have the exclusive right to manufacture and distribute FTF’s Trokie® lozenges through its subsidiaries in Canada.

Cure Pharmaceutical Holding Corp. (OTC:CURR)

This morning, Therapix Biosciences Ltd. announced that it has entered into a product development agreement with Cure Pharmaceutical Holding Corp. focusing on the development of cannabinoid-based treatments on CURE’s patented, multilayer oral thin film (OTF), CureFilm™, for the treatment of a wide range of sleep disorders.

Namaste Technologies Inc. (CSE:N) (OTC:NXTTF)

Today, Aurora Cannabis Inc. announced that it’s partnership with Namaste Technologies Inc. is off to a good start, with over 200 orders in the first three days since the launch.

Therapix Biosciences Ltd. (NASDAQ:TRPX)

This morning, Therapix Biosciences Ltd. announced that it has entered into a product development agreement with Cure Pharmaceutical Holding Corp. focusing on the development of cannabinoid-based treatments on CURE’s patented, multilayer oral thin film (OTF), CureFilm™, for the treatment of a wide range of sleep disorders.

Don’t forget to connect with The Daily Marijuana Observer on social media via Facebook, Twitter, StockTwits, YouTube, and Instagram.

 

Clear Pumpkin Pie Is Here To Blow Your Mind This Thanksgiving

0

Alinea, the famous culinary playground-slash-food-lab in Chicago that doesn’t like being called a restaurant, has created a whimsical autumnal dessert just in time for Thanksgiving that is soooo not something you would ever make at home: clear pumpkin pie.

According to its co-creator, chef de cuisine Simon Davies, it’s a distillation (the key to making it translucent) of pumpkin, cinnamon, ginger, and clove.

“Texture is very important to us,” says Davies. “This melts away. If it were over-gelled it would not be worth serving. The main texture that brings on nostalgia is from the pate brisee.” (Aka: pie dough.)

https://www.instagram.com/p/Baz6VI_D6D4

Davies created the clear pie with executive chef Mike Bagale as part of a 20 course tasting menu. Ingredients, according to Davies: Pumpkins from an organic farm 20 miles outside of Chicago, cinnamon, clove, ginger powder, All-Purpose flour, butter, water, heavy cream, Tahitian vanilla, sugar and salt. 

https://www.instagram.com/p/BZb-XMRDlK1

For those naysayers who say Jell-O pie sounds like the most unappetizing thing on the Thanksgiving dinner table, including that weird aspic your grandma brought, Davies has this to say: “I think a lot of people misunderstand how to effectively use gelatin. It can be used in a way that results in a gel that is stable but melts away on the palate unlike the common ‘Jell-O’ that most people are used to.”

Traditional flavor meets modern creation. The best of both worlds.

Says Davies, “It fits into our menu in a playful way and allows our guests to experience something new. We by no means are trying to re-create a classic. It’s just our way of having some fun.”

California Marijuana Now Has Its First Commercial Insurance Provider

California has taken the next step in boosting its cannabis business. For the first time, California marijuana companies are now able to buy commercial insurance from a state-guaranteed insurer.

Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones approved Golden Bear Insurance to be the first admitted (state-backed) commercial insurance company to cover legal marijuana businesses in California. 

In a statement, Jones said:

This is the first of what I hope will be many commercial carriers filing insurance products to fill insurance coverage gaps for the cannabis industry. Consumers who visit cannabis businesses, workers who work there, businesses who sell products to or rent property to cannabis businesses, and the investors, owners and operators of cannabis businesses all should have insurance coverage available to help them recover when something goes wrong just as any other legalized business does.

Last month, cannabis businesses and insurance company reps testified at a public hearing, revealing a coverage gap for the marijuana industry — specifically that commercial carriers were not providing insurance. 

  • Related Story: Inside The Ever-Expanding Complexities Of California’s Cannabis Market

“Our mission,” said Jones,  “remains insurance protection for all Californians, which includes insurance for California’s legalized cannabis businesses and customers. We encourage more insurance companies to file cannabis business insurance products with the department to meet the needs of this emerging market.”

Galen Hayes of Hayes Insurance Agency, the exclusive broker for Golden Bear, tells Business Insurance that Golden Bear will initially write general liability coverage, including professional and products liability; and property coverage, including coverage for buildings, contents and tenant improvements. Coverage will be available for both landlords and tenants.

Recreational marijuana becomes legal in California on Jan. 1, 2018.

Gossip: Spacey And Weinstein In Same Sex Addiction Clinic; Oprah Winfrey Reveals The Worst Guest She’s Ever Had

Kevin Spacey has reportedly checked into a $36,000-per-month sex addiction clinic in Arizona, after the string of sexual harassment and assault claims that have been made against him in the past week.

Sources told the Daily Mail that the “House of Cards” star is at The Meadows rehabilitation clinic in Wickenburg, which is known for having celebrity clientele.

Last week it was reported that Hollywood producer and alleged serial assaulter Harvey Weinstein was also at The Meadows, after he was apparently seen in disguise at a restaurant in nearby city Phoenix.

The luxury clinic has a fitness center and a swimming pool, as well as classes in horse riding, yoga, tai chi, acupuncture and ‘mindfulness meditation.’

It also runs a program called ‘Gentle Paths,’ which supposedly treats male sex-addiction through methods such as ‘Expressive Arts’ and ‘Equine Therapy.’

Oprah Winfrey Reveals The Worst Guest She’s Ever Had

Oprah Winfrey has interviewed every type of guest on “The Oprah Winfrey Show,” but not every one has been delightful, she revealed on the Tuesday, November 7, episode of “Harry.”

“You talk about all of the guests you’ve had over years. Has anyone been particularly annoying, where you’re just like, ‘Gosh, I can’t wait for this person to leave?’” Harry Connick Jr. asks Winfrey.

“Well, I mean, the worst kind of guest — you’ve had this, too — is when you ask them question and they start talking about 1975, and then you think, ‘Oh, we are in 2017. How long is it going to take us to get to 2017?’ That’s the worst,” Winfrey says. “The other worst guests, for me, are those who think whatever they are talking about is so spectacular, and you know it’s not. So, my go to word was always, ‘Wow.’ Like, ‘Wow! Really?’”

But what is the actual “worst?” Well, the one that can’t stop plugging their own products, the 63-year-old host says.

“I had a guest on who was a lawyer and he mentioned the book 29 times. That’s after I started counting. Every sentence started, ‘In my book, in my book, and if you buy my book,’ and so finally, around third segment, I said, ‘We all know the name of the book. Audience, tell him the name of the book … so you don’t have to say the name of the book anymore,’” Winfrey recalls. “After that we started having conversations. Our intention was to tell the people, ‘You don’t have to sell your book. I will mention the book. I will take care of the book.’”

“It’s wonderful the way my life has worked out and that I’m really rich and everything. That’s real cool. I really like that,” Winfrey says. Connick quickly teases: “You know how rich you have to be to say it like that? You have to be really rich to say, ‘I’m really rich.’”

Winfrey replies: “Yeah, but I’m not one of those people who ever [lied about being rich], because I used to hate it when really skinny women would come on the show and complain about their thighs: ‘Girl please!’”

Harry airs weekdays on Fox.

Love the fresh dirt we bring over daily from Naughty Gossip? Let us know in the comments!

Colombia President Compares Drug War To Riding A Stationary Bike

Like the United States, the nation of Colombia has been fighting —and losing — the Drug War. And, like the US, Colombia is changing its approach to the issue.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos said last week that his country must rethink the “war on drugs” and focus on a health-based approach to fixing the problem. In a report in the Toronto-based Globe and Mail, Santos said:

“We’re like a static bicycle – pedaling, pedaling and you’re left in the same position – so something is wrong with this war on drugs: It’s not working. We need a less punitive, more health[-based] approach.”

In September, the Trump administration “seriously considered” adding Colombia to its blacklist of countries that the US believes is not doing its share to fight narcotic production and trafficking. But Santos was having none of it.

“Colombia is the country that has made the largest sacrifice in the last 40 years [in the ‘war on drugs’]: We lost our best journalists, best judges, best policemen, it was a very high cost,” Mr. Santos told The Globe and Mail.

According to Santos, President Trump recently sent a letter recognizing Colombia’s commitment. “I trust that your efforts will help improve the problem,” Trump wrote. In Colombia, officials viewed the letter as a signal that the U.S. is backing of the September threat.

Santos was pleased with the official communication. “President Trump sent me a very positive, friendly letter of support. He confirms Colombia’s help and the wish of the US to work together with us in the fight against drug trafficking, and thanks us for all we have done,” Santos said in late October at a press conference.

For years, the US Drug Enforcement Agency has focused a lot of its resources and manpower battling the cocaine trafficking coming out of Colombia. But over the past seven years, Santos has made it one of his administration’s goals to address the issue. Just last year, he struck a peace deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the guerrilla group considered a linchpin in the cocaine trafficking business. That deal, which ended decades-long conflict, earned Santos the Nobel Peace Prize

In 2016 the illegal coca crops in Colombia reached a record area of 464,000 acres (188,000 hectares), with a potential cocaine production of 710 metric tons, according to US estimates.

Pennsylvania Releases List Of Medical Marijuana Doctors

While state officials predict that the medical marijuana program in Pennsylvania will be up and running within six months, doctors are getting their paperwork and training in to become certified medical cannabis physicians. So far 109 have been approved.

State officials say that over 300 doctors have registered for the program, the majority of them still completing the training and review process. Before the final review, physicians must complete a four hour training course and register with the state.

Dr. Adam Rothschild was approved in Allegheny County and has been inundated with calls since the list of doctors was released, primarily from interested persons who have one of the 17 qualifying conditions. Qualifying conditions include cancer, Parkinson’s disease, Multiple sclerosis, PTSD and other severe ailments like HIV/AIDS.

“There are a lot of patients who don’t get relief from conventional or even complementary medical therapies,” Rothschild said to Pennsylvania’s Tribune-Review. “Cannabis has been used successfully by many patients elsewhere. It is an incredibly safe drug, certainly when compared to opioids and even compared to aspirin. It has the potential to help a lot of people. I’m also not afraid of cannabis. I think a lot of physicians are afraid of this unknown.”

That statement is brave on Rothschild’s part. Many doctors dance around the cannabis issue and even those who recommend it often do so with the utmost of caution. A doctor should take caution when prescribing new medications, yet, as just pointed out, cannabis is more innocuous than aspirin and carries with it innumerable benefits that lead to relief.

Patients who qualify and have gotten their doctor’s recommendations will be able to go to a state licensed medical marijuana dispensary, which will be allowed to sell medical cannabis as oil, pills and creams, but not as flowers. They will also sell accessories in which to imbibe, including vaping devices.

“We cannot underestimate the role physicians have played in making sure that patients can access medical marijuana,” Physician General and acting Health Secretary Dr. Rachel Levine said in a statement. “Our physician workgroup also has been helping to make sure this program remains medically focused and an important tool in our medical toolkit.”

The list of approved doctors thus far can be found here, courtesy of Pennsylvania’s Department of Health.

Don't Miss Your Weekly Dose of The Fresh Toast.

Stay informed with exclusive news briefs delivered directly to your inbox every Friday.

We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe anytime.