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Possibly Nefarious Marijuana Clinics Are Appearing In Florida

In states with new medical marijuana programs, the bureaucratic red tape some patients must navigate to receive proper medical can prove difficult. While some may be honestly curious in how marijuana can treat their illnesses, others use patients’ lack of information in a nefariously opportunistic manner.

This exact dilemma has recently played out in Florida, where the state continues to sort out the functionality of its medical marijuana program. As the Miami Herald reported, a bevy of medical marijuana clinics have sprouted up in the region. Stories abound of “predatory offices and clinics that act more like certification factories than medical practitioners,” writes the Herald.

Florida voters passed an amendment in 2016, expanding the state’s medical marijuana programs from the extremely limited one approved in 2014. Statewide estimates of patients seeking medical marijuana are around the 500,000 mark. This has created a swath of individuals seeking valuable specialized medical advice they may not receive from their general practitioner.

Via the Herald:

While any licensed physician can become trained and qualified to recommend marijuana, these clinics offer a specialized service. Often, their physicians review a patient’s existing medical records to determine whether the client qualifies for medical marijuana treatment under Florida law. Typically, the experience is quick and costs between $200 and $300 inclusive of the certification and follow-up visits.

One patient learned the hard way that some of these clinics are focused on your dollars, not your health.

“These clinics want to take your money. They don’t really care,” Cathy Paget told the Herald. “I felt like I was in a card mill and nobody wanted to take care of me.”

Frustrated by the experience, Paget went on to open her own clinic, where she properly educates clients in a fair and honest manner.

Ben Pollara, however, sees it differently. Pollara was a political consultant who helped push the medical marijuana amendment through in Florida. He believes the medical marijuana clinics serve an important function while health care providers wait to see the decision from the state government.

“It’s tough to say that these guys are just purely craven and profit-driven because there’s just not a whole lot of profit in this [market] right now. You can’t do this in any real way without being a little bit of a true-believer,” Pollara said. “It’s the nature of the business and industry. […] There’s better ways to be greedy than opening up a chain of marijuana offices.”

It’s worth mentioning John Morgan’s views on Pollara. Morgan, the Orlando lawyer and marijuana activist, was a major player in driving medical cannabis to an approval vote in Florida. Many saw them as a team, but Morgan now blames Pollara for the state failing to pass legislation that would have created a system to enact the approved constitutional amendment. Quite frankly, Morgan told FloridaPolitics.com, “Ben Pollara fucked the patients.”

But it was Pat DeLuca, executive director of Compassionate Cannabis Clinic near Sarasota, who summed up the situation in Florida succinctly: “There are good actors and bad actors. Unfortunately, with the recent forward progress [of medical marijuana] in the state, there have been a lot of nefarious practices that have popped up. We call them parasites. And there are people operating within the space that don’t deserve to be.”

Got The End-Of-Summer Blues? Here’s How Marijuana Can Help

The possibility that a woman could have painless labor became an idée fixe of H. L. (“Doc”) Humes, a literary wunderkind and MIT science prodigy who developed some intriguing theories about cannabis. When his wife was giving birth at their home on July 4, 1977, they tried an experiment involving marijuana, breathing exercises, and massage. Humes gave her some marijuana to inhale just before each contraction and this helped her immensely.

Marijuana is “among the most forgiving medicines we know,” said Humes, who described cannabis as a “neurological laxative” that “acts to surface anxiety which the user holds within himself.” Doc touted the weed as the best remedy for stress, “the necessary medicine for the nation’s anxiety-tension problem.” “America is so sick,” he declared, “and cannabis is the specific medicine for the disease that afflicts us.”

Chronic “anxiety-tension,” Humes explained, “is a state of general blockage that shows up most obviously at an individual’s ‘weakest link,’ so it can have a wide variety of physical and emotional symptoms, as well as being generally debilitating … Most of the common elements from which people suffer are really symptoms of anxiety-tension, including headache, backache, insomnia, fatigue, irritability, GI disturbances such as constipation and ulcers, overweight, arthritis, and so on. Anxiety-tension has also been very clearly implicated in more deadly disorders such as high blood pressure, heart disease, cancer proneness, and premature aging … Depression is frequently a symptom of anxiety-tension.”

Ganja’s biphasic qualities allowed smokers to “equilibrate” the nervous system, according to Humes. Consumed in appropriate quantities, the herb could calm the hyper or invigorate the sluggish. The medical use of cannabis depends precisely on managing its psychoactive properties,” Doc counseled. “In heavy dosage, it functions like a hypnotic. In a light dosage it functions like an illuminant.”

Humes saw early on that the widespread “recreational use of cannabis is also a form of self-medication,” even if most marijuana smokers did not acknowledge this to themselves. He lamented the fact that hundreds of thousands of young people are arrested each year for using the most efficacious and least harmful medication available to cope with the stress of living in the modern world.

Source: H. L. Humes, “Notes on Painless Detoxification from Narcotics Addiction,” unpublished manuscript. 

An excerpt from Smoke Signals: A Social History of Marijuana – Medical, Recreational and Scientific by Martin A. Lee

Prince’s Sister Says His Favorite Color Was Orange

I know few things in this world. I know that pizza tastes delicious always. I know that even though the internet really loves cats, dogs remains man’s best friend. And I know that dabbing isn’t that cool anymore, yet I still ironically dab, fully knowing everyone can see through my ironic posturing, and that I’m really dabbing because, deep down, it still makes me feel cool. And I also know that Prince’s favorite color was purple. Or at least I thought I knew Prince’s favorite color was purple. Then Prince’s sister Tyka Nelson revealed that we had it all wrong in an interview with the Evening Standard.

Prince’s favorite color wasn’t purple. It was orange.

Via the Evening Standard:

The stand out piece for me is his orange Cloud guitar. It is strange because people always associate the colour purple with Prince, but his favourite colour was actually orange.

Wait, what? You’re telling me the guy who starred in Purple Rain, wrote the best movie soundtrack of all time called Purple Rain, and recorded one of his signature songs called “Purple Rain,” a track that’s more musical scripture than pop ballad, didn’t love the color purple? You’re telling me the guy who rocked this purple suit, this purple suit, and this purple suit, plus this fresh-as-hell sleeveless, sequined purple hoodie, and whatever the hell you call this dope purple clothing apparatus only Prince could pull off, didn’t consider purple his favorite color?

If I texted 1,000 people what Prince’s favorite color was right now, you know what they’d say? Purple. Even the ones who read Prince’s sister’s comments would be like, “Eh. I know she’s his sister and all but….pretty sure the dude loved purple.”

Please don’t get it twisted. This post does not intend to discredit Tyka Nelson whatsoever. She could be right. And I know some of you reading this might think, Did this weirdo really just write “She could be right” with some higher-minded authority compared to Prince’s sister? Which is totally fair. But I want you to know how incredibly burdensome it was to admit even that. Like I want to throw up. Plus, based on what I ate today, my puke would probably be orange, which would make me want to throw up even more. (Totally unnecessary and disgusting sidebar: Has anyone ever puked purple before? Please at me, if so.)

I know, I know. Some contrary evidence supporting Tyka’s claim exists. When Prince appeared at the Grammys in 2015, he pulled up in this shimmering orange blouse and some fly beads. And when he performed at the Super Bowl in 2007 amidst a damn downpour, he rocked this orange collared shirt (though I’d like to mention he did play his iconic purple guitar). This picture of Prince wearing an all-orange suit getup also exists on the internet, but I’m not particularly happy about it.

You’ve seen the evidence. So believe what you want. I mean, this is the fake news era of media and pop culture, where traditional values and facts just don’t matter anymore. I’m serious. If Prince’s favorite color wasn’t purple I don’t know what to believe anymore.

5 Tips For Maximizing Donation Dollars To Hurricane Harvey Victims

Many Americans want to help the people suffering from Hurricane Harvey and its unprecedented floods. There’s no shortage of media reports listing which groups are taking donations, often with scant guidance about what kinds of relief these organizations can offer.

Having researched giving in the wake of disasters and taught students how to be effective philanthropists, I’ve learned that it’s hard to make good decisions regarding donations – especially when there are many urgent needs and countless ways to spend charitable dollars. Here are some best practices you may want to consider before you contribute.

1. Give Money, Not Goods

The ideal way to show your compassion is to donate money to a charity that you respect, rather than shipping cartons of diapers and cases of canned chili.

It’s easy to think of disasters in personal terms: “What if it were me or my family?” and picture what you’d need if you suddenly became homeless: clothes, food or toys. But goods given during emergencies often go to waste. These donations can even do more harm than good when they interfere with disaster response efforts.

Besides, you aren’t likely to know what people on the (drenched) ground need.

2. Donate To Organizations Operating On The Scene

But where should you send that money? It’s generally a good idea to support groups operating in the midst of the disaster. They can give money and other aid to the people who need it directly.

But first, do your homework to learn about an organization’s past performance. Established organizations are usually your best bet because they are the most apt to have staff, experience, infrastructure and roots in affected communities. National organizations like the Red Cross and the Salvation Army have long track records in disaster response.

Every disaster raises questions about established organizations’ relief efforts, such as how the Red Cross spent funds donated after Superstorm Sandy on public relations stunts and other activities not directly tied to relief efforts, and the Salvation Army’s decision to hold back relief after that same disaster to spend later on in the recovery process. When you give, it’s important to keep that history in mind.

If you prefer to give locally, support groups firmly rooted in the affected area. In Harvey’s aftermath, that might mean the United Way of Greater Houston and the Greater Houston Community Foundation, which both have established relief funds and a long history of service to the local community.

You can screen organizations using tools like Charity Navigator, which rates nonprofits based on several performance metrics. It has compiled a list of highly rated Texas groups involved in relief efforts. Guidestar is another useful resource. While it does not rate charities, it provides basic financial data about them and allows nonprofits to upload information about their programs and results that you can use to help make your giving decisions. Guidestar also offers guidelines about giving during disasters and a list of groups active in the relief effort.

3. Support Established Nonprofits

Sometimes new groups sprout up to respond to catastrophes like the ones now unfolding in Texas that seem tailor-made for supporting people in distress but have some shortcomings.

When I studied the philanthropic response after the 9/11 attacks, I found that more than 250 new organizations emerged to meet the needs of people affected by that disaster. New organizations can play important roles, particularly those connected to marginalized groups, like immigrants, who may not trust established institutions. That was the case with the Windows of Hope Family Relief Fund, an organization I advised after 9/11.

But it can take time for new groups to get up and running, and in the meantime there’s no track record for donors to check out. While most new organizations are led by people moved to make a difference, some are opportunists committing fraud, like the founders of the Hurricane Sandy Relief Foundation. Fundraising services like the GoFundMe campaigns established to help Harvey victims pose the same risks if they are not tied to established organizations.

If you itemize your taxes and plan to deduct your contribution, note that you can do so only if the IRS has certified the organization’s 501(?)3 nonprofit status. Most contributions to new nonprofits and GoFundMe campaigns aren’t tax-deductible. But gifts to the Hurricane Harvey Relief Fund, which the city of Houston has already established, are.

4. Consider Long-Term Priorities

Photos and video clips of streets transformed into rivers, stranding residents, can create an urge to make a difference immediately. But, as recent disasters like Superstorm Sandy and Hurricane Katrina showed, the needs are sure to mount. That’s why more than one in four of organizations created after 9/11 was still providing relief five years later.

Be mindful that people in Houston, Rockport and other afflicted areas in Texas, and possibly Louisiana, will need our money long after Harvey stops making headlines. Your donation may matter six months or even years from now as much as it does today. Nonetheless, donation forms may offer you the option to indicate how you want your contribution used – including having it spent right away if you feel strongly about it.

5. Maximize The Speed And Size Of Your Gift

Many nonprofits are encouraging people to donate by sending texts, an approach that may seem like the fastest way to give.

But wireless companies tend to wait until you officially cover the donation’s cost – by paying your bill – before passing that money along to the charity. That can delay payments by weeks or even months.

If getting your money to Houston or another community fast is your top concern, make online donations with a credit card or a debit card. Even “a check in the mail” would transmit funds faster than texting, says Brian Mittendorf, who teaches accounting at the Ohio State University Fisher College of Business.

Mittendorf also cautions that giving through crowdfunding can mean that intermediaries skim fees that might otherwise go to disaster relief or another cause you support. Credit card companies also usually collect transaction fees.

The ConversationIn short, being an informed donor is the best way you can start to make a difference for the people who have lost their homes, cars and more.

David Campbell is an Associate Professor of Public Administration at Binghamton University, State University of New York

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

More Than 750 Patients Just Received Medical Marijuana IDs In Arkansas

The Department of Health has gotten and approved over 750 applications for medical marijuana registry identification cards that give residents the rights to Arkansas grown, doctor recommended cannabis and cannabis derived items. Cards will be distributed to patients one month before supplies are at the ready.

Here’s the bad news: zero applications to grow cannabis and only two to open dispensaries have been received by the Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission since the process opened on July 1st. Now there’s less than three weeks before the deadline approved by state legislature.

Back in May, legislature okayed emergency and regular rules submitted by the state Department of Finance and Administration. June 30th the commission opened to bids for up to eight growing facilities and up to 40 dispensary applications.

By September 18th, all forms must have been submitted to the commission. The applications will be time stamped and applicants must shell out the $15,000 fees. Applicants also must have $1 million in assets, $500,000 of which must be liquid.

Spokesman for the DFA Scott Hardin said state officials receive inquiries every day regarding cultivation and dispensary applications, and that the commission will stay quiet on them, until the September 18th deadline.

Industry experts and a chief legislator expect a rush of applications before said mid-September deadline.

The state Beverage Control board said further rules and policies will be announced by policy makers in the coming months on just how the cultivators and dispensary owners can process, transport and distribute cannabis, rules that will go beyond legislation already approved earlier in the year.

The Arkansas Department of Health started accepting applications for medical marijuana registry identification cards on July 1st. As of August 30th, the ADH told Talk Business & Politics there’ve been 769 approved applications so far. That number, however, isn’t large enough for the department to release demographic information. There will be an annual report with the info.

Until all applications are received for growing and dispensaries, the state Freedom of Information Act exemption will apply. The state open records law keeps the commission from giving out information that may give one bidder an advantage over another.

Once that deadline is passed, however, applications will be available for public consumption, making some applicants wary of leaks ahead of the deadline. Time will tell just how many brave souls will have stepped up to the Arkansas cannabis plate to get medicinal cannabis to those in need right out the gate.

Gossip: Kanye West Accused Of Drug And Alcohol Abuse; Justin Timberlake Wears Men’s Stockings

Kanye West’s insurance company are refusing to pay him because they believe the rapper abused drugs and alcohol prior to his 2016 mental breakdown.

As previously reported, the 40-year-old filed a $10 million lawsuit against Lloyd’s of London this year for failing to pay the money he’s allegedly owed following the cancellation of the Saint Pablo Tour.

Via Revolt TV:

He claimed that Lloyd’s of London failed to pay him money owed after his Saint Pablo Tour cancellation, despite being informed “with sworn testimony from his primary physician…that [he] suffered a debilitating medical condition that required he not tour.”

However, now Lloyd’s has countersued citing insurance policy exclusions that include “pre-existing psychological conditions, possession of illegal drugs, prescription drugs not taken as medically prescribed, and the consumption of alcohol rendering the insured unfit to perform.” Still, they won’t give specifics “in order to protect the privacy of Mr. West from public disclosure of details of his private life.”

Justin Timberlake Wears Men’s Stockings

Straight Shuter recently spotted Justin Timberlake walking alone in Soho in New York City. However, people were not stopping because they recognized the sexy singer but rather because a man was walking around in tight multi colored stockings.

“Justin was wearing a baseball cap, a white hoodie and black knee length shorts. But under his shorts he also had on black stockings that ended just above his knees,” an eyewitness tells Straight Shuter. “We have seen everything in New York but this was a new thing. He wasn’t looking to be photographed or seeking attention, this was just a guy wearing what he was comfortable in taking a walk in the city.”

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

Labor Day Weekend Is Top Holiday For Marijuana Sales

Labor Day weekend marks the unofficial end of summer as Americans (and Canadians) celebrate the labor movement with picnics, barbecues and one last pool party … and marijuana.

According to market research from  BDS Analytics, the three-day North American holiday is the busiest multi-sales period of the year for cannabis retailers. April 20 — the unofficial 420 holiday — remains the the largest retail day for the industry, but this weekend tops all others. Even Christmas takes a back seat to Labor Day weekend when it comes to marijuana sales.

In Colorado, BDS Analytics research shows that cannabis sales between Friday and Sunday of the 2016 holiday weekend brought in $29.94 million in sales of products. The following weekend, by comparison, saw $24.64 million. During last year’s July 4 weekend, dispensaries sold $26.98 million worth of product.

Washington state also saw an uptick in Labor Day weekend sales last year with $8.05 million in sales.

In Washington, September beats all of the months of the year, except for one — December. Washington dispensaries sold $70.68 million worth of cannabis in September; December brought in $72.93 million.

Using Cannabis During Pregnancy: A Doctor’s Advice

Pamela is newly pregnant with her third child. She and her husband think this is going to be their last one because she is having a dreadful time with nausea – morning sickness that lasts all day long. She knows all the tricks. Saltines by her bedside, taking Vitamin B6 and B12, and eating frequently even though her stomach is queasy. She tried ginger. She tried acupuncture. She considered hypnosis.

None of it is working, and the added stress of two little ones who still need her attention is making her pregnancy a miserable experience. She really wants this baby, but lately she’s been having guilty doubts about whether it’s worth going through all the nausea and vomiting.

Pamela consulted her physician. She was offered some prescription medications – droperidol (an antipsychotic), metoclopramide (causes drowsiness & dizziness), Benedryl (drowsiness), or Zofran. Although her doctor reassured her about side effects and effects on her baby, she really did not want to take a pharmaceutical if she could avoid it.

Pamela had used cannabis occasionally for many years. It relieved her stress at the end of the day when the kids were finally in bed and she had time to herself. It helped ease some pain she had in the past, and aided sleep when she had short bouts of insomnia. She knew it could help with nausea, appetite, and stress, but she did not know if it was safe to use it while pregnant. So she searched online for facts.

Online, Pamela found conflicting information. Some sites said it was perfectly fine to use cannabis while pregnant. Others warned of brain damage, early labors, babies with failure to thrive, and other dire consequences. There seemed to be some research on the subject, but was it well done? Was it reliable? How was she to dig down and find the real story?

I am a family physician and have attended hundreds of births during my career. I live in an area of the country (Northern California) where cannabis is used by many of my patients, and when they discovered that they could be honest with me about their use my prenatal records became more complete.

Many mothers were using it for nausea and for stress relief. Some used it because it was simply part of their lifestyle. We discussed this during their visits, and I was clear with them that I honestly did not know if cannabis caused harm because the scientific research was still incomplete.

In my experience, however, I had not seen complications from cannabis – but I had seen complications from alcohol and other drugs. We discussed the difference between ‘use’ and ‘abuse.’ If they planned to use it I, encouraged conscious use; microdosing to treat the need without overusing.

However, my personal and professional experience was not enough to rely on as a source of information for my patients. I began a search and review of the literature, reading the published peer-reviewed articles, and evaluating the study designs and the outcomes.

In this article, we are going to look at the facts. We will look at the research and outcomes, and evaluate their worth. We will look at populations that used cannabis during pregnancy and see how their children are doing now. The information shared may help you make your own decision about using cannabis during pregnancy.

It is important to remember that pregnancy recommendations regarding what to eat, what to drink, what medications to take, and any other outside influences are fraught with caution and fear. If the child does not turn out ‘right,’ who’s fault is it? Pointing a finger of blame can lead to guilt, to lawsuits, and/or a lifetime of regret. Simply being pregnant and carrying a baby for nine months creates unavoidable risks for both mother and baby. But for some, there is no end to the perceived risks or possible harms a mother may cause an unborn child.

Note: The use patterns considered here are limited to well-considered, clearly needed uses of cannabis. This includes using the herb or its constituents for medical reasons such as nausea, pain, sleep, or possibly for stress relief. I encourage any cannabis use to be done consciously, with respect for its power as medicine.

What I Tell My Patients

After all this reading, reviewing, and surveying, I was left with the following points I could share with my patients:

  • Cannabis can be abused. Don’t abuse it.
  • Smoke is an irritant on the airways. If you wish to inhale, vaporize flowers or use an alternate form of the medicine.
  • Federal law prohibits cannabis
  • Hospitals, physicians, and Social Services can have punitive responses to parents who test positive for THC.
  • Babies exposed to cannabis during gestation may weigh less than babies not exposed.

And if you choose to use cannabis:

  • Be clear about why you are using it and re-evaluate those reasons each time
  • Avoid smoking – vaporize herb or use non-smoked products from trusted sources
  • Use organic herb and concentrates that are clear of chemicals and pesticides
  • Be aware of the cannabinoid content and microdose medicine to efficacy
  • Keep your children safe from accidental or passive exposure
  • Avoid dabs, oils, and edibles with unknown content

To read the complete story from Dr. Kerr, continue reading at Project CBD

Deep Dive: A Look At America’s Marijuana Evolution

When President Barack Obama was sworn into office, only 13 states had legalized the use of marijuana for medical purposes and none allowed its recreational use. By the time Donald Trump was inaugurated, those numbers had grown to 28 states (plus Washington, D.C.) where medical marijuana is legal and eight states (and D.C.) where recreational use is permitted. And in the months since, another state — West Virginia — passed a law legalizing medical use, Vermont’s state legislature became the first in the nation to pass a recreational legalization bill (though it was vetoed by the Governor and sent back for changes), and several other states have begun to consider their own legalization proposals.

Though marijuana remains illegal at the federal level for any purpose, attitudes towards its legalization at all levels are changing, and changing quickly. In recent years, we’ve seen ballooning support in public opinion polls, substantial policy shifts in the White House, a willingness to address the issue in Congress, and state policymakers taking it up in growing numbers. As more states enact and implement legal marijuana programs, there is a growing urgency for federal policy change to ensure that states regulate as responsibly and safely as possible.

An Expanding Landscape

Since 1970, marijuana has been illegal under the federal Controlled Substances Act, listed as a Schedule I drug. That means for the purposes of federal law, marijuana has no currently accepted medical use and has a high potential for abuse — just like heroin, LSD, and ecstasy. 

At that time, marijuana was also illegal under the laws of every state. But over the last two decades, the map of state marijuana laws has undergone a significant transformation. California was the first state to legalize marijuana for medical purposes in 1996. Other states gradually started to follow suit, and what began as a trickle has now become a flood. In the last few years, the number of states passing laws to allow the legal use of marijuana in some form has skyrocketed.

Timeline of State Marijuana Legalization Laws

Today, 29 states have legalized medical marijuana, eight of which also permit recreational use, and another 17 allow the limited use of non-intoxicating marijuana extracts to treat certain medical conditions (like seizure disorders in young children). Roughly 201 million Americans (60% of the country) currently live in states where marijuana is legal for general medical use — up from 62 million ten years ago and 32 million ten years before that. And nearly 70 million (21%) live in states where recreational use by adults is also allowed, up from 12 million in 2012 and 0 in 2011. All told, roughly 98% of Americans live in a state that has legalized some form of marijuana—up from 0% just 21 years ago.

Percent of U.S. population that lives in states where marijuana is legal

U.S. Population in States Where Marijuana is Legal

Change over time in numbers of Americans living in medical and recreational states

Change over time in numbers of Americans living in medical and recreational states

Marijuana is now legal under state laws on both coasts, in the north and south, in red states and blue states, and even in the heartland. Just last fall, Maine and Massachusetts became the first states on the east coast to legalize recreational marijuana, Arkansas became the first state in the Bible Belt to legalize medical marijuana, and the passage of a recreational legalization initiative in California will soon significantly expand the size of that market.

Marijuana Map

At this point, all but four states in the nation have legalized some form of marijuana — all in violation of federal law. This ongoing and pervasive conflict between state and federal laws leads to some serious consequences:

  • States have to find workarounds to effectively regulate their markets, in order to avoid federal preemption suits;
  • All market participants—from dispensary owners to cancer patients—are at risk of federal prosecution and jail time; and,
  • Banks can’t safely provide services to marijuana-related businesses—even in states where those businesses are legal, forcing the market to operate in all-cash and making it difficult for states to tax and regulate marijuana businesses.

The landscape has massively shifted across the country. No longer is marijuana legalization the province of a few rogue states—it has become the new normal.

Growing Public Support

Very few issues can match the rapid uptick in public support that marijuana legalization has seen over the last two decades. Medical marijuana, in particular, is popular amongst just about every demographic group. And while support for recreational legalization lags somewhat behind that for medical, it remains well above the 50% mark and continues to rise.

Support for Medical Marijuana

Recent public opinion polls put support for medical marijuana in 2017 at 88% and 93% nationwide, which is consistent with the numbers we found in our own 2014 poll. Our data showed overwhelming support for medical marijuana among typically less supportive demographic groups like Republicans, women, and people of color. Even among those who oppose legalizing recreational marijuana, a majority support allowing its medical use. 

Support for Recreational Marijuana

Support for legalizing recreational marijuana has long lagged behind medical, but it is rapidly gaining. In 1969, only 12% of the country agreed with the statement, “the use of marijuana should be made legal.” That percentage had only increased to about 33% by the early 2000s. It wasn’t until the next decade that things really began to shift. In 2014, two years after Colorado and Washington voted to legalize recreational marijuana, public support for legalization hit the 50% mark nationwide. By 2017, polls clocked current support at 61% and 60%. The chart below from the Pew Research Center illustrates this remarkable shift over time.

Opinion on Legalizing Marijuana, 1969-2016

Opinion on Legalizing Marijuana

Note: Don’t know responses not shown. Source: Pew Research Center, Survey conducted Aug. 23-Sept. 2, 2016

This increase in support for marijuana legalization is happening across age groups and political parties. Millennials remain the most supportive of legalization, with 71% in favor, but large gains have been made among older generations as well. According to the most recent Pew polls, 57% percent of Gen X-ers support legalization, as do 56% of Baby Boomers. The only age group who still opposes legalization at this point is the Silent Generation, made up of people 71 and older, among whom only 33% favor legalization. And while Democrats and Independents tend to be more supportive of legalization (polling in the high 60s), Republicans now only oppose it by a 7-point margin, with 46% in favor of legalization and 53% against. That’s a more than a 20-point increase in support among Republicans since 2010, when less than a quarter favored legalization. Young Republicans in particular are leading that shift: in early 2015, 63% of Millennial Republicans supported legalizing marijuana, and given the overall shift that is occurring, that number has likely grown over the past two years.

Opposition to Federal Enforcement

Even more ardently than Americans support legalization, they oppose federal enforcement of the marijuana ban in states that have chosen to legalize medical or recreational use. A poll by CBS News in April 2017 found 71% of Americans opposed the federal government taking action to stop the sale or use of marijuana in states where it is legal—including majorities of Democrats, Independents, and Republicans. An April 2017 Quinnipiac poll showed similar findings, with 73% of Americans opposing government enforcement of federal marijuana laws in legal states. In fact, not a single political party, gender, education, age, or racial group supported federal enforcement of the ban where a state has legalized.

As evident from these poll numbers, the last several decades have seen a striking shift in public opinion on marijuana legalization. Support for medical marijuana has topped off in the high eighties or low nineties. And if the current trajectory continues, support for recreational legalization can be expected to continue its exponential increase, especially if more states successfully implement legalization. It is crystal clear that no age group, gender, or political party of Americans want the federal government to send the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in to raid the 46 states that have legalized some form of marijuana. It seems that on this issue, public opinion is only moving in one direction.

Shifting Federal Enforcement Policy

Unlike public opinion, federal law regarding marijuana hasn’t changed since the passage of the Controlled Substances Act in 1970—but federal enforcement of those laws has significantly evolved over time. The President, through the Department of Justice and DEA, has a great deal of control over how federal marijuana laws are enforced, especially when they conflict with the laws of a state. This wide berth has created uncertainty and a constant flow of new stances over the last two administrations, and it leaves open serious questions about what to expect from the Trump Administration on this issue.

The Bush Administration

Under President George W. Bush, the federal government strongly enforced the federal marijuana ban. While no state had yet legalized recreational marijuana, eight had legalized medical marijuana by the time he took office and five more did so before he finished his second term. During the Bush Administration, the federal government cracked down on medical marijuana dispensaries across the nation, leading to arrests, seized property, and prison sentences for dispensary operators and growers. DEA raids and federal prosecutions created a culture of fear that permeated the industry even in states with legal medical markets.

The Bush Department of Justice also argued and won two major Supreme Court cases bolstering federal authority to enforce marijuana laws. In 2001, the Supreme Court upheld a broad application of the Controlled Substances Act in U.S. v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers’ Coop­, declaring that medical need does not create an exception to the federal marijuana prohibition. And a few years later in 2005, it ruled in Gonzalez v. Raich that the federal government could still enforce the federal ban in states that had legalized medical marijuana. Though neither of these cases overturned state laws, they did reinforce federal supremacy and made it clear that state legalization does not protect market participants from federal prosecution. Consequentially, growing, selling, or using medical marijuana was a risky undertaking during the Bush Administration, regardless of the state in which one lived.

The Obama Administration

President Barack Obama’s time in office saw a massive expansion of state legalization, and as the landscape shifted, his Administration rolled out a series of policy changes. As a presidential candidate, Obama pledged to roll back the aggressive enforcement policies of the Bush era, and initially upon taking office, he did so. In 2009, his Deputy Attorney General James Ogden released the Ogden Memo, announcing that the Department of Justice and DEA would deprioritize enforcement of the federal ban on marijuana in states where medical use was legal.

This new policy led to rapid and wide scale growth of the medical marijuana industry—particularly in the west, where state laws and regulations were less comprehensive. As a result, the Administration shifted tactics in 2011, when Deputy Attorney General James Cole issued the First Cole Memorandum. Per this memo, the federal government announced it would focus its enforcement efforts against “large-scale, privately-owned industrial marijuana cultivation centers” and other similar operations, “even where those activities purport to comply with state law”—allowing the government to go after big market actors who were taking advantage of lax state laws. So states with strong laws like Colorado and New Mexico were largely left alone, while states like California and Montana with weak regulatory systems were returned to an era of greater federal enforcement.

The biggest turning point for the Obama Administration and federal marijuana policy came after the 2012 election—when Colorado and Washington became the very first states to legalize the recreational use of marijuana. Rather than forcefully applying federal law in these states where voters had acted directly through ballot initiatives to legalize adult use of marijuana, the Obama Administration took steps to ensure that states choosing to legalize would prioritize federal interests in designing their regulatory systems. The Second Cole Memo, released in August 2013, laid out the federal marijuana policy that is still in place today: the federal government will not prioritize enforcement of the marijuana ban against people who are adhering to state laws—so long as those laws adequately take into account the following federal concerns:

  • Preventing distribution of marijuana to minors;
  • Preventing revenue from going to organized crime;
  • Preventing diversion to states that have not legalized marijuana;
  • Preventing commerce in other drugs;
  • Preventing violence and illegal use of firearms;
  • Preventing impaired driving;
  • Preventing unauthorized cultivation on public lands; and,
  • Preventing marijuana on federal property.

A few months later, the Obama Administration went even further, issuing joint guidance by the Department of Justice and the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) to address the banking problem. Banks are heavily regulated under federal law, so the conflict between state and federal marijuana laws is particularly sticky in the financial services context. Before this guidance, virtually no bank was willing to provide services or accounts to any marijuana-related business out of fear of federal prosecution for money laundering or aiding and abetting. The purpose of the new FinCEN guidance was to address this problem at least in a partial way and provide banks with some level of assurance and a process to serve the industry and move it away from all-cash operations. Like the Second Cole Memo, this guidance deprioritizes federal enforcement, this time against banks and credit unions, so long as:

  1. They serve only those marijuana-related businesses that are complying with state laws.
  2. None of the federal priorities laid out in the Second Cole Memo are being violated.

In exchange, banks are required to perform expansive due diligence on potential clients connected to the marijuana industry and file Suspicious Activity Reports flagging all marijuana accounts for federal regulators (noting whether or not they are legal businesses in the state in which they operate). While this guidance opened the door to some level of marijuana banking, it fell far short of solving the problem, as it can be revoked overnight and does not provide a defense from federal prosecution.

While the Obama Administration took consequential steps to change the way the federal government enforces federal marijuana policy, none of these changes are set in stone, and none actually resolve the ongoing conflict between state and federal laws on marijuana.

The Trump Administration

The future of federal marijuana enforcement is still uncertain under President Trump. The Second Cole Memo and FinCEN guidance remain in place, but no one knows for how long. And while the President has suggested in public remarks that marijuana—or at least its medical use—should be left up to the states, his Administration has already begun taking steps that indicate hostility to state laws on this issue. Just a few months ago, then White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said that the President sees a “big difference” between the medical and recreational uses of marijuana. He also said that when it comes to the federal marijuana ban, “I do believe you will see greater enforcement it,” particularly as it relates to recreational use. 

One major signal of this Administration’s approach to marijuana reform was naming Senator Jeff Sessions as Attorney General. As a Senator from Alabama, Sessions has long been virulently opposed to loosening marijuana laws, and he loudly criticized the Obama Administration for its use of prosecutorial discretion to limit enforcement. He has made a long list of statements that show deep hostility to legalization, including that “good people don’t smoke marijuana,” and marijuana is only “slightly less awful than heroin.” In his first few months as Attorney General, he established a task force to, in part, review the current Department of Justice policies on marijuana, asked Congressional leadership to not constrain his ability to enforce the federal ban, and wrote letters to several states that have legalized suggesting their regulatory regimes are insufficient. And he’s even calling for a revival of the D.A.R.E. program that was a fixture in schools in the 1980s and 90s—and that has been shown to do “little or nothing to combat substance use in youth.”

Sessions’ appointment and his actions aren’t the only signs coming out of the White House. The President himself added a signing statement to the current government funding bill reserving the right to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed” on marijuana, despite Congressional language that prohibited him from cracking down on state medical marijuana laws. That’s an indication that the Administration may not agree with Congress when it comes to marijuana and could potentially be planning to ignore any attempts to curtail its enforcement activities. And in May, the Administration appointed five people to its newly-created Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis. Four of those five are on the record in strong opposition to marijuana legalization—including Chris Christie, who threatened to come after Colorado’s legal market when he ran for president in the last election; Patrick Kennedy, who co-founded the largest anti-marijuana legalization organization in the country; Charlie Baker, the Massachusetts Governor who wrote a scathing op-ed opposing the legalization ballot initiative in his state; and Bertha Madras, a former Deputy Director in the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy under the second President Bush.

Though it has become remarkably difficult to predict the actions of President Trump and his White House, it seems fair to assume that these players will not be leading the charge on reform. Instead, any progress on resolving the conflict between state and federal marijuana laws will have to be driven by Congress.

Congress Warming To Marijuana Reform

Just as the last several decades have seen massive transformations in state laws, public opinion, and Administration policy, so too has Congress begun to shift on this issue. Despite uncertainty as to how the Trump Administration will address marijuana, support in Congress has grown markedly, especially with regard to medical marijuana. Instead of being viewed through a “tough on crime” lens, it is now commonly talked about by many on Capitol Hill as a matter of the Tenth Amendment and states’ rights. For others, marijuana reform is seen as a necessary component of criminal justice reform and efforts to reduce over-incarceration.

A Changing Atmosphere

Federal policymakers on both sides of the aisle are becoming steadily more comfortable with addressing marijuana, especially with regard to responsible regulation and increasing access to medical marijuana. Here are just a few snapshots of recent developments illustrating this change taking place on Capitol Hill:

  • The establishment of the Cannabis Caucus: For the first time ever, the 115th Congress is home to a bipartisan Cannabis Caucus, dedicated to educating Members and their staff about marijuana policy, bringing attention to the conflict between state and federal marijuana laws, and introducing bills to reform federal policy.
  • Introduction of legislation: Two years ago, the bipartisan Compassionate Access, Research Expansion, and Respect States (CARERS) Act became the first major marijuana reform bill ever introduced in the Senate. Now, more than a dozen marijuana reform bills have been introduced thus far in the 115th Congress—in both the House and Senate and by both Republicans and Democrats—and many more are expected as this session of Congress continues.
  • Passage of policy riders: Though there is currently only one marijuana-related policy rider included the federal spending bill—prohibiting the federal government from enforcing the federal ban in states where medical marijuana is legal—it may soon be joined by others. Several additional riders have passed out of at least one chamber of Congress, or come extremely close, in recent years. A rider preventing the Department of Justice from enforcing the federal marijuana ban in recreational states fell only 12 votes short in the House in 2015. Last year, the Senate Appropriations Committee voted to prevent the Treasury Department from prosecuting banks serving state-legal marijuana businesses. And in 2016 both chambers passed a rider that would have allowed doctors in the Veterans Affairs system to discuss medical marijuana with their patients—but it fell out when the House and Senate versions of the appropriations bill were combined.
  • Public statements of support and hearings: The last time the House of Representatives debated marijuana funding amendments on the Floor, at least four times as many Members—from both parties—spoke in favor of protecting state legalization from federal enforcement as spoke against it. And unlike in the past, when marijuana was a taboo topic on Capitol Hill, in recent years it has become a common subject of hearings in both chambers. Marijuana policy and enforcement were even specifically brought up by Senators at Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ confirmation hearing and when Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein testified before the Appropriations Committee.
  • Evolution of individual Members: It’s not just the body of Congress that’s changing on marijuana; key Members have begun to shift their positions—and thus the state of play on the Hill. Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), for example, opposed marijuana legalization in her state, but when it passed by popular vote in 2014 she began to evolve. Though she would not call herself pro-marijuana, she believes it is her responsibility to the people of Alaska to make sure that legalization goes as smoothly as possible. She has since voted multiple times to limit federal enforcement in government spending bills, is co-sponsoring several Senate marijuana bills, and this spring co-authored a letter urging Attorney General Sessions to uphold the Second Cole Memo and respect state legalization efforts. The same shift can be seen amongst many of her peers. Everyone was surprised when long-time establishment Republican Lindsay Graham (R-SC) signed onto the Senate bill legalizing medical marijuana last Congress, but this year he’s been replaced by an even more surprising name—the very conservative Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) Add to that original co-sponsors and Democratic rising stars Senators Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) and Cory Booker (D-NJ), as well as libertarian firebrand Rand Paul (R-KY), and you have a who’s who of the Senate lined up to allow states to legalize medical marijuana nationwide.50

Concrete Action Instructing the Administration Not to Interfere

Though it is yet to have begun rewriting the Controlled Substances Act, Congress has very clearly spoken on marijuana policy—through the power of the purse. When Congress writes and passes appropriations bills funding the federal government, it has the ability to include restrictions that tie the hands of the Administration. That’s exactly what it’s done on marijuana with the bipartisan Rohrabacher-Farr Amendment—now the Rohrabacher-Blumenauer Amendment.

This provision amends the current government funding bill to prohibit the Department of Justice from spending any money to prevent states that have chosen to legalize medical marijuana “from implementing their own laws that authorize the use, distribution, possession, or cultivation of medical marijuana.” It’s a clear instruction from Congress to the executive branch not to meddle where states have legalized medical marijuana. And it’s more than just advice. In passing this amendment, Congress has instructed the Administration in no uncertain terms not to interfere—and a federal Circuit Court of Appeals reads it the same way. Per a Ninth Circuit ruling, the Rohrabacher-Farr amendment prohibits the Department of Justice not only from preventing states from implementing their medical marijuana laws, but also from raiding businesses or prosecuting people who are following the laws in their states.

First passed in 2014 by only a single vote in the Republican-controlled House, it has been included in every appropriations bill since, passing in 2015 with dozens of votes to spare, again in a Republican Congress. Every time it has passed—both on the House Floor and in the Senate Appropriations Committee—it has done so thanks to a bipartisan vote. And the Senate margins are even more conclusive—despite Republican majorities, the amendment passed out of committee with more than twice as many votes in favor as opposed in both 2015 and 2016. This year, the Senate Appropriations Committee passed it by simple voice vote. Unfortunately, while the amendment has been effective at protecting medical markets, it is not permanent. Because it is just a rider to a federal appropriations bill, it must be renewed each budget cycle, and is currently slotted to expire in September 2017 if Congress does not act to include it in the final version of the bill again.

Ten years ago, few Members took marijuana policy seriously, even fewer were willing to discuss it publicly, and almost none were well-versed on the problems created by the conflict between state and federal laws. But times have changed and the 115th Congress has warmed to the topic as one deserving not only serious consideration but also real action.

State Policymakers Embracing Legalization

The change that has taken place over the last decade in Washington is remarkable—but also negligible compared to what’s happening in the states. States have been steadily passing legalization initiatives, both through their legislatures and via the popular vote, since the 1990s. Of the 29 states that have legalized medical marijuana, more than half—15—did so through their state legislatures.

29 medical marijuana states, the year they legalized, and how

Ballot v. Legislature

So far, each of the eight states that has legalized recreational marijuana has done so via ballot initiative. Vermont’s is the only state legislature in the nation to have passed a recreational legalization bill, but it was vetoed by the Governor earlier this year with instructions to address some specific concerns.

Once their states decided to legalize marijuana for adult use, state policymakers of both parties have endeavored to make sure legalization is implemented successfully. Earlier this year, the Governors of Alaska, Colorado, Oregon, and Washington sent a joint letter to Attorney General Sessions, defending their states’ programs and urging the Department of Justice to not intervene.

Legislation Passing by a Wide Margin

A detailed analysis of the ten states to most recently legalize medical marijuana legislatively finds that most bills passed with large majorities, regardless of the party controlling the chamber. In nine of those ten states, the measure passed with at least 60% of the vote in the lower chamber of the state legislature. And in all but Ohio, the upper house voted in favor of legalization with at least 58% of the vote. In several states, the bills passed with more than 80% or even 90% approval—making it clear that medical legalization on the state level has gained wide support across the ideological spectrum.

Percent by which the 10 most recent state medical marijuana bills passed

Bill Passage Percentage

Bipartisan Support for Reform

Marijuana is even less of a partisan issue on the state level than on the federal level, though Democratic policymakers at all levels of government remain more supportive of reform than Republicans. In every single one of the ten states to most recently legalize legislatively, the majority passing the bill through each chamber of the state legislature was bipartisan. And while in nine of those ten states the Governor signing the bill into law was a Democrat, in the three most recent—Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia—both chambers of the state legislature were controlled by Republicans. In fact, in Ohio Republican Governor John Kasich signed his state’s bill into law, making it the first to enact marijuana legalization through a process that was Republican-controlled at every stage. And the Democratic Governor of West Virginia who signed his state’s bill into law earlier this year—Jim Justice—has since announced he is switching party affiliation to be a Republican.

Party control of the 10 state legislatures most recently passing medical marijuana laws

Partisan Control of Majority Maker Districts

When Vermont became the first state in the nation to pass a recreational legalization bill this spring, it did so with healthy majorities as well—20-9 in the Senate and 79-66 in the House. Though only a handful of Republicans voted for the bill in each chamber, when Republican Governor Phil Scott vetoed it, he said that he is not philosophically opposed to marijuana legalization and has since been working with the legislature on a new bill that addresses some specific concerns he had raised.

Increasingly, marijuana reform is becoming a bipartisan issue in state legislatures, regardless of the party in power. That’s especially true for medical legalization, which is now the law of the land in the majority of states.

The Lack of Backlash

We analyzed the state legislative and gubernatorial elections immediately following legalization in each of the ten states that most recently legislated medical marijuana, and we couldn’t identify a single instance of negative political consequences for elected officials who supported legalization of medical marijuana.

We could find no state legislative races in which voting in favor of a medical marijuana bill was detrimental. Only two state senates flipped party control after legalization—New York and Minnesota—but in both the medical marijuana vote had been overwhelmingly in favor and bipartisan. Only two state lower chambers flipped party control as well—Minnesota and New Hampshire—but in neither state was marijuana a major campaign issue. Not a single Governor in any of these ten states lost a reelection campaign because he or she signed a medical marijuana bill into law—in fact, only one Governor lost their reelection at all (Democrat Pat Quinn of Illinois), and it was to an opponent who did not oppose medical marijuana legalization.

It seems clear that legalizing medical marijuana is not a political liability for Governors or state legislatures. In fact, given the overwhelming popularity of medical marijuana, just the opposite may prove to be true going forward, especially as more states legalize and those that don’t are left behind.

State policymakers have led the way on marijuana reform. More than half of the 29 states that have legalized medical marijuana did so legislatively, and more are likely to follow. The growing bipartisan nature of state reforms and the absence of any major political consequences for those policymakers who enacted them illustrate that policymakers can feel comfortable publicly supporting legalization, regardless of party affiliation.

Conclusion

The policy landscape has changed dramatically around marijuana during the past 20 years. Roughly 98% of Americans live in states that permit some use of medical marijuana and roughly one-fifth of the country’s population lives in states where recreational use is also legal. Public support for legalization—and opposition to federal enforcement—is at the highest levels ever seen. And while there is uncertainty about what course the Trump Administration will take on marijuana policy, support in Congress and statehouses nationwide continues to grow. Increasingly, federal policymakers are recognizing the conflict between state and federal laws and are working to proactively to address it. That’s critical, because as the number of states where marijuana is legal expands, the need for responsible, safe, and smart governance is more important than ever.

Nathan Kasai co-authored this report, which was originally published by Third Way, a Washington, D.C.-based centrist public policy think tank. 

4 Cannabis-Infused Dishes To Bring To A Labor Day Cookout

You can’t just bring any old food with you to a sunny locale and hope for the best. Unless its prepared to order and promptly eaten or stored on ice, many foods we love with enter the unsafe for consumption zone rapidly. Whether its beachside, poolside, or at a park, we all want delicious homemade snacks to munch on while enjoying the great outdoors. Since cannabis potluck is a really discreet way to combine a love for THC with outdoor activities, this list should make your Labor Day that much more chill.

Before you say goodbye to summer, you can still enjoy its delights, dining al fresco one of the key ones for me personally. All of the outside favorites are still habitable until Halloween in some places, so get your fill of nice weather before it peaces out for good.

Photo by Danielle Guercio

Beach​ ​Dip

This dip comes together in mere moments for a super efficient night-before beach snack prep. Rinse one can of black beans, mash with ½ cup salsa, half a packet of Sazon, two chopped scallions, a squeeze of lemon or lime, and 2 Tbs cannabis infused olive oil*.

I also add either two chopped up fresh chilis or a ½ tsp of ground dried chilis if you like things spicy, and cilantro if it’s on hand. It tastes miles better than anything you bought in a jar, pairs perfectly with virtually any chips, and hits the spot when you’re baking that bod.

Photo by Danielle Guercio

Park​ ​Primi

Another filling bean option that you can make in moments is marinated chickpeas. Hummus gets old for me, as the taste of tahini sometimes comes through too strongly in store bought brands. I like the taste of the chickpeas to shine through, so this deconstructed hummus allows them to do just that.

Mix together ½ cup olive oil with 1 tablespoon cannabis olive oil*, the juice and peel of one lemon, salt and pepper, thyme, and a scant sprinkle of dried chili. Serve with crusty bread and die happy at the picnic spread.

Photo by Danielle Guercio

Soup​ ​Squad

Coldpressed Chilled store bought soups make perfect sense for this More health conscious generation. New brand Zupa Noma is bringing more than gazpacho to the scene with their fiber-boosting and tasty soup selection. Toss in with your beer cooler and spike with cannabis olive oil* or spike your hot sauce with glycerin tincture to make the healthy treats also take you to cloud 9. My fav was the Yellow Pepper Turmeric soup, which I used to make beach micheladas and then replenish myself from said micheladas.

Photo by Danielle Guercio

Basic​ ​Bruschetta

Though I love raw tomatoes with a passion, I am dutifully obsessed with a simple tomato confit as a cold bruschetta the next day. One head of garlic plus one pound of quartered cherry tomatoes with a generous sprinkle of salt and olive oil baked at 350 for 30 minutes gives you the juiciest, sweetest, most complex tomato taste you can get at that quick rate.

If it’s too hot you can also make this in a pan on the stovetop, but it won’t be as juicy. Stir in 2 tablespoons cannabis olive oil* and a few torn basil leaves to complete the taste profile. Refrigerate overnight, serve with toast points.

*Cannabis​ ​Olive​ ​Oil

Decarboxylate 3.5g of finely ground cannabis at 225 degrees for 20 minutes in a tightly sealed, oven safe container. Put cannabis in lidded mason jar or vacuum sealed bag with cannabis and ½ cup olive oil. Heat in water bath just under boiling for at least 1 hour. Strain and chill to use in recipes.

Photo by Danielle Guercio

Thanks to the lack of perishable cheeses and dairy in these items, you can risk having them sit on a table or picnic for a bit longer than some of their creamier counterparts. Salsa Verde brings the goodness of guacamole without the risk of oxidation by burying the avo in acidic store bought salsa for an easy cheat. Throw them in a clean recycled jar, grab some chips or a baguette en route, and you’ve got a quality contribution to any party vibes!

Photos by Danielle Guercio 

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