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Meghan Markle Is Reportedly Overwhelmed By Pressures Of Royal Life

As Meghan Markle prepares for her wedding in May, sources claim the retired actress has been feeling trapped and overwhelmed by the pressures of royal life.

Markle moved to London last year after she and Prince Harry announced they were engaged, and ever since, she’s been traveling to different parts of the UK for all sorts of meetings and charity events.

According to the Daily Mail, even though she seems comfortable and confident in her outings, she’s been missing the anonymity that came with her life in Toronto. And since the engagement was confirmed, it’s hard for her to leave the palace, where she lives in a two bedroom apartment with Prince Harry.

Via Daily Mail

Meghan may appear confident when on royal walkabouts, but she does have some pre-wedding butterflies – not about Harry, but about her new life.

She can’t potter about on the High Street, attend gym classes, or jog around Hyde Park. Instead she is confined to yoga at home or visits to Kate and William in Apartment 1A.

Markle has sought advice from the Duchess of Cornwall, Camilla, and from Kate Middleton, who’ve both helped her cope with the pressures of being part of the royal family.

Gossip: Pregnant Kate Middleton Goes Against Protocol; Angelina Jolie & Brad Pitt Divorce Talks Go Nuclear

Kate Middleton chose a dark green dress and many wondered if she would choose a black dress in solidarity with the Time’s Up movement. Many actresses tonight have chosen black dresses, and fans on Twitter were speculating if the Duchess would take a stand.

It is against royal protocol to take a stance on political issues, though Duchess Kate did wear a black ribbon around her dress.

Angelina Jolie & Brad Pitt Were Close To Finalizing Divorce But ‘Talks Blew Up’

They came this close. Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie were just days away from finalizing a divorce and custody agreement in late January when talks blew up at the last minute, In Touch magazine has learned.
“They had been diligently going along privately and amicably, trying to keep the focus on the family,” an insider tells In Touch exclusively. “But suddenly, Angelina reversed course when she felt Brad was pushing too hard to resolve the situation to his benefit.”

Now both Brad, 54, and Angelina, 42, say they need more time to hash everything out. On Feb. 6, both asked to extend the temporary judge in their case — which remains sealed — while both parties continue to discuss custody and distribution of assets. “The completion date for all proceedings before the temporary judge is extended from Dec. 31, 2017, to Dec. 31, 2018,” reads the order (right), obtained by In Touch.

“This means their custody battle can drag on for another year,” says the insider.

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

These Cities Consume The Most Marijuana In The World

Where marijuana is legal, people will not necessarily consume more of it. In fact, of the top five cities for cannabis consumption, it’s illegal in three. The U.S. was the only country to place two cities on the list (cue “U.S.A.!” chant if that’s your thing).

Seedo, a company that makes a device allowing users to grow cannabis plants at home, recently released a report that shows which cities around the world consume the most weed. They compiled the list through crowdsourcing and cross-referencing it with the World Drug Report 2017.

Important reminder: The cities were ranked by overall consumption, not per capita use.

5. Cairo, Egypt

  • Population: 7.8 million
  • Area: 117 square miles
  • Legal status: Illegal
  • Total consumption in metric tons: 32.59
  • Consumption per capita in grams: 4.17
  • Price per gram: $16.15

Hemp production in Egypt can be traced back as many as 5,000 years, though there exists no concrete proof that it has always been used for psychoactive purposes. But, numerous sources conclude enthusiasts there have been getting high for about 1,000 years.

Alcohol is illegal in the Islamic country. The book “Cannabis: A History,” claims that when Napoleon’s troops invaded in 1798 the troops turned to, and liked, hashish.

Users with weed caught by authorities face very long jail time. Though enforcement is considerably lax and judges have wide sentencing leeway.

Foreigners in the country’s largest and capital city will find purchasing cannabis relatively easy. Sample advice from webehigh.com: Strike up a conversation with a local, but watch out for inflated prices and camel dung.

4. Los Angeles, USA

  • Population: 4 million
  • Area: 469 square miles
  • Legal status: Legal
  • Total consumption in metric tons: 36.06
  • Consumption per capita in grams: 9.015
  • Price per gram: $8.14

Voters made recreational use legal effective the first of this year. Prior to that, California was one of the leaders in legal medical marijuana.

To buy weed in The City of Angels go to a state-licensed shop. You can search for those outlets on the state Web site. There are also many quasi-legal “co-ops” that were established to bend the medical weed rules prior to full legalization that operate around the city.

And, as with alcohol, check your watch and plan ahead for that big night. It is illegal for the shops to sell from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m.

3. New Delhi, India

  • Population: 11.7 million
  • Area: 178 square miles
  • Legal status: Illegal
  • Total consumption in metric tons: 38.26
  • Consumption per capita in grams: 3.27
  • Price per gram: $4.38

The history of cannabis use in India dates back at least 4,000 years. Common traditional uses include a milkshake-like beverage. Though illegal, the law is rarely and laxly enforced, due in large part to its long history of use in Indian traditions.

According to legend, Shiva, one of the main gods of Hinduism, called cannabis his favorite food. He discovered the plant while seeking rest from an argument with his family (wonder if it was on Thanksgiving).

The very low prices may seem enticing to the tourist, but webehigh.com cautions to watch out for weed that has been cut with shoe polish. The site’s travel guide suggests going to one of the city’s many “hippie” cafes and ask a fellow tourist.

2. Karachi, Pakistan

  • Population: 15 million
  • Area: 237 square miles
  • Legal status: Illegal
  • Total consumption in metric tons: 41.95
  • Consumption per capita in grams: 2.8
  • Price per gram: $5.32

The country’s largest city also ranks as the third-largest in the world by population. Possession or sales can lead to a seven-year sentence. The law is enforced but, as one travel guide says, most police can be bought off for less than $10.

Cannabis is widely available throughout the country from local dealers. That same report said throughout the country 6.4 million people (at the time roughly 6.5 percent of the adult population) used cannabis.

1. New York City, USA

  • Population: 8.5 million
  • Area: 690 square miles
  • Legal status: Partially legal
  • Total consumption in metric tons: 77.44
  • Consumption per capita in grams: 9.11
  • Price per gram: $10.76

The Big Apple has a long history of growing and using weed. In the 80s, the Green Aid movement supplied AIDS patients with cannabis — one of the first organized medical marijuana efforts in the country.

Recreational use in the city has largely been decriminalized and possession of a small amount is now a violation — a ticket with a fine, no jail time, and no criminal record. There are harsher penalties for amounts greater than two ounces. Medical use, from state-licensed outlets, was allowed last year.

Finding marijuana is easy for tourists. Weedmaps.com lists local dispensaries (some deliver and may only require a phone consultation to qualify) and storefronts.

Which Former Basketball Player Just Introduced A CBD Wellness Product?

Retired NBA great Al Harrington, who discovered the benefits of CBDs (Cannabinoids) at the end of his playing career, has premiered a new line of wellness products based on hemp, the non-psychoactive elements found in the plant. As an upscale consumer brand, Harrington Wellness will feature products that will foster healthy living and all the benefits that come from it.

Harrington introduced the new brand at a star-studded dinner in Beverly Hills at the start of the NBA’s 2018 All-Star Weekend taking place in Los Angeles.

“After more surgeries than I care to admit, my knee was shot, and I was in pain all the time,” said Harrington, CEO of Harrington Wellness and founder of The Harrington Group. “If I had the benefit of CBDs, like our Harrington Wellness Cream when I was playing, there’s no doubt I could have played two or three more seasons in the NBA.”

It was Harrington’s fall 2017 “Uninterrupted” online interview with retired NBA Commissioner David Stern, which has generated over 122,000 views on YouTube and more than one million total across various websites, that led to the creation of Harrington Wellness.

“David and I were talking about the benefits of CBDs and how NBA players could benefit from them,” added the former New York Knicks and Denver Nuggets forward. “That interview led to lots of interest and an outpouring of support, so I created Harrington Wellness to fill the unserved niche of upmarket, professional and premium CBD products that are legal anywhere in the country.”

Harrington initially discovered the recuperative power of Cannabis, and later CBDs, as a result of convincing his grandmother, Viola, to use extracts to help with her glaucoma. As a result, Harrington Wellness’ sister company, Viola Extracts, is named in her honor.

The Essential Facts About Marijuana And Testicular Cancer

One cannot overemphasize the impact of cancer on contemporary society. Regardless of an individual’s age group or socioeconomic status, they are bound to know someone who died far too young from this awful disease. Similarly, cancer is non-discriminatory in its victims—taking the lives of males, females, youths, and elderly. For the young male demographic, testicular cancer is a real threat to one’s longevity and quality of life. Because, “testicular cancer is the most common form of cancer in men between the ages of 15 and 35.” For the most part, testicular cancer propagates within the germ cells that comprise male sperm.

Depending on the “stage” (one through three) of testicular cancer development, there are a few options for treatment. For starters, this form of cancer is initially combatted with surgery, in which the cancerous testicle, and occasionally lymph nodes, are removed. After surgery, testicular cancer patients are treated with radiation or chemotherapy—depending on the severity of the case in question. It’s important to note, however, that testicular cancer has the highest survival rate of any cancer with survival rates as high as 95 percent .

Opposing Opinions: A Word Of Caution

As seen with the many facets of the novel medical marijuana field, there are opposing study results concerning the benefits of cannabis use in relation to testicular cancer. Most notably, some studies report that regular use of marijuana heightens “the HCG testicular cancer marker in men.” This means, during blood tests marijuana triggers the same chemical red flags seen with testicular cancer detection. While opinions on these findings vary, it’s worth noting that some studies report that regular cannabis use actually increases one’s chance in contracting testicular cancer.

Chemotherapy Ailment Relief

The use of medical marijuana to treat the side effects of chemotherapy is the most widely studied, and accepted, type of medical use for the herb. To elaborate, there have been a number of studies which investigate the benefits of cannabinoids in quelling physical ailments related to chemotherapy. These investigations show that “[t]he main beneficial effects reported from use of cannabinoids [for chemo patients] are a reduction in the incidence and severity of nausea and vomiting…and [the] stimulation of appetite”.

Cannabis As Preventative Medicine

There has been cutting-edge scientific work done on laboratory animals to test the effectiveness of cannabinoids in retarding cancer cell growth. Remarkably, these studies show that cannabis does in fact “induce tumor regression in rodents” by effecting the “proliferation and apoptosis of numerous types of cancer cells”. Therefore, through the systematic studies of various cannabinoids and their reactions to the human organism, it’s not unrealistic to feel that medical marijuana could one day be used as a preventative medicine regarding testicular cancer.

Kent Gruetzmacher M.F.A. is a Colorado based freelance writer and the Director of Business Development at Mac & Fulton Executive Search (www.mandfconsultants.com), an employment recruiting firm dedicated to the indoor gardening and hydroponics industry. He is interested in utilizing his M.A. in the Humanities to critically explore the many cultural and business facets of this youthful, emergent industry by way of his entrepreneurial projects.

We’ll Have Live Streaming Holograms In The Next 5 Years

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Magic Leap is a promising company that focuses on Augmented Reality and that wants to bring the digital world out of the screen and into our physical spaces.

Their most discussed product is their AR Goggles, a device that looks a little clunky and heavy, but that promises to merge the real world with the digital one. Recently, CEO Rony Abovitz announced that Magic Leap would partner with the NBA to bring basketball closer to their viewers in groundbreaking ways.

During an interview with The Verge, Abovitz claimed that within 3 to 5 years, people will be able to watch an NBA game live, in a holographic and interactive form. That sounds very stressful, and kind of cool, even though it’s a complete departure from the way in which people view and experience sports. Will you have to move your head around? What about if you want to eat some chips or have a beer? We have many questions.

Abovitz elaborated that for this to happen the stadiums and venues would have to install several camera sensors at different points, to capture all the necessary footage. This development could change broadcasting, and the way in which sports are aired. The necessary cameras required for this “volumetric capture” would be much smaller, with higher definition.

Magic Leap’s proposal, or dream, demands outfitting every space with these camera sensors and expecting every person to own the goggles. Which could happen. Everyone owns a TV, and a smartphone, what are a pair of glasses in the grand scheme of things? Still, five years sounds like too little time to adapt to such a radical change.

Everything You Need To Know About Cannabis Transdermal Patches

Among the thousands of ways to consume marijuana, there’s transdermal patches, a method that’s not as popular as smoking or consuming edibles, but that nonetheless delivers the goods. Transdermal patches are mostly medicinal, provinding relief for a myriad of conditions while offering reduced negative side effects.

Transdermal patches are different than smoking your average joint; instead of giving you an intense high that can last for an hour or two, these produce a steady effect that can last for longer periods of time and that may treat symptoms that you won’t even notice. Patches are more about reducing anxiety, pain, and nausea, than of getting you super high.

These patches should be placed in areas of the body where there are tons of blood vessels, making it easier for the THC to be delivered straight into your blood stream. This method of delivery is one of the most effective ways to get THC into your system, delivering it without any outside influence.

Patches are strong, unlike cannabis creams and lotions that affect the surface of your skin, they’re designed to go through all seven layers of the dermis.

Transdermal patches allow you to function really well, having limited psychoactive effects and producing long term relief. Once you use the patch, you’ll feel a steady stream of relief that’ll last hours. They’re are also easier to manage than other forms of cannabis, coming in with different dosages – 10mg or 20 – that you can simply remove if you’re not feeling comfortable with.

The patches normally kick in after a 20 minute window, and you can adapt them in any way you want, cutting them in half or in quarters if you want to consume a smaller dose.

Green Rush Blues: Why The Illicit Market Will Thrive In California

Old Kai is an Emerald Triangle-based distribution business licensed by Mendocino County to transport cannabis from the farms and brands it works with to the main marketplaces in cities to the south. The company took all the steps required by the state and county to make their business compliant with the new laws and regulations, and they were excited to provide product to Bay Area dispensaries in anticipation of the January 1st roll-out of legal sales.

But in late December 2017, just eight days before adult use commerce would begin, an Old Kai delivery truck was pulled over on Highway 101 in Mendocino County by the California Highway Patrol, which called in the Mendocino Major Crimes Task Force as backup. Old Kai’s drivers were arrested and cited and nearly 2,000 pounds of cannabis was impounded as evidence.

Technically, Old Kai was not yet in compliance with the new regulations, because the new regulations did not go into effect until January 1st. And if Old Kai had followed the old guidelines pertaining to Proposition 215, California’s loosely regulated medical marijuana provision, the company would not have been compliant with the new policy for adult use.

Why did the California Highway Patrol and Mendocino County cops even bother to arrest an employee of a licensed cannabis distribution company when legal adult sales were imminent? Hadn’t these law enforcement officials heard that marijuana prohibition in Mendocino County, and California at large, was supposed to be over?

The Old Kai bust was not an anomaly. Rather, it was one of several shakedown operations mounted against licensed cannabis companies in the Emerald Triangle prior to the start of legal sales for recreational use.

Drug raids involving seizures and forfeitures have long been a cash cow for police, and a spate of arrests in Mendocino County followed a similar pattern during the waning days of prohibition: money and product are confiscated, never to be returned, and the district attorney’s office discreetly indicates that a six-figure sum will make the problem go away.

Now that marijuana is officially legal for grown-ups to purchase in California, will the cops back off? Not necessarily. State and local law enforcement could be very busy for a while targeting cannabis cultivators and businesses operating outside the regulated market.

The Road To Legalization

Although cannabis has been a mainstay of California’s unofficial economy for decades, the road to legalization has not been easy. Efforts to legalize marijuana at the state level began in the early 1970s and grew into a grassroots social movement, especially in San Francisco, the following decade during the worst days of the AIDS epidemic.

The passage of Proposition 215 in 1996 legalized the therapeutic use of cannabis, and a disparate network of cultivation collectives cautiously emerged in Northern California to provide medical marijuana to certified patients who could now legally possess it under state law. The first storefronts sprang up in San Francisco and Los Angeles and spread to a few other cities during the Clinton-Bush II years.

The federal government, working in tandem with state and local law enforcement, responded by threatening doctors, raiding gardens and dispensaries, and prosecuting suppliers.  According to the Drug Policy Alliance, between 2006 and 2015 there were nearly half a million marijuana-related arrests in California, mostly for possession. State legislators, meanwhile, declined to regulate California’s nascent cannabis industry, which prospered, despite all, in a confusing legal limbo.

A pro-cannabis cultural shift in the United States was already well underway when President Barack Obama was inaugurated in 2009. Several TV reality shows featuring “marijuana millionaires” captivated a national audience in the throes of the worst economic downturn the nation had experienced since the Great Depression.

When Colorado and Washington voted to legalize recreational cannabis for adults in 2012, the Obama administration issued a memo outlining a look-the-other-way policy with respect to state marijuana laws. The four-page memo, written by Deputy Attorney General James M. Cole, basically asserted that marijuana businesses would not be subject to federal prosecution as long as they complied with state law.

Marijuana fever took hold in America, and the Green Rush went into overdrive. Growers, investors, scam artists, get-rich-quick schemers, and patients seeking relief began flocking to California and other Western states where a legal cannabis industry had taken root.

But the Cole Memo also asserted that each state, as a condition of avoiding federal interference, was required to originate its own cannabis supply and prevent it from leaving its borders. This has resulted in sky-high prices in Washington, “emergency shortages” in Nevada (which initiated recreational sales in 2017), and corrupt, pay-to-play medical marijuana legislation in Midwestern and East Coast states like Ohio and Florida.

Proponents of drug policy reform argued that a regulated adult market would generate significant tax revenues in states that legalized marijuana. They were right. From windfall taxes to job creation and increased tourism, the economic impact of legal cannabis commerce has exceeded expectations in Colorado, Washington, and Oregon.

Legislators in other states began to warm up to the industry. Several influential politicians in California endorsed Proposition 64, the successful 2016 ballot measure that allows adults to possess small amounts of cannabis and to cultivate as many as six plants for personal use. Prop 64 included anti-monopoly language that prohibited large-scale mega-grows for five years, while giving local jurisdictions considerable latitude to tax and regulate cannabis commerce, including onsite consumption at dispensaries and social clubs. 

Game Changer

In a surprise move, shortly before the new law was due to go into effect, the anti-monopoly provision was scrapped by state officials who had merged the medical marijuana program and adult use regulations into one system. Certain industry lobbyists got what they wanted, but this is not what California residents voted for.

There were no public hearings about the 11th hour reversal, which removed the cap on the number of cultivation licenses a single company could own. The rule-change directly contradicted an environmental impact report issued by the Department of Food and Agriculture a few weeks earlier.

Small and medium-sized cannabis growers felt betrayed, fearing a corporate takeover of the world’s largest legal marijuana market. The California Growers Association, which represents some Emerald Triangle growers, filed suit against the California Department of Food Agriculture hoping to overturn the rule that permits cannabis farms of near-unlimited size.

With a population approaching 40 million residents, the Golden State is an economic behemoth in both the cannabis industry and the nation at large. The staggering amount of money to be made has raised the stakes for farmers in the Emerald Triangle, the epicenter of domestic cannabis production, which produces much more marijuana than California residents can consume. Most of the marijuana grown in Northern California is smuggled across state lines and sold on the black market throughout the United States.

Caught between a voracious national consumer demand and recalcitrant federal law, the cannabis industry in California faces a precarious future. The same election that legalized cannabis for adult use in the Golden State also put Donald Trump in the White House and Jeff Sessions, an anti-marijuana ideologue, in charge of the Justice Department.

California’s Green Rush got a lot more complicated on January 4, 2018, when Attorney General Sessions announced he was rescinding the Obama-era Cole Memo, which had provided a measure of protection for cannabis cultivators and producers. The Attorney General’s drug war saber-rattling was a direct response to the legalization of marijuana for personal use and the advent of commercial sales in California.

Feeling The Byrne

 There are no reliable numbers on exactly how much cannabis is being grown in California, but recent estimates have put the total between $30 and $40 billion a year, with only about $5 billion worth consumed in state. The rest supplies an insatiable black market from sea to shining sea, despite ongoing law enforcement efforts to eradicate as many marijuana plants as possible.

Marijuana eradication efforts in the Emerald Triangle have been funded for over 25 years via the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant (JAG) Program. This federal block grant program promotes collaboration between the DEA and local police agencies, which have raided numerous marijuana grow-ops and destroyed tens of thousands of illegal plants.

State law enforcement officials split the Byrne Grant funds 60/40 with local jurisdictions and have broad discretion on how the money is actually spent. The program has been criticized for financially incentivizing local law enforcement to focus on non-violent drug offenders in lieu of more serious problems like rape, murder and other violent crimes.

After nearly three decades, the Byrne Grant program has actually done very little to stem the supply or demand for illegal drugs, especially cannabis. And money for eradication shows no signs of drying up – even though marijuana commerce is now legal and licensed in California.

In 2017, the Department of Justice disclosed it would award 56 local grants that year worth about $17.7 million each, for a total of $174.4 million, through the JAG program. One of these grants has funded the County of Mendocino Marijuana Eradication Team (COMMET), which continues to participate in federal and state efforts to destroy unlicensed grow-ops – not just in Mendocino, but throughout the state.

Mendocino County officials set aside an additional $60,000 in asset forfeiture money (seized from drug suspects) to pair with $70,000 from JAG to underwrite COMMET in 2018. And COMMET is just one of several agencies participating in anti-marijuana busts and shakedowns throughout the state, despite legalization.

Costly Failure

Historically, the Byrne Grant program sponsored the efforts of the Campaign Against Marijuana Planting (CAMP), a law enforcement operation that used helicopters and paramilitary units to identify and eliminate marijuana grows in the sparsely populated hills and mountains of the Emerald Triangle. In recent years, COMMET and other eradication efforts have begun to focus on the massive illegal gardens being cut into the California hills, targeting polluters and other black market cultivators.

But state agencies won’t be able to fully protect the forests and water supply if marijuana remains a Schedule I Controlled Substance on a federal level. And that’s where it remains – despite all the science showing that it should never have been scheduled in the first place.

As long as there is an illegal demand for cannabis, there will also be an illegal supply made artificially more valuable by the prohibition meant to prevent it. And because it is federally illegal, cannabis is valuable enough to grow illegally in the middle of remote forests, the ecosystem be damned.

In 2016, the DEA spent $4.3 million in California to eliminate marijuana plants, $200,000 in Oregon, and $760,000 in Washington.

“That’s a huge cost when evidence has shown that these eradication efforts have not significantly reduced the total amount of illegal marijuana making its way to the market,” said Diane Goldstein, a former police officer. “We have to ask if local marijuana eradication is the best way for the federal government to spend its money.”

Goldstein, now retired, was the first female lieutenant at the Redondo Beach Police Department in Los Angeles County. During her career as a peace officer, Goldstein participated in raids to uproot illegal marijuana gardens on public lands. She witnessed firsthand the toll the drug war was taking in her community. After she retired from the force, Goldstein became a spokeswoman for the Law Enforcement Action Partnership (LEAP), formerly known as Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, which describes itself as “a nonprofit group of police, judges, and other law enforcement professionals who advance drug policy and criminal justice solutions that improve public safety.”

Goldstein says that California needs to lower barriers to entry for small businesses and pull back on taxes in order to bring the good actors into compliance and stabilize local economies. If not, the black market will flourish and anti-marijuana law enforcement operations will continue.

“There is no amount of money the federal government can give marijuana eradication task forces that is going to solve this problem,” Goldstein concludes.

The Cup Runneth Over

The Emerald Cup is one of the biggest cultural events of the year for the Northern California cannabis scene. The annual December gathering features big-name musicians, thousands of vending booths for all things hemp and cannabis, educational panels and workshops, and a prestigious competition with awards for the best products in a variety of categories. The contest drew over 600 product entrees in 2017.

From a marketing perspective, winning a highly coveted prize for best THC concentrate, CBD-rich flower, gourmet edible or topical salve at the Emerald Cup can make a huge difference for a cannabis brand. But there’s a good possibility that fewer contestants will participate in the next Emerald Cup, as many farmers and producers are opting out of the legal market.

Organized by Tim Blake, a former smuggler-turned-black market grower-turned legal entrepreneur, the Emerald Cup didn’t start out as a high-profile event. Disguised as a birthday party, the first Cup was held in 2003 at a community center in Humboldt County,

“Back then, the first place winners wouldn’t even pick up their awards,” Blake recalled. “People came in masks and there were only a couple dozen entries. Everyone was afraid they would be busted, but they weren’t.”

Blake bought property in southern Humboldt and installed a medical marijuana dispensary on the premises, called Area 101, which included meditative gardens, a 1500-pound statue of Ganesh (the Hindu elephant god), and other “religious deities.” Area 101 hosted the Emerald Cup until it outgrew the space a few years ago. Today, the Cup has become so large, attracting more than 25,000 weekend visitors, that it sells out the entire Sonoma County Fairgrounds, its current venue.

Writing On The Wall

In many ways the evolution of the Emerald Cup reflects the changes that have transpired in recent years as the underground cannabis community has evolved into an above-ground, multibillion dollar industry. Not everyone is happy about the transition. At last year’s Cup, anxiety and disdain for the new regulations were palpable among many of the vendors. “Black Markets Matter” signs appeared conspicuously at several vending booths.

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The message was unmistakable: Legalization won’t work unless growers and producers who wish to be compliant have an easier path – which means California legislators must reform the overly burdensome tax code and other policies that favor well-heeled investors over long-time veterans of the cannabis scene.

Blake saw the writing on the wall. For several years, he and others had been preparing for legalization. Blake rolled the success of the Emerald Cup brand into a popular line of hash products, a cannabis nursery, garden center, and manufacturing and farming company that markets top-shelf rosin and popular, pre-loaded vaporizer cartridges.

Despite the anticipated cultural and economic shift within the cannabis community, Blake still felt it was important to support the passage of Proposition 64. “I supported Prop 64 in 2016 because I felt like as long as people were still going to prison and patients can’t get their medicine, we have to put an end to this,” he said.

But as small farmers and boutique producers struggle to keep their businesses profitable while coming into compliance, Blake sees falling prices on the cannabis commodity market as a threat to the old way of life up north.

“Among my friends and family there is going to be more hardship and bankruptcy,” he predicted.

Even though it had been evident for some time that prohibition’s days were numbered, few expected profit margins to shrink so quickly as California approached legalization. Blake says a “perfect storm” of factors, including legalization in other states, has shrunk the transition window and left a lot of growers in a state of panic about what’s to come.

ALSO IN THIS SERIES

Part 1.  Eco-Crisis: Will Cannabis Legalization Save California’s Forests?

Angela Bacca is a Portland, Oregon-based freelance journalist with an MBA and 10 years experience in cannabis media. She specializes in coverage of cannabis in conservative states, science, medicine, politics, business, culture and media.

The ‘Five Guys’ Menu Hacks You Need In Your Life Immediately

Word is out that Five Guys has an epic secret menu.

Photos of secret menu items have been showing up on Instagram for some time, but more recently, New York Daily News has launched these crazy burger combos into the spotlight. And it appears that you can make anything out of a bun, patty and cheese.

Related Story: 8 Novelty Burgers That Might Kill You

A grilled cheese patty melt.  Ratherbeshopping.com revealed the “Presidential Burger,” is. reportedly a favorite of former President Obama’s. It’s a cheeseburger topped with lettuce, tomato, jalapeño peppers, and mustard.

There’s the In-N-Out Double Double hack that consists of a cheeseburger with extra cheese, lettuce, tomato, pickles, and grilled onions. Want some In-N-Out sauce with that? Just mix some mayo, relish, and ketchup together.

Related Story: How Much Cocaine Is In Domino’s Garlic Dip?

And as the New York Daily News points out, there’s also the “Quintuple Down,” which is compiled of two bunless bacon cheeseburgers, a grilled cheese with bacon, and two hot dogs (just to raise the likelihood of heart failure).
There’s even a healthier  “burger bowl” option that is just that: a deconstructed burger is two bacon cheeseburger patties, extra bacon, pickles, grilled onions, green peppers, mustard, and mayo. Served in a to-go container (not really a bowl at all).

Last year, a crew member of Five Guys went on Reddit for an AMA (ask me anything). Among disclosing her favorite thing to order (“Little cheeseburger all the way no ketchup but add BBQ. Extra mayo on there and maybe some grilled jalapeños if I’m feelin’ spicy. ALWAYS cut in half. Lil’ fry a little undercooked with a mix of mayo, BBQ sauce and some Cajun seasoning.”), she said there wasn’t really a “secret menu” at all, at least not an official one known to employees:

The other day though one of our crew members went on a lunch break leaving only myself and one other person in the kitchen. We ended up getting slammed so I’m taking orders and my co-worker is behind me making all of the food. This lady walks up and says “I’m going to order off of the secret menu so I’d like a presidential burger.” I had absolutely ZERO idea what that was and when I asked her what it consisted of, she got super grumpy and couldn’t even really tell me herself. We tried our best to make her happy but we also had 15 other guests that we also needed to make happy and in case one of those guests is a secret shopper we’re trying to get those orders out in 8 minutes or less.

More importantly, she said not to order “off menu” when the restaurant is slammed. That’s just inconsiderate.

We can’t pull out our phones on the line and look up secret menu items. If you want something “secret” make sure you know how to order it i.e. Grilled cheese with two patties and add onions, jalapeños etc…. And please, for the love of everything that is good, PLEASE don’t throw complicated secret menu items at us when we are in a lunch or dinner rush.

And if you want to try and replicate a FG burger at home, she says the trick “is to smash the patty after it’s cooked for a minute or two. This evens the patty out further, allowing the insides to cook completely without the outside charring or drying out.”

This Snowboarder Lit Debate About Olympian Cannabis Use 20 Years Ago

As the world looks to the frigid venues in Pyeongchang, so far the only major non-competition stories have been relatively minor, such as a potential ice dancing wardrobe malfunction, North Korea’s massive cheerleader invasion, and the Vice President getting shade from a figure skater.

But the 2018 games mark the 20-year anniversary when the bombshell was a snowboarding gold medalist from Canada who began the debate over whether Olympians can, and even should, use cannabis.

Ross Rebagliati won the men’s giant slalom competition at the 1998 Nagano, Japan games. It was the first time the sport had been included in the Olympics. The Canadian, then 26, had to take a urine test. He told Deadspin in 2013 he felt that the test, in a way, made him feel like he, and the sport, were being taken seriously: “It was an honor to do the pee test.”

Within a few days he learned he had tested positive for THC (the main psychoactive compound in cannabis), his medal was taken away, and probably the most terrifying part, had to have a sit-down with the Japanese police (a country with famously harsh drug laws) and spend a short time in jail. Rebagliati maintained that the result was from secondhand smoke. Despite the internet not being a thing then, he became a hero to … er … enthusiasts, even being parodied on Saturday Night Live soon after (although if a show claims that you listen to Smash Mouth, you should be able to sue for defamation).

The reason for getting the medal back? THC, though thought by some in the scientific and athletic communities to be performance-enhancing, wasn’t on the World Anti-Doping Agency’s banned substance list. It was subsequently added, but in 2013 WADA changed the amount that could set off alarms. Before the change, it was 15 nanograms per milliliter. The new standard is 150 nanograms per milliliter. Rebagliati’s test results after his championship run at the games, 17.8. Not even enough to warrant a raised eyebrow under the current rules.

But to those in Canada, Rebagliati hasn’t turned into an answer to a trivia question. He’s been an outspoken advocate in politics and for the mainstreaming of cannabis in Canada.

Rebagliati gave up a bid for Liberal Party candidate to be a federal representative in a district of his native British Columbia, citing his new cannabis business interests. But he told the CBC during the 2015 election season, “I mean, to think I can be involved in helping people and sharing the knowledge that I have and a lot of people have about cannabis to the mainstream public. I think it’s my responsibility.”

The herb isn’t legal, yet, in Canada, though there have been shops selling it out in the open for some time now. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has previously said cannabis would be legal in July of 2018 though local and federal officials are still working out details.

Rebagliati told Civilized recently, “I feel that I represent tens of thousands of Canadians and citizens of the world that have unjustly paid different dues because of their cannabis use or their association with it. And I’m honored.” He has used that platform, and his reputation, to help promote his cannabis-related business ventures.

In 2013, he launched Ross’ Gold, selling cannabis for medicinal purposes — technically legal under Canadian law at the time. In 2014 the company merged with Green & Hill Industries and it is now publicly traded. As of 2015, he had expanded his offering to glassware and edibles that could be found in more than 100 stores across Canada. But he’s more than just a businessman.

And he’s still a strong advocate for making cannabis part of a training regimen, if it works for the athlete.

“As an athlete, there’s a lot of repetitive working out that goes on and going to the gym two, three hours a day for five days a week for years on end gets monotonous. To be able to spice it up in a natural way for an athlete is the best possible thing,” Rebagliati told the Washington Post in 2016.

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