Studying Marijuana and Its Loftier Purpose

By ISABEL KERSHNER

Baz Ratner/Reuters

Tikkun Olam, a medical marijuana farm in Israel, blends the high-tech and the spiritual.

“In a story the mystics of Safed would appreciate, Ms. Sikorin related the case of a 97-year-old Holocaust survivor at the home whose hands and forearms had long been frozen in an upward, twisted position. After taking medical cannabis, the nurse said, she joined a tai chi class.”

Full Article:

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/02/world/middleeast/new-insights-on-marijuana-in-israel-where-its-illegal.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&

Club 64 One of the First Marijuana Clubs Opens for New Years Celebration


 
Club 64, a marijuana club, was the second of its kind to open in the entire nation. Following the legislation that legalized pot smoking, which was codified as the 64 constitutional amendment, smoking marijuana is permissible at home. But not all homes are viable. Some local ordinances and landlord’s threats might make using the recreation drug difficult. Club 64 aims to relieve that problem.
 
Full Article:
http://www.jdjournal.com/2013/01/01/club-64-one-of-the-first-marijuana-clubs-opens-for-new-years-celebration/

Stormy Ray

William Lopez Argus Observer
Stormy Ray
William Lopez | Argus Observer
 
Ray was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, a debilitating disease that, along with pharmaceutical poisoning due to the number of medications she was prescribed, caused a rapid decline in Ray’s health.
Within just a few years of her diagnosis, Ray was in a wheelchair, and her health had deteriorated to the point that she couldn’t speak or even open her eyes.
“I was entombed in my body and in terrible pain, like a fire,” Ray said. “As far as everybody knew, I was sleeping, but I was awake and alert.”
Ray said that a friend came over one day and somehow knew that she was awake. He told her that he was going to put something to her lips and that she needed to inhale.
She did as instructed, and the result was immediate, Ray said.
“My eyes snapped open and I yelled! I hadn’t been able to speak for the last month and now I yelled, ‘What was that,’” Ray said.
When he told her that it was a marijuana cigarette, Ray said that she had never experienced anything so instantaneously beneficial.
“I knew, right then, that I’d be able to live my life again,” Ray said.
 
Full Article:
http://www.argusobserver.com/news/stormy-ray/article_0c5f7116-521d-11e2-8920-0019bb2963f4.html

Ole Miss home to medical marijuana lab

Jared Robert Senseman, The (Jackson, Miss.) Clarion-Ledger
GAN POT LEGAL 122812
(Photo: Jared Robert Senseman, The (Jackson, Miss.) Clarion-Ledger)
 
OXFORD, Miss. — The only reason 73-year-old Elvy Musikka still has her sight, she says, is she’s been smoking pot for the last 30 years.
“In 1975, my doctor told me if I didn’t start using marijuana, I’d go blind,” said Musikka. “Shortly thereafter I found out that, indeed, it was the only thing that would help me with my glaucoma.”
Musikka is one of only four people still enrolled in the federal government’s Investigational New Drug program, which allows a small number of patients to use medical marijuana grown at the University of Mississippi. The program stopped accepting new participants in 1992 but allowed patients already in the program to continue receiving their prescriptions. At its peak, the program provided pot for 30 patients.
“All of us admitted in the program were required to prove to the FDA, DEA and NIDA that marijuana was the safest and most efficient treatment available for us,” she said. “The bottom line for me was that I was losing my sight.”
 
Full Article:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2012/12/28/medical-marijuana-lab-in-mississippi/1796475/

German court allows patients to grow own pot

Marcus Lütticke, John Blau
Symbol for justice
Foto: Wolfram Steinberg +++(c) dpa - Report+++
 
A German court has ruled in favor of allowing seriously ill patients to grow their own cannabis for medical treatment. But the ruling, with certain stipulations, could still prevent self-cultivation for some patients.
Michael F. is seriously ill. For more than 20 years, the craftsman from the western German city of Mannheim has suffered from multiple sclerosis. He has difficulty speaking, often suffers from convulsions and says cannabis gives him relief.
Legal and affordable
The medical effect of cannabis is widely accepted, but for many people like Michael F. a legal and affordable cannabis treatment is difficult in Germany. That could change following a recent ruling, which has not yet gone into effect, by the Federal Administrative Court in Münster.
A German court has weighed in favor of allowing patients to grow their own cannabis
Under strict conditions, severely ill people in Germany may now be allowed to grow cannabis at home. Those for whom no other therapies are available or effective but may receive a medical benefit from cannabis can apply to the Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices (BfArM) for permission to treat themselves with their home-grown cannabis, when its use is monitored by their doctor.
“If an affordable treatment option is missing, a license for personal cultivation of cannabis has to be taken into consideration – at the discretion of the BfArM,” the court ruled.
Previously, all requests for personal cultivation had been rejected by the Federal Ministry of Health.
 
Full Article:
http://www.dw.de/german-court-allows-patients-to-grow-own-pot/a-16480968

5 Senior Citizens Serving Life Without Parole for Pot

AlterNet / By Kristen Gwynne

Photo Credit: Farsh/ Shutterstock.com
 
Right now, five adults await death in prison for non-violent, marijuana-related crimes. Their names are John Knock, Paul Free, Larry Duke, William Dekle, and Charles “Fred” Cundiff. They are all more than 60 years old; they have all spent at least 15 years locked up for selling pot; and they are all what one might call model prisoners, serving life without parole. As time wrinkles their skin and weakens their bodies, Michael Kennedy of the Trans High Corporation has filed a legal petition with the federal government seeking their clemency. Otherwise they will die behind bars for selling a drug 40% of American adults have admitted to using, 50% of Americans want legal, and two states have already legalized for adult use. Since these men were convicted of these crimes many years ago, public opinion and policy related to marijuana have shifted greatly. Should these five non-violent senior-citizen offenders die behind bars for a crime Americans increasingly believe should not even be a crime?
 
Full Article:
http://www.alternet.org/5-senior-citizens-serving-life-without-parole-pot?paging=off

Off the hook — charges against two Vallejo pot dispensary operators dismissed

BY 
Greenwell
 
Criminal charges against operators of a Vallejo medical marijuana dispensary raided three times and shut down earlier this year were dismissed Thursday by a Solano County judge.
Superior Court Judge William Harrison threw out all charges against Vallejo residents Jorge Espinoza, 25, and Jonathan Linares, 22, owners of the old Better Health Group on Sonoma Boulevard, after a preliminary hearing.
“I don’t think there is sufficient evidence” that a crime has been committed, the judge said, according to the Vallejo Times-Herald newspaper.
“Our legislature has said you can have this kind of business if you do it right.”
 
Full Article:
http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/13656403-off-the-hook-charges-against-two-vallejo-pot-dispensary-operators-dismissed