Cannabis
Hemp-based body panels among Eve's green plans
Submitted by Nicole Seguin on Wed, 09/22/2010 - 11:57am
The consortium, Project Eve, was recently formed with the mission to get electric car production in this country to the next level.
It includes firms, universities, infrastructure entities, etc., who all know a thing or two about how to design and build a state-of-the-art electric car. Basically, it’s like all the smart kids in class getting together to collaborate on a science project.
In fact, two of the member firms, Toronto Electric and Motive Industries (Calgary), have already built working prototypes, and they will be the first two products the consortium will build and sell to fleet customers on a per-order basis (a full line-up is in the works).
HealthWatch: Does marijuana really relieve pain?
Submitted by Nicole Seguin on Tue, 09/21/2010 - 7:18am
By EVRA EDDY, TAYLOR LEVY LANG, The GazetteMONTREAL - The use of marijuana for a few carefully selected medical conditions has generated heated discussion, pitting those who favour legalization against those who warn about the undesired consequences of wider availability. Absent from much of the debate so far, however, is scientific evidence to establish whether marijuana really works to relieve chronic pain; and if it does, whether it does so in a manner that is distinct from simply providing the well-known high that has made it a popular recreational but illicit drug. This edition of HealthWatch takes a closer look at the burden of chronic pain and a recent study that has received a great deal of attention.
What is neuropathic pain?
The United Nations on Drugs: Alice in Wonderland Revisited
Submitted by Nicole Seguin on Mon, 09/20/2010 - 12:03pm
By Neil Boyd, Vancouver SunThe most recent edition of The Guardian Weekly, a typically “progressive" news outlet, devoted a full page to the wildly speculative musings of Antonio Maria Costa, the outgoing director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
Mr. Costa made three key claims, none of which have any compelling empirical support. First, he argued that making illegal drugs more freely available will lead to more “public health damage”.
Hypocrisy weeds out Prince of Pot
Submitted by Nicole Seguin on Wed, 09/15/2010 - 10:54am
By Sandra Thomas, Vancouver CourierCosmetic pesticide use was banned in Vancouver Jan. 1, 2007.
But the sale of pesticides wasn't banned. So as long as you promise the sales-clerk at your local garden shop or big box store that you're intending to use that bottle or box of chemicals anywhere but in the soon-to-be greenest city in the world, you can make your purchase and leave.
That sales-clerk has no way of knowing if you plan to use those pesticides in Vancouver or in a municipality where the toxic chemicals are also banned. It makes me wonder if there would be any repercussions should the purchaser of those chemicals be busted using them illegally and the package was traced back to a Vancouver store.
City plans to regulate headshops
They are stores that cater to drug culture, but sell products are perfectly legal. Head shops have caused a store in some neighbourhoods with marijuana paraphernalia on display.
Now City Hall is now trying to regulate stores that sell bongs and pipes.
A city committee has agreed to force so-called head shops to get a license to operate. Existing stores and new ones will have to apply for the license before a community committee where area residents can have their say too.
“They seem to drag down the local…scenario, the neighbours don’t like them, the local businesses don’t like them, it’s a problem,” said City Councillor Gord Steeves.
Couple ‘devastated’ after kids removed following [marijuana] bust
Submitted by Nicole Seguin on Tue, 09/14/2010 - 11:37am
By Dianne Wood, Record staffKITCHENER — Three children were removed from a Kitchener home in April after police discovered their parents were growing marijuana plants in the basement.
The 33-year-old man and his 24-year-old common-law wife have a four-year-old child, and the man has two sons, one who is 13, Kitchener’s Ontario Court heard.
Although the marijuana grow operation was extremely small at only four plants, Family and Children’s Services took the children after a police search of the rented Weber Street East home on April 30. (To prevent the identification of the children, who had been in care of FCS, their parents are not being named in this story.)
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