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Saturday 16 July 2011

White House admits marijuana has ‘some’ medical value

Just days after the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) insisted that there is no medical value to marijuana, the White House appeared to contradict the position, saying in a report that there may actually be "some" medical value to "individual components of the cannabis plant" after all.
The statement was just a small part of the Office on National Drug Control Policy's yearly update on the progress of the drug war and its goals moving forward. Overall, the document only serves to affirm the federal prohibition of marijuana and what it calls "'medical' marijuana," which it still views as illegitimate.
But a single passage, under their "facts about marijuana," seems to loosen a bit from the generation-old line that there is no value to cannabis whatsoever.
"While there may be medical value for some of the individual components of the cannabis plant, the fact remains that smoking marijuana is an inefficient and harmful method for delivering the constituent elements that have or may have medicinal value," the report says.
Still, today's medical marijuana patients and proprietors don't have much to cheer in the report, as it goes on to insist that smoking the marijuana plant itself is harmful and dangerous, especially for teens, and perpetuates the largely discredited "gateway drug" theory.
Critics are likely to see the passage as offering a bit of wiggle room for major pharmesutical producers looking to grow marijuana to extract its psychoactive ingredient, THC, or other cannabinoid compounds that have been demonstrated to help abate symptoms of some chronic diseases, like wasting syndrome in AIDS patients or nausea in cancer patients.
In 2007, GW Pharmaceuticals announced that it partnered with Otsuka to bring "Sativex" -- or liquefied marijuana -- to the U.S. The companies recently completed Phase II efficacy and safety trials testing and began discussion with the FDA for Phase III testing. Phase III is generally thought to be the final step before the drug can be marketed in the U.S.
Yet as the FDA is poised to approve the drug for Big Pharma, state-licensed medical marijuana dispensaries that provide relief for thousands of Americans are under attack by other federal agencies.
The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) has warned just as much, claiming that federal authorities may be looking to shift policy slightly, if only to legalize marijuana-based medicines for Big Pharma only, which could step in and  potentially eradicate the medical marijuana market.
The Obama administration said in a recent memo that it fully intends to enforce the federal ban on marijuana, regardless of whether individual states have legalized its use for medical purposes.
It added that a 2009 memo, which seemed to take the pressure off state-authorized medical marijuana clinics and patients, was merely a guidance on the best uses of federal funds and not actually a change in policy.
An ABC News poll found last year that eight in 10 Americans favor legalizing medical marijuana.

'More of this country's young people are dying from alcohol than anything else'

Wasted: the number of people dying from alcohol consumption is increasing. Photograph: Gerd George/Getty

CARL O'BRIEN
Irish people are among the heaviest consumers of alcohol in Europe. One in four deaths of young men aged 15 to 34 is attributed to alcohol, and it is costing the health service millions each year. So what can we do about it?
STANDING IN the kitchen, Charlotte O’Sullivan saw her son’s face in bright daylight for the first time in months. She began to panic. “His skin was turning yellow,” she says. “It was awful. I’d never seen anything like it. He said to me, ‘I’m dying.’ I didn’t believe him. I told him of course he wasn’t but that he needed to get help . . . He was young and he was ill, but we never thought his life was at risk.”
Her son, Sammy Lundy, had retreated from his friends and family. He would stay in the sitting room of the family home all day with the curtains closed and the lights off, drinking cans of beer or cider. It was as if a darkness had descended on him, his mother says.
In the beginning he would have four or five cans a day; later it could be anything up to 12. It helped him to sleep, he said, though his mother believed there was another reason: he was drinking to drown out disturbing thoughts and voices in his head.
Sometimes he could be delusional, believing he was related to gangland figures or that the Garda was after him. Psychiatric services had diagnosed him as having anger-management problems.
Frightened by his deterioration, his mother decided the next day to call an ambulance when she was out. Sammy had always refused to seek medical help, but this time it didn’t matter. He needed help, whether he wanted it or not.
When she arrived at the house, however, the door was open and the lights were on but there was no sign of him. She drove around the area, looking for him, as her sense of dread grew deeper. A short time later, his body was found in the front garden of a house around the corner. He was 26.
In the coroner’s court a few months later, the assistant State pathologist Dr Margaret Bolster found that Sammy had died from liver disease. He was deeply jaundiced, with an enlarged liver showing signs of steatosis (fatty deposits) and early cirrhosis (scarring).
This damage is reversible if the person stops drinking. But if a person continues, permanent scarring of the liver can develop, which is irreversible.
“It’s quite frightening the amount of damage one can do to one’s liver in a relatively short time of drinking excessively,” Bolster says. “Five pints per day will lead you to severe liver disease and sudden death at any time. You can do this damage in four years of consistent heavy drinking.”
SAMMY’S STORY isn’t uncommon. Most days at coroners’ courts around the country, drink is mentioned alongside the names of cases due to be heard that day.
Deaths linked to such drugs as cocaine attract headlines in the media, but alcohol-related deaths rarely do. Often they simply aren’t reported.
Yet the number and nature of these deaths are frightening. The Health Research Board published a report this week that showed the number of people dying from alcohol consumption is increasing and young men are most likely to be the victims.
Six hundred and seventy-two people died from alcohol-related poisoning between 2004 and 2008, with the numbers increasing from 125 in 2004 to 150 in 2008. In addition, there were 3,336 deaths among alcohol-dependent people during the same period who died in circumstances with strong links to alcohol. The principal causes were suicide, stroke, cancer and liver disease.
The Health Research Board’s senior director, Dr Suzi Lyons, says that Irish people are among the biggest drinkers in Europe and significant numbers consume alcohol in a way that is harmful to their health by, for example, binge drinking.
“What we cannot do in this paper is estimate the social cost of premature mortality, the detrimental effect on the family and the burden on society,” she says.
But the cost in terms of young lives is clearer. Figures compiled by the Department of Health’s chief medical officer show that one in four deaths in young men aged 15 to 34 is due to alcohol, compared with one in 12 deaths as a result of cancer and one in 25 deaths due to circulatory disease.
“We can no longer afford to ignore the fact that so many more of this country’s young people are dying from alcohol than anything else,” says Fiona Ryan, director of the lobby group Alcohol Action Ireland. “We need to stop turning a blind eye to the all-too-high price we all pay for alcohol in this country.”
THE PREVALENCE OF alcohol means it is seen as a relatively benign drug. But what is the real danger it poses to the typical drinker?
Light to moderate drinking can have a beneficial effect in that it helps prevent heart disease and stroke, according to the World Health Organisation. “However, the beneficial cardio-protective effect of drinking disappears [if there is occasional] heavy drinking,” it says.
Bolster says that even a weekend of heavy drinking can cause fatty changes to the liver that increase the risk of sudden death. The fatty changes, which are the first stage of liver disease, are reversible once consumption of alcohol stops. However, the second stage of liver disease – cirrhosis – is irreversible.
Consumption of alcohol above the recommended ipper limit of 21 units per week for men, and 12 to 14 units per week for women, even for a few months, can lead to fatal consequences, she says. When you consider that a large glass of wine or a pint of beer contains about three units, these are worrying figures for many who consider themselves modest drinkers.
In tackling the problem of overconsumption, there are a few simple solutions. One of the most effective ways to curb drinking, especially among young people, is to raise taxes. “Yet not enough countries use these and other effective policy options to prevent death, disease and injury attributable to alcohol consumption,” the World Health Organisation says.
In Ireland, alcohol-control policies are relatively weak and have remained a low priority for successive governments.
There has been plenty of talk about tackling alcohol abuse but little meaningful action. There have been two strategic task force reports on alcohol, but the key recommendations to increase prices, reduce the number of places it can be bought and tighten controls on advertising remain largely unimplemented. For example, plans to strictly regulate the marketing of alcohol by the Fianna Fáil-Progressive Democrats government were ditched in favour of allowing the industry to regulate itself.
The benefits of even a modest reduction in alcohol consumption would be significant.
Prof Joe Barry, co-author of a study published in the Irish Medical Journal , estimates that the total cost of hospital inpatient beds allocated to those with alcohol-related problems is more than €850 million over five years. His study estimates that if Irish people halved their alcohol consumption, the costs to the exchequer for hospital beds would drop by up to €80 million a year.
Highlighting the dangers of alcohol isn’t an easy sell, though. The Health Research Board says there is no published evidence that school-based programmes are resulting in a reduction in alcohol-related harm, while it is probable that education campaigns and warning labels are not reducing alcohol-related harm.
“The main issue is that the public thinks of alcoholics primarily,” says Barry. “But most people who die of alcohol-related causes are not alcoholics but, rather, are heavy drinkers. This is an important take-home message.”
SAMMY’S MOTHER, Charlotte, is determined her son will not have died in vain. She sometimes feels guilty that she didn’t act sooner to help address the dangers posed to Sammy by alcohol, but she also feels let down by the health authorities.
The underlying issue for Sammy was his undiagnosed mental-health problems. Yet when she went for help, she felt the psychiatric services didn’t take his condition seriously enough. In addition, because he was over 18, she was unable to make him get medical attention or treatment.
“I know the drink killed him, but that was just the end process of what started to kill him, his mental-health problems,” Charlotte says. “If he had got the help he needed, he would still be alive today. I firmly believe that. What does it take for someone to sit up and take notice? There are lots of young people out there like Sammy who need some help.”
Five pints per day will lead you to severe liver disease and sudden death at any time

Friday 15 July 2011

Were To Buy Cannabis Seeds Safley & Securely Online

At Weed Seeds They make sure you have a very plesent shopping experience with some of the finest cannabis seeds
The have recently been updated to a secure  checkout also login pages and any pages with account info is fully secure through comodo secure ssl

Over the last few months Weedseeds has proven to customers that they can full fill orders and people are now starting to trust weed seeds as there supplier.

also they have also considerably grown there stock at weed seeds

You must check out the facebook page ,

10 Facts about medicinal cannabis

The best way to make change is by sharing your knowledge about cannabis and a top ten list is easy to remember and can help to convince sceptic people, so here is a list of the most notable benefits of marijuana.
  1. Treats Migraines
  2. Slow Tumor Growth
  3. Relieves Symptoms of chronic disease
  4. Prevents Alzheimers
  5. Treats Glaucoma
  6. Prevents Seizures
  7. Helps those with ADD and ADHD
  8. May treat multiple sclerosis
  9. Helps relieve PMS
  10. Helps calm those with Tourettes Syndrome and OCD
10 major health benefits from cannabis

Why Medicinal Marijuana Is Here to Stay

Lester Grinspoon on Medicinal Marijuana 


“We are not far from a time when pot will be hailed as a wonder drug.”
The following is the text of a speech by Lester Greenspoon, M.D. recently delivered to the 2011 NORML conference.
In 1967, because of my concern about the rapidly growing use of the dangerous drug marijuana, I began my studies of the scientific and medical literature with the goal of providing a reasonably objective summary of the data which underlay its prohibition.  Much to my surprise, I found no credible scientific basis for the justification of the prohibition.  The assertion that it is a very toxic drug is based on old and new myths.  In fact, one of the many exceptional features of this drug is its remarkably limited toxicity.  Compared to aspirin, which people are free to purchase and use without the advice or prescription of a physician, cannabis is much safer: there are well over 1000 deaths annually from aspirin in this country alone, whereas there has never been a death anywhere from marijuana.  In fact, when cannabis regains its place in the US Pharmacopeia, a status it lost after the passage of the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937, it will be seen as one of the safest drugs in that compendium.  Moreover, it will eventually be hailed as a “wonder drug” just as penicillin was in the 1940s.  Penicillin achieved this reputation because it was remarkably non-toxic, it was, once it was produced on an economy of scale, quite inexpensive, and it was effective in the treatment of a variety of infectious diseases.  Similarly, cannabis is exceptionally safe, and once freed of the prohibition tariff, will be significantly less expensive than the conventional drugs it replaces while its already impressive medical versatility continues to expand.

Given these characteristics, it should come as no surprise that its use as a medicine is growing exponentially or that individual states have established  legislation which makes it possible for patients suffering from a variety of disorders to use the drug legally with a recommendation from a physician. Unfortunately, because each state arrogates the right to define which symptoms and syndromes may be lawfully treated with cannabis, many  patients with legitimate claims to the therapeutic usefulness of this plant must continue to use it illegally and therefore endure the extra layer of anxiety imposed by its illegality.  California and Colorado are the two states in which the largest number of patients for whom it would be medically useful have the freedom to access it legally.  New Jersey is the most restrictive, and I would guess that only a small fraction of the pool of patients who would find marijuana to be as or more useful than the invariably more toxic conventional drugs it will displace will be allowed legal access to it.  The framers of the New Jersey legislation may fear what they see as chaos in the distribution of medical marijuana in California and Colorado, a fear born of their concern that the more liberal parameters of medical use  adopted in these states have allowed its access to many people who use it for other than strictly medicinal reasons.  If this is correct, it is consistent with my view that it will be impossible to realize the full potential of this plant as a medicine, not to speak of the other ways it is useful, in the setting of this destructive prohibition.
Marijuana is here to stay; there can no longer be any doubt that it is not just another transient drug fad.  Like alcohol, it has become a part of our culture, a culture which is now trying to find an appropriate social, legal and medical accommodation.  We have finally come to realize, after arresting over 21 million marijuana users since the 1960s, most of them young and 90% for mere possession, that “making war” against cannabis doesn’t work anymore now than it did for alcohol during the days of the Volstead Act.  Many people are expressing their impatience with the federal government’s intransigence as it  obdurately maintains its position that ” marijuana is not a medicine”.  Thirteen states have now decriminalized marijuana.  And, beginning with California in 1996, another 15 states and the District of Columbia have followed suit in allowing patients legal access to marijuana, and  others are in the process of enacting similar legislation.  These states are inadvertently constructing a large social experiment in how best to deal with the reinvention of the “cannabis as medicine” phenomenon, while at the same time sending a powerful message to the federal government.  Each of these state actions has taken a slice out of the extraordinary popular delusion known as cannabinophobia.
Dr. Lester Grinspoon is Associate Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and one of the leading experts on medicinal cannabis.

Get Ranked High in Google - Ways to Generate Traffic

For any internet or online business to thrive, you must receive large amounts of traffic and be able to convert that traffic into sales. While sales conversions are important, the sole purpose of this article is to outline how you can generate massive traffic to any website or blog. To get ranked high in Google and other search engines their are a few rules you need to know and follow. Here are three ideas you can use to generate killer traffic.
1. Make sure to update your website or blog routinely with fresh content. The search engine spiders crawl the web, and when they do they are searching for the freshest and most relevant content to place on the first page of search engines. This means fresh content is essential to get ranked high in Google or any other major search engine.
2. Use the power of free advertising via the web 2.0 format. This includes websites such as myspace or facebook, and can bring a nice amount of traffic to your website. I have heard of people generating 10 or more opt-ins per day to their subscriber list just by using this type of marketing.
3. Practice a combination of Google AdWords and search engine optimization techniques. Many people are scared of AdWords, and I recommend starting off with some type of seo program that can teach you the proper optimization techniques. As you may or may not know that organic listings in Google are completely free and do not cost you a dime. This is beneficial over adwords because you can avoid spending any money on advertising and focus or your money on other areas of your online business.
Following a quality SEO program will help you generate massive traffic to your website or blog.

Wednesday 13 July 2011

Deputy Luke Ming Flanagan responds to "Miss Piggy" controversy

 
 
Roscommon South Leitrim TD Luke Ming Flanagan says he has nothing to apologise about - in relation to his involvement in a conversation which referred to a Fine Gael TD as "Miss Piggy".
 
Mary Mitchell O'Connor says she was hurt and upset by the comments made by the independent TD Mick Wallace, in conversation with Luke "Ming" Flanagan and Shane Ross.
 
The remarks were caught on open microphones during a Dail vote.
 
Mick Wallace this morning contacted Mary Mitchell O'Connor and apologised for the comments he made.
 
However Deputy Flanagan maintains that all he said was - I wonder how she would feel if she was banned from wearing pink in the Dail?
 
Speaking to Shannonside News the Independent TD says Deputy Mitchell O'Connor should actually apologise to him over remarks she made on his dress sense.

Mick Wallace sorry for 'Miss Piggy' remark





Independent TD Mick Wallace has said he is very sorry for the offence caused to one of his Dáil colleagues after calling her 'Miss Piggy'.
Speaking on RTÉ's John Murray Show, the Wexford TD said he was completely out of order in the comments he made about the Fine Gael TD for Dún Laoghaire Mary Mitchell O'Connor.
He said it was completely his fault and he said fellow Independent Deputies Shane Ross and Luke 'Ming' Flanagan had nothing to do with it.
Mr Wallace said that it was clearly in bad taste and that he had no right to be passing comment like that.
He said he rang Ms Mitchell O'Connor this morning and apologised.
Ms Mitchell O'Connor said the incident represents a type of casual sexism that is unacceptable.
The Dún Laoghaire TD said when Mr Wallace attempted to apologise to her in a phone call subsequently she cut him off.
She told reporters she had been upset but had now moved on.
Mr Ross has said he will apologise to Ms Mitchell O'Connor for anything he has done to offend her.
Deputy Ross, who was caught on microphone criticising her dress sense in the Dáil Chamber, said he had called Ms Mitchell O'Connor, but had not yet had a response.
Senator calls for TDs to be suspended
A Fianna Fáil Senator has said the TDs who made remarks about Ms Mitchell O'Connor should be suspended from the House.
Mary White said the comments set a bad example for schoolchildren.
Labour's Ivana Bacik said the remarks show that the culture of sexism is still prevalent in politics.
In the Seanad today, Senator Bacik said the comments were sexist and will not help increase female representation in the houses of the Oireachtas.
Independent Senator Rónán Mullen said it was embarrassing behaviour and added it raised bigger issues about how politicians conduct themselves.
Fine Gael's Cáit Keane described the remarks as conduct unbecoming of parliamentarians.

do u think cannabis should be legal