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PostPosted: Fri Sep 27, 2013 1:22 pm
 


OnTheIce OnTheIce:
Curtman Curtman:

Build some roads then. I thought we were pretending that we cared about addiction.


No, that's you.

You just want to feel better about smoking drugs and have it easier to access. All this other bullshit, and it IS bullshit, is a smoke screen for your self-serving agenda in which you are an AWFUL spokesperson for.


Why would that be the case? I order it and the postman drops it in my mailbox. I have better access to pot than I do milk. I have to go all the way to Loblaws for that.





PostPosted: Fri Sep 27, 2013 2:33 pm
 


Guatemalan President Praises CO and WA for Marijuana Legalization at UN Speech
$1:
Ending the failed war on drugs emerged as a major theme of the United Nations General Assembly meeting this week, after Guatemalan President Otto Pérez Molina took the floor yesterday to denounce drug prohibition and urge the world’s leaders to experiment with “new models” for controlling drugs.

In his address, President Pérez Molina made a forceful plea to end the insanity of current drug war policies, declaring “that the war against drugs has not borne the desired results, and that we cannot continue doing the same, waiting for different results.”

The Guatemalan leader went on to praise the voters of Colorado and Washington for making history last November with their “visionary decision” to legalize and regulate marijuana, as well as President Obama for doing the right thing and “respecting the voice of the citizens of Colorado and Washington, to allow these innovative experiences to provide results.”

President Pérez Molina also commended Uruguayan President José Mujica for proposing groundbreaking legislation “that regulates the market of cannabis instead of following the failed route of prohibition.” The marijuana legalization bill has passed Uruguay’s House and is expected to sail through the Senate when considered next month – which would make Uruguay the first nation in the world to legalize the production, distribution and sale of marijuana among adult recreational consumers.

Apart from the General Assembly, President Pérez Molina held private meetings yesterday with President Mujica and with New Zealand Prime Minister John Key – whose country’s Parliament enacted a first-of-its-kind law this summer to regulate and control (rather than criminalize) so-called “new synthetic drugs” for recreational use.

While President Pérez Molina’s remarks made the biggest waves, he was not the only Latin American head-of-state to call on the UN to end the global war on drugs. Using similar language as their Guatemalan counterpart, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos and Costa Rican President Laura Chinchilla both criticized the failed drug war in their speeches on Tuesday – and called for new drug policies grounded in principles of health, human rights and harm reduction.

For her part, President Chinchilla affirmed that Costa Rica “joins the call from other States from our region, such as Mexico and Guatemala, to re-evaluate internationally agreed-upon policies in search of more effective responses to drug trafficking, from a perspective of health, a framework of respect for human rights, and a perspective of harm reduction” – a consensus statement that was developed and endorsed by all three presidents and by Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto. President Pérez Molina echoed this language in his own speech yesterday – as did Mexican Foreign Affairs Minister José Antonio Meade Kuribreña, who addressed the UN on behalf of President Peña Nieto yesterday, adding that the statement was also supported by Chile, Paraguay and others.

President Santos didn’t mince words when he condemned the drug war’s catastrophic consequences, of which his country has suffered a disproportionate share. He stated: “Right here, in this same headquarters, 52 years ago, the Convention that gave the birth certificate to the war on drugs was approved. Today, we must acknowledge, that war has not been won. And I say this as the president of the country which has suffered more deaths, more blood and more sacrifices in this war.” Santos said matter-of-factly that, were it not for the war on drugs, his country’s half-century-long internal conflict would have ended long ago.

The Colombian president concluded by urging, “If we act together on the drug problem, with a comprehensive vision devoid of ideological or political biases, we will be able to prevent much harm and violence!”

As a starting point, Santos referenced the groundbreaking report issued by the Organization of American States (OAS) in May, which not only discussed marijuana legalization as a viable alternative to prohibition, but also predicted a likely hemispheric trend towards marijuana legalization in the coming years. In a companion report, the OAS also recommended decriminalizing possession of all drugs, which it described as “an essential element of any public health approach.” All three presidents and Foreign Minister Meade Kuribreña expressed their hope that the OAS’s inclusive process and far-reaching report will guide the UN’s special session on drug policy planned for 2016.

This isn’t the first time that Latin American leaders have pushed the UN to undertake a wholesale transformation of global drug policy. At the last General Assembly meeting one year ago, Pérez Molina and Santos (along with then-president of Mexico, Felipe Calderón) made headlines by calling for alternatives to the war on drugs – and for the UN to consider all available options, including the legal regulation of certain drugs, to reduce violence and weaken organized crime.

All in all, the week’s activity at the UN to advance drug policy reform is a reflection of the unprecedented momentum that’s rapidly growing – in Latin America, the United States, and around the world – for debating alternatives to a drug war that’s increasingly recognized as brutal, unjust and unsustainable. Of equal importance, it’s a promising sign that the necessary political will is finally mounting among world leaders to pursue those alternatives.


R=UP

No wonder Steve didn't want to show up.


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 27, 2013 5:26 pm
 


Curtman Curtman:

Why would that be the case? I order it and the postman drops it in my mailbox. I have better access to pot than I do milk. I have to go all the way to Loblaws for that.


Ah yes...your mysterious illness that you won't discuss to a bunch of anonymous people likely because it'll poke holes through your agenda like swiss cheese.

I'm not sure why you push the agenda....but I'll stick to my original theory about you as I think you're a liar.


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 27, 2013 8:10 pm
 


OnTheIce OnTheIce:
Curtman Curtman:

Why would that be the case? I order it and the postman drops it in my mailbox. I have better access to pot than I do milk. I have to go all the way to Loblaws for that.


Ah yes...your mysterious illness that you won't discuss to a bunch of anonymous people likely because it'll poke holes through your agenda like swiss cheese.

I'm not sure why you push the agenda....but I'll stick to my original theory about you as I think you're a liar.


The illness story seems to be a recent addition. I don't recall him ever referring to it when he first showed up spouting his legalize weed and the world becomes better mantra. I think I recall him saying something about getting weed from someone who gets medical marijuana, but maybe it was someone else. Either or, I think all Curt wants is to be allowed to smoke wherever he wants with no repercussions. Everything else is just smoke and mirrors.





PostPosted: Sat Sep 28, 2013 1:35 am
 


2Cdo 2Cdo:
OnTheIce OnTheIce:
Curtman Curtman:

Why would that be the case? I order it and the postman drops it in my mailbox. I have better access to pot than I do milk. I have to go all the way to Loblaws for that.


Ah yes...your mysterious illness that you won't discuss to a bunch of anonymous people likely because it'll poke holes through your agenda like swiss cheese.

I'm not sure why you push the agenda....but I'll stick to my original theory about you as I think you're a liar.


The illness story seems to be a recent addition. I don't recall him ever referring to it when he first showed up spouting his legalize weed and the world becomes better mantra. I think I recall him saying something about getting weed from someone who gets medical marijuana, but maybe it was someone else. Either or, I think all Curt wants is to be allowed to smoke wherever he wants with no repercussions. Everything else is just smoke and mirrors.


I got my card almost 2 years ago. It's been really great.

As always I've been intentionally vague about my usage, and the reasons for it. It's none of your business really, but the illness has been with me my whole life. I no longer have to grow it myself, or buy it from thugs. Win-win.

No repercussions, high quality, low prices. Next day service from Canada Post.

It's actually getting easier to acquire in some ways next year too.

http://www.cannabisculture.com/content/ ... ram-Part-1
$1:
How To Access Canada's New MMPR Medical Marijuana Program

1. You need only one doctor, regardless of illness. Gone are the specialists and categories of illness in MMAR. The MMPR is wide-open to ensure, regardless of illness, that if you want to medicate with marijuana and have a doctor's (or in the future, a nurse practitioner's) support, you're going to gain access to legal cannabis.

2. You don't apply to the government for medical marijuana. The burdensome application is not only gone, but so is government involvement. Many believe it's the feds that frightened-off doctors. It could be true.

3. Health Canada has a one-page PDF sample form. The sample medical document is kind of amazing in its simplicity. It's not an application, but a form. You can print it off take it your doctor. Download it here.

4. The document looks innocuous, but the third line is the deal-sealer or deal-breaker. "Daily quantity of dried marihuana to be used by the patient" is where all the action is. Convince a doctor to put a number here and you may buy legal cannabis.

5. The rest of the information on the sample form is basic medical office information.

6. Doctor's signature. Most importantly, the doctor is signing that the information on the form is correct – you intend to use cannabis daily. No endorsement. No recommendation. No obligation. Doctors may still balk at being involved in medical marijuana or they may embrace it. At the moment we still aren't sure about all the possible barriers to access.

7. Nurse practitioner's signature. New under the MMPR is the possibility of nurse practitioners signing for medical marijuana. Health Canada will never admit my court case R v. Mernagh forced this option, but Team Mernagh is going to take credit. Currently provincial legislation in every province prevents Nurse Practitioners from actually doing this.

8. Sample Medical Document. Remember, it's only a sample form and Health Canada notes another document may be used as long as the information is identical. Alternatively (and possibly the best method) would be to use a doctor's letterhead, because all the medical business information is already on it. A prescription pad note is also doable if it contains all the required information. Any alternative documents must have all the doctor's information on it and your's too.




Justin Trudeau can’t catch a bad break
$1:
Justin Trudeau, on the other hand, couldn’t have asked for better press yesterday. The Liberal leader visited Steinbach, Man., earlier this week. The city of 13,000 lies in Provencher, the riding recently vacated by former public safety minister Vic Toews. At some point, Trudeau met Candice Cancade, the operations manager at a local food bank. She asked him what he thought about legalizing marijuana. He said the current approach to drug policy isn’t working. She disagreed. He rebutted. She pivoted. He retorted. The exchange was caught on video.

Steinbach Mayor Chris Goertzen, who was accompanying Trudeau through town, eventually shed some light on Cancade’s biography. As it turns out, she’s married to a man who used to be Toews’ executive assistant. Outed, she looked sheepish. Trudeau looked confident. He’d taken on a troll and won. Just ask the YouTube commenters. Stunningly, they unanimously support the Liberal.


R=UP


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PostPosted: Sat Sep 28, 2013 3:54 am
 


:|


Last edited by Public_Domain on Sun Feb 23, 2025 4:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sat Sep 28, 2013 5:27 am
 


Curt reading your entire last post especially the bit from the completely impartial "canabisculture.com" was enlightening. :lol:

It looked like a primer on how to convince your doctor you need medical marijuana for a horrendous case of the sniffles. :roll:





PostPosted: Sat Sep 28, 2013 6:33 am
 


2Cdo 2Cdo:
Curt reading your entire last post especially the bit from the completely impartial "canabisculture.com" was enlightening. :lol:

It looked like a primer on how to convince your doctor you need medical marijuana for a horrendous case of the sniffles. :roll:


I doubt the sniffles would work. If you're faking it, you'll want to go with migraines, or something like that. Depression is a good one too. They'll prescribe every kind of pharmaceutical they can think of before they'll agree to sign your form though. Some of them are really terrible, they will make you very sick and can they can kill you. They'll know if you don't fill the prescription, but they won't know that you've flushed them down the toilet.

The cannabisculture article wasn't intended to be objective about anything, it was meant to show you how truly stupid this drug war is. Once you have that note signed by any doctor you can purchase a months supply at a time. You can carry it around with you in the street, smoking big fat joints all freaking day.

You can barge into Stephen Harpers office and roll them up on his desk. There's not a thing anyone can do about it.



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PostPosted: Sat Sep 28, 2013 6:57 am
 


Curtman Curtman:

You can barge into Stephen Harpers office and roll them up on his desk. There's not a thing anyone can do about it.



Complete bullshit video, but I would gladly drive you to his office to attempt this. The look on your face when you're led off to jail would be priceless. :lol:


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PostPosted: Sat Sep 28, 2013 7:07 am
 


What happened to his assertions that he didn't use it for years, or only rarely??
$1:
but the illness has been with me my whole life.


Hmmmh...I didn't think being an asshole was a medical condition.....gee maybe I should apply for occasional flare ups, or does it have to be an acute chronic condition like Curt's?


Last edited by ShepherdsDog on Sat Sep 28, 2013 7:09 am, edited 2 times in total.




PostPosted: Sat Sep 28, 2013 7:07 am
 


2Cdo 2Cdo:
Curtman Curtman:

You can barge into Stephen Harpers office and roll them up on his desk. There's not a thing anyone can do about it.



Complete bullshit video, but I would gladly drive you to his office to attempt this. The look on your face when you're led off to jail would be priceless. :lol:


Bullshit video? You want some more?

Terence Young's office:


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PostPosted: Sat Sep 28, 2013 7:35 am
 


The second video should have been one warning to vacate and when they didn't carted off to jail for trespassing and possession of marijuana. Their argument about freedom to "occupy" someones office reeks of the same moronic ramblings of "freeman of the land" loons.

No wonder you look up to these types.





PostPosted: Sat Sep 28, 2013 7:48 am
 


$1:
We are protesting the extradition of Marc Emery, and The Conservative Party's culture war on the cannabis community. We are conducting a sit-in which is fully legal during open office hours. This is public property and so we'll be staying until whatever the posted closing hours are, which is presumably 5PM. We've only entered open doors


Here's part 2.



:rock:

Peaceful non-violent protest is protected by law in this country, unfortunately for you and your kind.


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PostPosted: Sat Sep 28, 2013 7:51 am
 


Curtman Curtman:
Peaceful non-violent protest is protected by law in this country, unfortunately for you and your kind.


I have no problem with peaceful non-violent protest. Occupying someones workplace is breaking the law.

"You and your kind"? Nothing like generalizations when you know you're full of shit. :lol:





PostPosted: Sat Sep 28, 2013 8:00 am
 


2Cdo 2Cdo:
"You and your kind"? Nothing like generalizations when you know you're full of shit. :lol:


You're a prohibitionist aren't you? You believe that marijuana prohibition keeps us safe somehow right?

2Cdo 2Cdo:
The second video should have been one warning to vacate and when they didn't carted off to jail for trespassing and possession of marijuana.


You were just saying how someone who is legally allowed to possess marijuana should be arrested for possessing marijuana. That's the bit of perverted logic that comes from your type.

News coverage of the Calgary protest:




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