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Colorado nach 10 Monaten legalisierung...

  • Colorado legalized the growing, selling, smoking
    and eating of recreational marijuana more than 10 months ago, but it
    still hasn’t resolved some major questions about how this new market is
    supposed to work.The Associated Press
    reported on Monday that the state Health Department was proposing to ban
    nearly all forms of edible marijuana, to make it easier to keep
    children from overdosing. The proposal was one of several ideas
    presented to a state-sponsored working group considering safety
    regulations for the marijuana industry.



    But health officials quickly backed away
    from the plan after the A.P. article appeared. As the Denver Post
    reported, edibles account for nearly half of the state’s cannabis
    business. Forcing all those soda- and candy-makers out of business or
    underground would be a head-spinning retreat for Colorado’s
    world-leading legalization experiment.
    It
    would also seem to clearly violate the Constitutional amendment,
    overwhelmingly approved by Colorado voters, to make marijuana in its
    many forms legal, and to regulate it like alcohol.
    The
    federal government should follow the growing movement in the states and
    repeal the ban on marijuana for both medical and recreational use.
    As
    The Post also makes clear, it is proving difficult to come up with
    simple, surefire rules about the size, look, potency and potential risk
    of edibles. Everyone seems to agree that regulation is desirable, but
    how is that supposed to happen? By airbrushing warnings on individual
    gummy candies? By making all marijuana chocolates a telltale shade of
    gray? It’s easy to see why some health officials thought the simplest
    thing to do with edibles would be to just get rid of them.
    The
    problem is that it’s too late for that. There seems little chance that
    Colorado will impose what Twitter jokesters have been calling “Maureen’s
    Law,” after the Times op-ed columnist Maureen Dowd, who had a bad night
    in a Denver hotel after eating marijuana-infused candy.
    Besides, for all the concern, opponents have not much evidence to show that edible marijuana is a public-health crisis.
    Halloween
    is nearly here. Parents in Colorado and the other legalization state,
    Washington, have been hearing warnings about adulterated candies and
    stoned trick-or-treaters. Next month we will know how much of that the
    fear was justified.
    [color=000000]Quelle: vom 21.10 New York Times (auch die lese ich ;)[/color]
    [color=000000]Gruß City
    [/color]

  • verschieb ich mal in den News Teil. Danke an City.


    Chill out. hemp_blatt

    Moin an alle,


    bin neu hier und es ist mein 2. grow, also noch recht gruen alles. Coole Site hier, hoffe auf ne Menge Infos und Spass. Weed out :thumbup:

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