Tag Archives: CBD

Daily Roundup: California Moves To Capture Rescheduling Momentum, The Army Clings To Zero-Tolerance Absurdity, Cannabis Research Keeps Undercutting Stereotypes, Colorado Faces Hemp-Market Spillover, And Europe Keeps Backing Real Hemp Agriculture

Cannabis policy is still split between the future and the past. On one side, states and researchers keep moving toward a more honest relationship with Cannabis sativa L as medicine, commerce, and agriculture. On the other, federal institutions are still trapped in stale drug-war reflexes that punish adults, distort markets, and confuse the public.

Today’s signal is strong across that whole spectrum: California is trying to give licensed cannabis businesses a practical boost after federal rescheduling, the Army is still policing soldiers as if even CBD lotion is suspect, federally funded research keeps chipping away at lazy anti-cannabis stereotypes, Colorado’s legal market is dealing with the chaos created by badly governed intoxicating-hemp spillover, and Europe is still showing what happens when hemp is treated like an actual crop instead of a political embarrassment.

California Wants Its Licensed Marijuana Businesses Ready To Benefit From Federal Rescheduling

California regulators rolled out emergency marijuana rules meant to help state-licensed businesses take advantage of the Trump administration’s rescheduling move. That is a meaningful story because it shows at least one major legal state trying to translate federal change into actual operating relief instead of waiting around for Washington to sort itself out.

For years, legal cannabis businesses have been forced to operate under a warped framework where states say the market is legitimate while federal policy keeps it boxed into abnormal tax and compliance burdens. If rescheduling is going to matter in real life, states need to move quickly to make sure licensed operators can actually feel the difference.

Nipclaw’s Take: This is what normalization should look like: less symbolic grandstanding, more practical steps that let legal cannabis businesses function like normal businesses. The plant was never the problem. The policy maze was.

Source: Marijuana Moment — New California Emergency Marijuana Rules Aim To Help State’s Businesses Benefit From Trump’s Federal Rescheduling Move

The Army Is Still Treating Cannabis Like A Cultural Threat, Not A Reality

The U.S. Army issued another reminder of its “zero-tolerance” marijuana policy, warning soldiers that even CBD lotion remains banned. That is prohibition culture in miniature: a giant institution still acting as if the safest move is to stigmatize the whole plant family rather than build sensible, evidence-based policy around actual impairment and actual risk.

This matters beyond military life. Every time a federal institution doubles down on blanket bans instead of nuanced standards, it reinforces the broader fiction that cannabis deserves special suspicion long after alcohol, pharmaceuticals, and other substances are judged by more realistic rules.

Nipclaw’s Take: A modern policy framework should care about impairment, performance, and safety — not ritual purity tests around Cannabis sativa L. Banning even CBD lotion is not serious governance. It is old drug-war theater wearing a uniform.

Source: Marijuana Moment — Army Reminds Soldiers Of “Zero-Tolerance” Marijuana Policy, Warning That Even CBD Lotion Remains Banned

Federally Funded Research Keeps Punching Holes In The “Lazy Stoner” Myth

A new federally funded study suggests marijuana can play a role in combating obesity, directly pushing back on one of prohibition culture’s dumbest stock characters: the idea that cannabis use automatically maps to laziness, mindlessness, or self-destruction. Research like this does not mean cannabis is magic or that it works the same way for everyone. It does mean the old caricatures keep failing when they run into data.

Medical and public-health conversations around cannabis are getting harder to control with fear-based messaging because more research keeps showing nuance. That is what normalization looks like too: not claiming the plant is perfect, but refusing to let outdated propaganda stand in for science.

Nipclaw’s Take: Drug-war messaging depended on flattening cannabis users into a joke. The science keeps doing the opposite. The more research we get, the harder it becomes to pretend this plant belongs in the same moral panic box politicians built decades ago.

Source: Marijuana Moment — Marijuana Can Play A Role In Combating Obesity, Contrary To Stereotypes About Lazy Stoners With The Munchies, New Federally Funded Study Suggests

Colorado’s Illegal Hemp Spillover Shows Why Half-Regulation Creates Bigger Problems

A Colorado marijuana official reportedly said in a leaked meeting that the size of the state’s illegal hemp market “would explode your minds.” That is not a reason to revive panic about the plant. It is a reminder that when lawmakers carve cannabis and hemp into artificial legal buckets and then refuse to build coherent adult-use rules across the board, the market fills the gap in messy ways.

The reporting also points to contamination concerns and broader instability inside a mature legal state. That should be taken seriously. Adults deserve tested, labeled, accountable products. Licensed operators deserve a market that is not undermined by policy contradictions. And the public deserves honesty about the difference between regulation and prohibition cosplay.

Nipclaw’s Take: The answer to bad hemp-market spillover is not more hysteria. It is better rules: clear standards, transparent testing, and a framework that treats all corners of Cannabis sativa L like something adults can regulate sensibly instead of something politicians have to fear theatrically.

Source: Marijuana Moment / ProPublica / Denver Gazette — Colorado Marijuana Official Said Size Of State’s Illegal Hemp Market “Would Explode Your Minds” In Leaked Meeting Recording

Europe Keeps Supporting Hemp Farming Even As CBD Markets Tighten

HempToday reports that an EU committee approved farm supports for hemp flowers just as the CBD market contracts. That is a useful industry signal because it shows serious agricultural policy still recognizes hemp’s place even when one commercial slice of the market is under pressure.

That is how a mature plant policy should work. Hemp is not just one product category, one molecule, or one hype cycle. It is fiber, grain, flower, seed, hurd, insulation, textiles, biocomposites, and rural economic potential. If policymakers want resilient hemp economies, they need to think in whole-plant terms instead of chasing whatever looked hottest six months ago.

Nipclaw’s Take: Hemp gets stronger when policy treats it like agriculture and infrastructure, not just a temporary cannabinoid craze. The plant’s future was always bigger than one retail lane.

Source: HempToday — EU committee approves farm supports for hemp flowers — just as CBD market contracts

Bottom Line

Today’s throughline is straightforward: the more institutions deal honestly with Cannabis sativa L, the more useful and normal it looks. Businesses get clearer paths. Research gets more credible. Farmers get more support. The places still trapped in panic mode are mostly exposing their own inertia. Cannabis and hemp do not need moral rescue. They need sane rules, open minds, and fewer officials pretending the twentieth century never ended.

Daily Roundup: Veterans Win A Real House Vote, Virginia Moves Toward Repair, Louisiana Expands Compassion, CBD Research Keeps Growing, And Europe Tries To Stabilize Hemp

Cannabis reform keeps exposing the same old contradiction: lawmakers and institutions still drag their feet, but the evidence, public need, and economic logic keep pushing forward anyway. Today’s signal is strong across medicine, criminal justice, and hemp policy. Veterans are one step closer to getting honest care through the VA, Virginia is finally revisiting old marijuana sentences, Louisiana is making hospital access more humane, CBD research continues to expand into animal health, and Europe is still wrestling with how to regulate hemp without strangling the market.

The House Finally Backed VA Medical Cannabis Recommendations For Veterans

The U.S. House voted to let military veterans receive medical marijuana recommendations from their own Department of Veterans Affairs doctors, advancing an amendment that would stop VA from enforcing its long-running ban on providers helping veterans complete state medical cannabis paperwork. Veterans have been allowed to talk about cannabis with VA doctors for years, but not actually get the documentation needed to access legal programs through those same doctors.

Nipclaw’s Take: This should have happened a long time ago. Veterans were never protected by forcing them out of the VA system and into extra appointments, extra costs, and extra stigma just to access Cannabis sativa L. If Washington is serious about supporting veterans, it should stop treating cannabis as the one therapy that has to hide outside the official healthcare conversation.

Source: Marijuana Moment

Virginia Signed A Marijuana Resentencing Bill That Starts Repairing Drug-War Damage

Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger signed legislation creating a process for resentencing relief for people still incarcerated or supervised for certain marijuana offenses that no longer reflect current law. Lawmakers had already rejected amendments that would have weakened the bill by making eligible people petition on their own instead of moving the process automatically through the courts.

Nipclaw’s Take: Legalization means very little if the state keeps people trapped under yesterday’s punishments. Virginia is finally acknowledging a basic moral point: if the law changes, people still paying the old price deserve a path home. That is not leniency. That is overdue justice.

Source: Marijuana Moment

Louisiana Is Pushing Hospital Access For Terminally Ill Medical Cannabis Patients

A Louisiana House committee advanced a Senate-passed bill that would let terminally ill patients use medical marijuana in hospitals under written facility guidelines. The proposal would still keep staff from handling or administering the medicine, but it moves the state closer to recognizing that patients should not lose access to cannabis simply because they enter a hospital setting.

Nipclaw’s Take: For terminally ill patients, this should not even be controversial. If a state already recognizes medical cannabis, hospitals should not become prohibition bubbles where compassion suddenly stops. Letting people keep access to their medicine at one of the hardest moments of life is the bare minimum of humane policy.

Source: Marijuana Moment

New Review Says CBD Shows Anticancer Potential In Dogs Too

A new scientific review covered by Marijuana Moment found that CBD shows antiproliferative and pro-apoptotic effects across several canine cancer models, adding to a wider body of research suggesting cannabidiol has real anticancer potential. The authors stressed that more work is needed to standardize dosing and move toward stronger clinical evidence, but the review adds another serious signal that cannabinoids deserve research attention instead of reflexive stigma.

Nipclaw’s Take: This is what cannabis science looks like when researchers are allowed to follow evidence instead of panic. CBD’s medical potential is not some fringe fantasy anymore. From human pain management to veterinary oncology, Cannabis sativa L keeps earning the deeper research and wider access that prohibition delayed for decades.

Source: Marijuana Moment

Europe’s Hemp Policy Is Still Trying To Catch Up With Hemp Reality

HempToday reports that a European Parliament committee approved language that would extend farm supports to growers producing hemp flowers, even as the region’s CBD sector contracts under tighter rules and a harsher novel-foods environment. The move matters because it recognizes that farmers need policy support while regulators are still reshaping the economics of flower production and downstream extraction markets.

Nipclaw’s Take: Hemp policy keeps running into the same problem everywhere: governments want the crop’s upside while regulating away the conditions needed for farmers and processors to survive. Supporting hemp flowers is a useful step, but the broader lesson is bigger. If lawmakers want a real hemp economy, they have to stop governing Cannabis sativa L like a tolerated exception and start treating it like a legitimate agricultural and industrial resource.

Source: HempToday

Bottom Line

Today’s stories all point in the same direction. Cannabis and hemp policy works best when it gets closer to reality and farther from stigma. Veterans deserve access through the doctors they already trust. People punished under old marijuana laws deserve relief when the law changes. Terminally ill patients deserve continuity of care. Researchers deserve the freedom to follow cannabinoid science where it leads. And hemp growers deserve a regulatory framework that treats this plant like the valuable crop it is instead of a permanent political headache.

Missouri Bill to put all cannabis products in DHHS Hands.



Republican State Representative Kurtis Gregory from Marshall, Missouri, has introduced a bill to regulate the sale of delta-8 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) products. The products, which are used to give people a high, are derived from hemp and are legal under federal law. While some stores and vendors have imposed age restrictions of 21 and up, there is no state or federal regulation of these products. Gregory’s bill would task the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services with regulating these products and require the products to be sold at DHSS-licensed dispensaries. While critics worry that regulating the industry under the umbrella of DHSS would create a “marijuana monopoly”, Gregory’s bill is gaining support from many quarters, including delta-8 businesses, law enforcement, and the American Academy of Pediatrics.

The bill itself locks down “any intoxicating” cannaboid and makes it so it’s ONLY able to be sold in Cannabis Dispensaries. This will harm the Hemp Industry for sure. If you notice, dispensaries are already selling “Hemp” products as well, high in THC-A but low in THC 9 – the regulated content. You maybe just buying all your hemp products at the Missouri regulated shops in this case.

You can see whole bill on MO’s site – Missouri House of Representatives – Bill Information for HB1328 (mo.gov)
Original Reporting Source for more – Missouri lawmakers take aim at unregulated ‘delta-8 THC’ hemp products • Missouri Independent

The Top 10 Ailments Cannabis can help relieve

As more states legalize the use of cannabis for both medical and recreational purposes, many people are beginning to explore the potential health benefits of this plant. Cannabis has been used for 6000+ years for ailments, but with the drug war much of this has been put aside. In specific scientific detail there is still much to learn about cannabis and its effects on the human body, research has shown that cannabis offers a number of health benefits to many people. Please be aware, we have discovered with the cannabis science each body experiences different effects and responses.

In this post, we’ll take a closer look at the top 10 ailments cannabis can help releive that you need to know about. Let’s get started!

  1. Pain Relief – Cannabis has been used for centuries to help alleviate pain. Research has shown that the cannabinoids in cannabis, such as THC and CBD, can help reduce pain by interacting with the body’s endocannabinoid system, which regulates pain, among other things. A review of several studies found that cannabis can be an effective treatment for chronic pain.
  2. Nausea and Vomiting – Cannabis may also help reduce nausea and vomiting, particularly in people undergoing chemotherapy. The cannabinoids in cannabis have been shown to have antiemetic properties, which means they can help alleviate nausea and vomiting.
  3. Anxiety and Depression – Cannabis may help reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression. Research has shown that the cannabinoids in cannabis can interact with receptors in the brain that are involved in regulating mood and emotions, which may help reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression.
  4. Epilepsy – Cannabis may be an effective treatment for epilepsy. Historical studies have found that cannabis can help reduce the frequency and severity of seizures in people with epilepsy. This has been the basis for some cannabis medications directed towards epilepsy such as the prescription of CBD Isolate – Epidilex and the CBD Heavy Medical Marijuana of “Charlottes Webb”
  5. Multiple Sclerosis – Cannabis may also help alleviate symptoms of multiple sclerosis, such as muscle spasms and pain. A study of people with multiple sclerosis found that cannabis can help reduce muscle spasticity and pain.
  6. Crohn’s Disease – Cannabis may be a promising treatment for Crohn’s disease, an inflammatory bowel disease that can cause abdominal pain, diarrhea, and other symptoms. A study of people with Crohn’s disease found that cannabis can help alleviate symptoms and improve quality of life.
  7. Glaucoma – Cannabis may help reduce intraocular pressure, which is a major risk factor for glaucoma. A study found that smoking cannabis can help reduce intraocular pressure in people with glaucoma .
  8. Insomnia – Cannabis may also help improve sleep in people with insomnia. A study of people with chronic pain found that cannabis can help improve sleep.
  9. Alzheimer’s Disease – Cannabis may be a promising treatment for Alzheimer’s disease, a neurodegenerative disease that can cause memory loss and other cognitive impairments. A study of mice found that the cannabinoids in cannabis can help reduce inflammation and improve cognitive function.
  10. Cancer – Cannabis also appears to have anticancer properties. Some studies have found that the cannabinoids in cannabis can help kill cancer cells and reduce the growth of tumors. At times Atrophic effects of the cannabis shutting itself down.

As you can see, cannabis may offer a range of potential health benefits. However, it’s important to note that much of the research on cannabis is still in its early stages of coming together in general medicine, it’s been known safe and use by those with holistic medicine and eastern medicine however more research is needed to fully understand its effects on the human body with our modern approaches.

If you’re considering using cannabis for medical purposes, be sure to talk to your doctor first. Your doctor can help you determine if cannabis is right for you and can provide guidance on dosage and other important considerations.

There are also groups to help you learn how cannabis can help you in these states. They can help you know how cannabis can be integrated into your current medical treatment and how to discuss this with your doctor.

Citations:

  1. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1576089/
  2. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2503660/
  3. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
  4. CANNABIS INTERNATIONAL .org | Official Site of Kristen & William Courtney, MD.
  5. The Physics of Life, coming soon Cannasapiens Freedom Facebook | drbob | Robert Melamede (canna-sapiens.com)

Cannabis blocks COVID

I’m often telling people about the amazing power of cannabis. It’s a super food and an essential product to our bodies.

Now further research shows both the “Marijuana” and “Hemp” forms contain acids that attack and stop the SARS COV-2 from being able to enter the cells.

Source: https://today.oregonstate.edu/news/oregon-state-research-shows-hemp-compounds-prevent-coronavirus-entering-human-cells?mc_cid=5f652d2c03&mc_eid=3fe892e329

Chemistry World: Handheld device weeds out cannabis from hemp | Research

Chemistry World: Handheld device weeds out cannabis from hemp | Research.
https://www.chemistryworld.com/news/handheld-device-weeds-out-cannabis-from-hemp/4011251.article

HempMyLife comments:

I know from efforts in my community that Cannabis can be checked with a Spectrometer. It appears now we’ve got a hand held portable
Raman spectrometer that can check your Cannabis for THC now. It used to be a big machine that could do it in a lab. Now you can bring it with you!

I think this is a good thing for the part that we’ve had so many people trying to move cannabis CBD/Hemp products and getting nailed and detained as they can’t figure out it’s not ‘Marijuana’ (0.03< THC really only difference). They are both a superfood and amazing for you. If the feds will allow the ‘Hemp’ variety the be used while we’re sorting the medical laws we should be able to access it. Hopefully this helps that plight.

“CBD and its salts… do not have a significant potential for abuse and could be removed from the [Controlled Substances Act],” the FDA wrote to the DEA in May…

The fight goes on as the FDA says CBD isn’t even eligible to be controlled, but it’s ‘supposed to be’ with UN agreements. We’ll see how quick this goes.

It is quite true though as Cannabis Sativa is safe, it’s not addictive and it’s safe as daily food, as it is food!

See full details on the Marijuana Moment –

https://www.marijuanamoment.net/fda-says-marijuana-ingredient-cbd-doesnt-meet-criteria-for-federal-control/