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5 Stoner Games To Play On 420

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Will you be spending 420 at the crib? If so, you can still have an epic time. And of course, smoke lots of weed. But do you want to know how you can have the best time ever? With pot-friendly games, that’s how. Whether you’re all by your lonesome or with a few of your homies, there’s a game out there for everyone. From the Smokin’ Dice Game to 420- The Card Game, here are five stoner games to play on 420.

1. Whiz Khalifa’s Weed Farm

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Launching on 420, Wiz Khalifa’s Weed Farm is a game that allows you to build your very own weed empire. Like most pot farm games, you get to grow and harvest your own ganja.

Khalifa’s mobile game gives players a more realistic view of the budding weed industry than others like it. Gamers can seize opportunities as if they were real entrepreneurs. Available for Apple App Store and Google Play, Khalifa’s Weed Farm will entertain you for hours.

2. 420: The Card Game

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A mix of truth or dare and cards against humanity, 420: The Card Game is full of weed references and inappropriateness. You’ll laugh your ass off, do embarrassing things, and answer the most random of questions.

But to enjoy the game, you must start play while high. You’ll need to grab a couple of your buddies to play with you, too. 420: The Card Game costa $35, and it’s worth every penny.

3. Weed Shop: The Game

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Ever wondered what it’s like to work at a dispensary? If so, you can run your very own pot shop from home, sort-of. Weed Shop: The Game is a game app that makes you the boss. Not only can you decorate your store, but you can also harvest and sell your own buds.

Be warned, though. In like manner of a real-life dispensary, you need to be able to keep up. There will be slow times, and there will be busy times. Either way, you need to make sure you’re stocked up at all times.

4. THC The Game

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Everyone remembers playing Candyland as kids. But now there’s an adult, weed-friendly version, called THC The Game. This particular boardgame, costing $12.99, features a joint as a spinner and allows you to travel to high destinations, including Mouth Smokemore and MJ Thicket.

THC The Game is also best played while stoned. It’s 420, so you should be high. Otherwise, it’s just not the same.

5. Smokin’ Dice Game

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In case you want a simple game that doesn’t require a lot of thought, there’s the Smokin’ Dice Game. Not only will this game provide hours of fun for you and your friends, but it also encourages you to toke.

Not to mention, the Smokin’ Dice Game is cheap. And for just $6.99, you can roll your way to cloud nine and share lots of laughs while you’re at it.

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Brittney Sanger

I am a free spirit located in a small college town. Most of the time I am busy working towards my degree in Healthcare Management. During my spare time, I enjoy writing, reading, shopping, music and board games. Most of all, I like Cannabis. I am a firm believer in Cannabis and the good it does for people. Marijuana is my motivator, my medicine for when I’m sick, and my most favored pick-me-up. Meeting and connecting with other Cannabis lovers is a passion of mine. It’s a nice feeling to know that so many people feel the same way I do on the subject.
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Get Out The Cannabis Vote – Part 4 of 5

The Green Party of Canada shares a similar view on cannabis as the Liberals – they support full legalization. They have been outspoken in their support of legalizing cannabis and included a section (Section 4.9 – Ending The War On Drugs) in their platform that deals with the issue of the war on drugs. They are the only party that has calculated the tax revenue (Budget Calculation) that Canada will gain by full legalization.

The Green Party believes that the prohibition of cannabis and the war on drugs have failed – miserably. In their opinion, not only does it waste taxpayer money, but it also “[criminalizes] youth, and [fosters] organized crime.”

Candidates for Kooteny-Columbia participated in a “Question of the Week” series with The Nelson Daily in the lead up to the federal election on October 19th. Earlier this month each candidate was asked where their party stands on legalization of cannabis – Green Party candidate Bill Green stated: “I fully support the Green Party policy with respect to marijuana/cannabis for both medicinal and recreational use, which is: Legalize, Research, Educate. Legalize so that the link between the production and sale of cannabis and drug gangs is severed.”

Green-Logo-300x300Green went on to say:
Research to carefully determine the full range of health/medicinal benefits and health risks. Where scientific studies demonstrate health benefits and appropriate modes of use and dosages, medical marijuana should be brought fully within our regulated drug and medical system so that people needing cannabis treatment can obtain prescriptions from their family doctors and purchase treatments at their local drug store.

The Green Party national Pharmacare plan will then kick in so that cost is not a barrier to anyone needing therapeutic marijuana.

Physicians then need to be educated on the medicinal values of marijuana, and Canadians should be informed of the results of ongoing research about the health benefits and risks of various modes of cannabis use.

The federal Green’s have seriously considered the issues surrounding prohibition, and understand what Canada stands to gain by legalizing cannabis. In January of 2010 Elizabeth May, leader of the Green Party of Canada sat down with Cannabis Digest for an interview. She spoke candidly on the harms of prohibition and what her party would like to see for Canada, in regards to legalization of cannabis.

Elizabeth-May_GreenMay said:

There is solid research that prohibition doesn’t work. There is no reason to treat marijuana as an illegal substance; and by regulating, legalizing, taxing, then you have a much more sustainable ongoing access to marijuana for people for medicinal reason, for recreational reasons, but with the proper limits and all the same programs of awareness for ‘don’t drink and drive,’ ‘don’t be under the influence of any kind of drug or artificial stimulant when you are behind the wheel.’ So it’s a full package recognizing marijuana as legal which is different than promoting its use.

Even though this interview is more than 5 years old it is still relevant to this election – the Green Party has not changed their opinion on prohibition and have consistently been on record, backing full legalization.

In January of 2012, almost a full year before the Liberals drafted their policy document,
that created a framework for legalization, Elizabeth May spoke out to show her support of their changing attitude towards cannabis legalization: “It is nice to see another party come in line with Green Party policy. We have said for years that we should be regulating and taxing marijuana and freeing up our police resources to fight real crime”.

green-party-simplified-flower-election-logo-englishThis election is could be one of the most important in our country’s history. “Elections Canada says an estimated 3.6 million people voted during four days of advance polls running from Friday to Thanksgiving Monday, representing a 71 per cent increase over three days of advance polling in 2011.”

For whatever reasons, this election is engaging voters in a much different way than any election over the last several decades. I urge you to get out and cast a ballot, it does not matter whom you are voting for, or why you are voting – just get out there and vote. It is your right and your privilege to vote. Please make your voice heard – your vote counts.
If you have any further questions for about the Green Party’s platform, or would like to find a candidate in your riding, please visit their website:
www.greenparty.ca/en
Written By: Beth Cormier

References:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/elections-canada-says-3-6-million-votes-cast-during-advance-polls-1.3269393
www.greenparty.ca/en/media-release/2012-01-17/greens-welcome-new-liberal-marijuana-policy

www.thenelsondaily.com/news/nelson-daily-question-week-—-marijuana-39410 – .Vh2CZxNVikp

GREEN’S ELIZABETH MAY TO TOUR NELSON-CRESTON APRIL 20TH

Elizabeth May to tour Nelson-Creston

NELSON B.C. – Hot on the heels of BC Green Party Leader, Andrew Weaver, Elizabeth May, leader of the Green Party of Canada, will tour Nelson-Creston with MLA candidate, Kim Charlesworth, on Thursday, April 20.

“Elizabeth is visiting to support and inspire the Green Wave that we’re seeing in BC.”, Charlesworth said. “The people of Nelson-Creston need to know that the Greens present a real option for reclaiming our democracy and solving problems that affect individuals, communities, our environment, and our climate. ”

CRESTON – Elizabeth May Speeches by Kim Charlesworth & Elizabeth May. Discussion with citizens. Cookies & drinks Creston & District Community Complex , 312 19 Ave N, 12:30 to 2:30 PM

NELSON – The Green Groundswell continues with Elizabeth May
Keynote Speaker – Green Party of Canada Leader, Elizabeth
May, Speech by Kim Charlesworth, Questions & Answers
with citizens, silent auction, music, snacks & drinks. Rod and Gun Club, 801 Railway Street 7 to 9 PM

Canada’s Green Party Leader Tells Trudeau How To Legalize Cannabis

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stole headlines last October when his Liberal Party won Canada’s federal election while promising to legalize marijuana nationwide. But legalization was a policy plank of the rival Green Party of Canada long before the Liberals adopted it in 2012. And party leader Elizabeth May has been a staunch support for ending cannabis prohibition and the war on drugs for years:

“The traditional approach to preventing drug use has not only been a spectacular failure in itself, but has resulted in building a massive crime industry and has had catastrophic negative impacts on numerous young people, especially within poverty-stricken areas both within Canada and abroad,” Green Party Leader Elizabeth May, Jan. 2012.
With so much uncertainty surrounding the Liberals’ plans, we reached out to Elizabeth May to ask what the Green Party wants from legalization. Here are some of the things she emphasized.

1) Take a liberal approach to growing at home

Elizabeth May doesn’t think legalization would take very long to complete if the Liberals take the Green Party’s advice:

“The view of the Green Party is: the less complicated it is, the easier it is to administrate, and the more sense it will make. So you want to tax and regulate and control the sales of cannabis, but no more rigorously than you would alcohol or cigarettes.”
And her party’s regulations would allow Canadians to grow cannabis at home – tax free:

“People who are growing their own for their own use, for instance, would not be subject to penalty or regulation or tax. Those who are growing for sale to others, would have to meet the standards of regulation and paying a tax on product.”

2) Allow small, craft producers to participate in the market

May says companies involved in Canada’s cannabis industry right now are concerned they might be pushed out by the Liberals’ regulatory framework.

“There is a concern from those who are providers of access to medical marijuana that the rules not be so stringent as they prejudice people who are in that business right now, whether they’re making (cannabis-infused) salves or different products. Those should be easier to access at an affordable price with quality that can be assured by, for instance, local craft makers of salves, and so on. I’ve met with some of those people on Vancouver Island and they’re very concerned that the regulations, when they come in, shouldn’t make it more difficult for them to provide products which meet safety standards [and] are regulated.”
3) Make ‘gray market’ dispensaries part of the regulated system

One hot topic surrounding legalization is what the government will do about Canada’s medical marijuana dispensaries, which are illegal storefronts that have sprouted up across the country. May thinks they should be brought into the regulatory scheme.

“They already have a clientele, they’re located in places that people know, they’ve been doing a really good job trying to manage physician-prescribed access to marijuana. It makes sense that they shouldn’t be bypassed.”
However, she also said that dispensaries owners should be prepared to cooperate with the government’s regulations. When asked if she was concerned with the growth of illegal dispensaries, May told Civilized, “I’m not. I mean, they’ll have to be prepared to comply with the system that emerges, but I think they should be eligible to comply.”

4) Don’t let ‘Big Cannabis’ take over

While she isn’t very worried about the “gray market” dispensaries, May is concerned about the rise of corporate interest in the marijuana industry:

“As we legalize marijuana, it’s very likely that large corporate interests will want to step in and take the profits. And in the context of sustainability, maintaining local [interests] where you can…makes a lot of sense. Just as you would with fruits and vegetables, so you know something is locally grown and organic. And that you actually know your grower is a good guard against any additives that are a more significant threat to health.”
And she thinks that the issue of protecting local businesses needs to be discussed more when we talk about legalization.

“The key thing that I don’t think I’ve heard about enough is this question of making sure that those people who are making cannabis products – whether salves or teas or or lotions – to make sure that they’re not pushed out of the market in doing something that is local and sustainable by larger corporate interests.”

5) Using tax revenue to spread awareness

May wants to see a portion of Canada’s cannabis tax revenue go toward educating the public about the plant and its effects.

“We…want to see funds collected in a tax on cannabis sales [used] to [raise] awareness to where the health threats are. We’re not saying that it’s a product with no health risks. We think that use by adolescents should be discouraged. We certainly think that there should be a way of preparing society and for traffic police to learn how to spot people who are under the influence and driving.”
6) Outdoor grow operations have a lower carbon footprint

As a federal party, the Greens take on numerous causes and issues of national importance. But the environment remains the cornerstone of their policies, so we had to ask how legalization could reduce the environmental impact of marijuana cultivation.

Her answer addresses the issue of where it’s grown. Simply put, May wants to see indoor cultivation become rare in Canada.

“The sort of hysteria around marijuana and cannabis in the past, the process of government-grown, and government-approved regulations over marijuana growing operations has essentially insisted that the operations move indoors. And as a result, it’s created a very heavy…carbon footprint from the growing of marijuana. It’s bizarre given that it’s a product that grows outdoors perfectly well…To the greatest extent possible, we should not be moving the cultivation of this crop to indoor facilities. That creates a huge carbon footprint that is completely unnecessary.”
She recommends that cultivators learn from the tobacco industry and produce enough cannabis during the growing season to last the entire year.

“Tobacco’s also a seasonal crop. It doesn’t grow year-round. You can dry enough to meet annual demand. From what I’ve seen so far, I see absolutely no point whatsoever in seeing an indoor growing regime for cannabis.”

banner image: canada.2020 / Flickr

Elizabeth May says marijuana could be lucrative if legalized

The Green party is promising to legalize marijuana and invest billions for jobs, healthcare and seniors — all without running a deficit.

4.9 Ending the war on drugs

Between 2008 and 2011, according to the Department of Justice, Canada spent $311 million targeting illicit drugs, with a majority of that money going to law enforcement. Most of that was for the ‘war’ against cannabis (marijuana). Marijuana prohibition is also prohibitively costly in other ways, including criminalizing youth and fostering organized crime. Cannabis prohibition, which has gone on for decades, has utterly failed and has not led to reduced drug use in Canada.

After analyzing the recommendation of the Canadian Senate’s 2002 Special Committee on Drugs and the examples of strategies used by some European countries, the Green Party of Canada has come to the conclusion that it is time to legalize the adult use of marijuana. Furthermore, the Greens believe that drug addictions should be treated as a health problem, not as criminal offences.

Green Party MPs will:

  • Legalize marijuana by removing marijuana from the drug schedule;
  • Create a regulatory framework for the safe production of marijuana by small, independent growers;
  • Develop a taxation rate for marijuana similar to that of tobacco;
  • Establish the sale of marijuana to adults for medicinal or personal use through licensed distribution outlets;
  • Educate the public about the health threats of marijuana, tobacco, and other drug use;
  • Launch a public consultation on the decriminalization of illicit drugs, considering the current high costs of the law enforcement effort;
  • Provide increased funding to safe injection sites, treatment facilities, and addict rehabilitation.
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