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How the U.S. Government is profiting from keeping pot illegal
A new report suggests the feds could earn $5 billion in the next decade if weed stays federally banned – so where's the incentive for legalization?
Rolling Stone (US)
Thursday, February 1, 2018Because of the discrepancy between state and federal law, legal marijuana businesses are stuck paying twice as much as normal businesses – effective rates of up to 70 percent – in federal taxes. How much extra tax revenue makes it to the feds because of marijuana's illegality is not clear. The Congressional Joint Committee on Taxation responded to a request from Colorado Senator Cory Gardner with the projected additional amount collected from legal cannabis businesses between 2018-2027 if it remains federally illegal: $5 billion. While AG Jeff Sessions is presenting marijuana legalization as a moral problem and encouraging prosecutors to go after state-legal weed businesses, the federal government may have a financial incentive to keep cannabis listed.
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Canadian cannabis companies set their sights on South America
Canadian cannabis companies have taken a particular interest in Colombia
Forbes (US)
Wednesday, January 31, 2018Much has been made of the marijuana M&A spree afoot in Canada. Just this year alone, licensed producer Aurora Cannabis Inc. agreed to acquire CanniMed Therapeutics Inc for $852 million, which would create the largest cannabis company in the world. Bank of Montreal got into the weed game with a $175 million deal with Canopy Growth Corp. Skyrocketing cannabis stocks are leading to comparisons to the dot-com boom, and American marijuana companies are looking North for more capital and a friendly business environment. Amid the frenzy, Canadian cannabis companies are increasingly setting their sights on South America, where several countries are liberalizing their cannabis laws. (See also: Latin America offers Canada a route to global dominance in medical marijuana)
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Chloe Swarbrick's medicinal cannabis bill fails at first reading
The Government bill only provides support for the terminally ill
Stuff (New Zealand)
Wednesday, January 31, 2018Green MP Chloe Swarbrick's medicinal cannabis bill has failed at its first reading. The bill lost 47 votes to 73, with both every National and NZ First MP voting against it. Swarbrick told media that National would lose votes over the decision, because 78 per cent of Kiwis agreed with the premise of her bill. In contrast to a significantly more conservative Government bill which was progressed to select committee, this bill would have allowed the terminally ill and debilitated to legally grow cannabis if prescribed it by their doctor. The Government's bill went so far as to set up a scheme to allow cannabis-based medicinal products and provide a criminal defence for anyone terminally ill charged with possession of marijuana.
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India’s cannabis hot-spot experiments with alternative livelihoods
The producers of the world's 'most expensive cannabis,' Malana Cream, are attempting to diversify, with mixed success
Asia Times
Wednesday, January 31, 2018According to the Institute for Narcotics Studies and Analysis (INSA), a Delhi-based think tank, Malana has 351 families involved in making hashish. They produce 400-500 kg of the drug annually. Between 2006 and 2010, several initiatives were launched by the government to encourage cannabis growers to switch to alternative cash crops. Kumar remembers them distributing pea seeds and lilium (a medicinal herb) plants. But both failed. “Many questioned the quality of seeds and environmental conditions for growing the crop,” says JC Sharma, managing director of the state’s Horticulture Produce Marketing and Processing Corporation. He believes the perfect substitute for cannabis in Himachal lies in high-yield apple plantations.
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Trafficked, beaten, enslaved: the life of a Vietnamese cannabis farmer
The details of his case provide a rare insight into the conditions in which a significant proportion of cannabis is cultivated in the UK
The Guardian (UK)
Wednesday, January 31, 2018At 10, ‘Stephen’ was taken from Hanoi to London and then spent four years tending plants for a brutal drug gang. Now awaiting news of an appeal against deportation, he recalls his horrific experience – and his lucky escape. He was taken to a six-room house, where every room had been emptied and converted into a cannabis-growing area. “Three people stayed for the first few days to show me how to organise everything. Then they locked the door and left me alone,” he said. By this point, he thinks he was about 12 years old. (See also: Trafficked and enslaved: the teenagers tending UK cannabis farms)
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Canadian weed companies are staking their claim in Europe
The legal status of cannabis varies throughout Europe
Vice (Canada)
Tuesday, January 30, 2018Some of Canada’s biggest cannabis companies are expanding their presence in Europe through a series of strategic acquisitions, designed to secure a first-mover advantage in a region that is firmly on the path towards the legalization of medical weed. Two of the biggest deals in the Canadian cannabis space had Europe’s medical cannabis market in mind. When Aurora Cannabis succeeded in its takeover of CanniMed Therapeutics — a two-month bid that was fraught with hostilities — it not only acquired the most well-oiled medical marijuana machine in the country, it bought over a company whose advances in cannabis research perfectly complement Aurora’s own foray into the burgeoning medical cannabis markets of Denmark, Italy and Germany.
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Illegal cannabis plantations becoming more advanced, better hidden
There are around 30 thousand cannabis farms in the Netherlands that steal nearly 1 billion kWh of electricity each year
NL Times (Netherlands)
Tuesday, January 30, 2018Drug criminals are getting better and better at hiding their illegal cannabis plantations, according to grid manager Stedin whose been working with the police on discovering such illegal farms. Last year around a thousand illegal cannabis farms were found in three major cities, 22 percent less than the year before. But Stedin is certain that the number of cannabis farms is on the rise. "Organized crime is become more and more innovative in hiding cannabis farms", Barthjeu Ammerlaan, manager of the fraud department at Stedin, said. "Deeply hidden away in cellars of houses with masked ventilation is where you can find these hard to find plantations." (See also: Dutch councils vie to produce cannabis in bid to cut out criminals)
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Philippine police return to war on drugs, cannot promise no bloodshed
Duterte has stopped police anti-drugs operations twice due to questions over the conduct of the force
Channel News Asia (Singapore)
Monday, January 29, 2018Police in the Philippines resumed President Rodrigo Duterte's war on drugs, making visits to the homes of users and dealers to convince them to surrender, but the national police chief declined to guarantee that blood would not be shed. The programme of visits, known as "Oplan Tokhang", made a comeback with an assurance from police chief Ronaldo dela Rosa that it should be free of violence if offenders agreed to go quietly and did not resist. But he could not promise a "foolproof anti-drug campaign that would be bloodless", Dela Rosa added, as the police were "not dealing with people who are in their proper state of mind".
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‘Prison time will not stop my fight for cannabis’
Mike Dobson, founder of the Preston Cannabis Club, has decided to give up growing the drug after a second spell in Preston Prison
Lancashire Post (UK)
Monday, January 29, 2018Cannabis campaigner Mike Dobson has vowed to give up growing the drug after a sobering second spell in prison. But the 39-year-old is refusing to abandon his fight to become a legalised producer – even though it means taking on the might of the Home Office and the judiciary. “I’m 100 per cent convinced we will win,” said Mike, at home in Bamber Bridge. Mike insists he will continue campaigning against the UK’s strict rules on cannabis even though he was refused a licence to produce it by the Home Office and then had his plea for a judicial review rejected by a judge. He has appealed that decision and is now waiting on a date for a hearing before the High Court’s Civil Appeals Division in London.
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The War on Drugs in Southeast Asia
Southeast Asia has a long history of being tough on drug use
New Naratif (UK)
Monday, January 29, 2018While the world’s attention has been focused on the carnage of the Philippine Drug War, which has resulted in an estimated 13,000 deaths from anti-narcotics operations and extrajudicial killings since June 2016, President Duterte’s extreme solution to the country’s drug problem may only be the most conspicuous and controversial in a region with a history of draconian drug laws and anti-drug campaigns. Media reports and human rights monitors have pointed to a worrying surge in the killing and jailing of suspected drug dealers and users in at least two Southeast Asian nations over the past year. Jakarta-based non-profit LBH Masyarakat estimates that the number of extrajudicial killings in Indonesia jumped from 17 in 2016 to nearly 100 last year (official figures put it at 79).
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