In cognitive tests, potheads tend to get it right, eventually

Photo: Bryan Brenneman/Flickr CC

Columbia University scientists recently reported that chronic tokers — those blazing morning, noon and night — do just fine on cognitive performance tests.

All they need is a bit more time.

From an abstract at PubMed:

“The overall response accuracy on the word recognition and working memory tasks was unaffected by marijuana, although smoked marijuana did increase the amount of time participants needed to complete these tasks.”

Sci-Tech Heretic readers will recall a similar finding with marijuana users who did fine in driving simulators, perhaps because they drove more slowly.

via Neurophysiological and cognitive effects of smoked… [Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 2010] – PubMed result.

Pot is a pain buster, Texas docs say

Needs relief. Photo: Elvert Barnes/Flickr CC

Diabetics and others with chronic pain caused by peripheral nerve damage, might find relief in a pot derivative, according to docs at the Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.

Last week the researchers announced a finding that the cannabinoid, MDA19, reduces neuropathic pain, “without producing adverse effects in the central nervous system.”

In other words, using the cannabinoid alone reduced pain in rats, without getting them stoned — an undesirable effect, as the docs see it.

The synthetic cannabinoid (cannabis-related) compound, called MDA19, seems to avoid side effects by acting mainly on one specific subtype of the cannabinoid receptor. “MDA19 has the potential for alleviating neuropathic pain without producing adverse effects in the central nervous system,” according to the study by Dr Mohamed Naguib of The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.

via Marijuana Derivative Could Be Useful for Pain Treatment Blocks Neuropathic Pain without Undesired Side Effects.

Will marijuana bong and vaporizer sellers welcome government oversight?

Should these consumers (present and future) be protected from false advertising claims? Photo: nimbin mardi grass 2009/Flickr CC

With cannabis legalization looking like a real possibility in California this fall, growers are understandably worried that they’ll soon be out of business.

But there’s another group of entrepreneurs — the makers of pot smoking and vaporizing paraphernalia — who might also be in for a rude awakening.

Post-legalization, I expect government regulators to be snuffing out bogus product claims, such as those made by the makers of the Gravity Vortex (excerpt from the product website, below).

The company’s website copy strongly suggests that its bong removes as many harmful particulates as vaporizers (emphases are mine):

The Gravity VORTEX is the world’s first portable gravity smoking device that hits like a gravity bong and is smooth like a vaporizer. Winner of the gold medal at the 2006 High Times Cannabis Cup, the VORTEX is quickly taking the smoking world by storm. Clean, cool and smooth hits that wont hurt your lungs. It is made of high quality polycarbonate, so its virtually indestructible and safe to smoke from (sic).

These are exactly the kinds of claims for legal products that the FDA and other agencies already look for…

In fact, since the maker of the Gravity Vortex, Long Beach, Calif.-based Nine Point Eight Entertainment, claims its product is for “tobacco use only,” it may already be in the sites of someone at FDA, and we just have not heard about it yet.

I plan on tracking this story for a while, so stay tuned.

via Gravity VORTEX: Waterfall smoking experience. Powerful as a gravity bong, smooth as a vaporizer.

Faced with legalization, pot growers mull new marketing tactics

The foodies get it. Pot-laced products bear interesting labels. Photo: Bob With/Flickr CC

More mainstream focus on the impending pot legalization story. In this case, Village Voice Media’s Toke of the Town picks up on an NPR report. — MB

I interviewed a California medical marijuana producer a year ago, and he was already stressing about legalization. (Like many licensed to grow medical marijuana in the state, he also sells pot to non-medical clients.)

“I want to get out of the business before it becomes fully legal,” he said.

But since then, the same grower has started mulling new angles for his business. One is branding: He and a close relative hope to become the Mondavi brothers of weed. He noted in a subsequent interview the allure of small batch beers, and reckoned that pot growers can take a similar approach to marketing their product.

Marijuana growers could compete against the likes of Altria by emphasizing their organic growing methods, for example, or that they are local producers.

The context:

“Greater supply, more competition, and especially the prospect of legalized marijuana — with the issue enjoying majority support and slated to appear on November’s ballot in California — is exerting downward pressure on pot prices…”

via Toke of the Town – Low Pot Prices Create Panic; We Should All Have Such Problems.

Bombshell NY governor hopeful: Legalize pot, liberate courts

As a native New Yorker, I can’t tell you who disappoints me more: the NYPD, for chasing dopers around town, because they’re easy marks, or the “46,000 New Yorkers” too indiscreet to avoid getting busted with a bit of weed.

What’s happened to the Big Apple’s cosmopolitanism?

“Spitzer madam” and libertarian gubernatorial candidate Kristin Davis (right) is using her notoriety, and her cleavage, to draw attention to New York’s pot problem, as she sees it, as well as gay marriage, which she supports.

Here’s Davis’ take on government waste:

“High Times recently reported that New York City recorded, in 2009, the second highest number of marijuana arrests on record. The police arrested over 46,000 people – that’s right, 46,000 – for public possession of marijuana. That’s 46,000 people bogging down the judicial system, trudging through city precincts, and otherwise diverting the police from more pressing duties. I find this ludicrous and asinine.”

Davis also wants to legalize prostitution in New York, and reform the state’s penal system, in which she did a four-month turn, after providing hookers to some of New York’s most powerful men.

via NY Gov. candidate Kristin Davis: ‘I can think of few acts as harmless as smoking a joint, even in a public park’ | The Daily Caller – Breaking News, Opinion, Research, and Entertainment.

Facebook post nabs Boston bong thief

Good glass will cost you. Photo: Igor Bespamyatnov/Flickr CC

From UH (link below), a short while ago:

Wicked Local Allston/Brighton reports the owner of a Comm. Ave. shop that sells high-quality bongs nailed one of the men who allegedly stole several of them by posting photos on Facebook – which resulted in tips leading to a Saugus man – with tattoos showing on his own Facebook page that matched those seen on surveillance video.

via Bing bong: Facebook helps head-shop owner catch a thief | Universal Hub.

MPP: UN "meddles" in US marijuana legalization fight

Photo: Salvatore Palange/Flickr CC

The UN is sticking its nose into the business of individual US states, by complaining that any trend toward legalization of weed will have a domino effect, globally, says the MPP:

“The U.N.’s International Narcotics Control Board’s (INCB) attempts to meddle in marijuana reform in the United States were denounced by the Marijuana Policy Project on Thursday.

The INCB, which is currently meeting in Vienna, Austria, said in a recent report that they were ‘deeply concerned’ that the 14 U.S. states that have medical marijuana laws are sending the ‘wrong message to other countries.’”

via Toke of the Town – Cannabis news, rumor and humor.

Cannabis, computers, conspiracies: latest MSM recipe for disaster

The takeaway, from this week's Pentagon shooting: Pot will make you crazy. Photo: nimbin mardi grass 2009/Flickr CC

The Washington Post today describes John Patrick Bedell as “a troubled 36-year-old Californian who loved marijuana, computers, and conspiracy theories.”

If those interests form some kind of explosive mix, as the WaPo story indicates, then we’re in a hell of a lot of trouble.

Suspicions that 9/11 was an inside job are widespread, as are pot use and technophilia — the latter two, at least, are directly supported by the government.

Bedell pulled a gun at an entrance to the Pentagon this week not because of his interests, or his character, but — as Bedell’s parents rightly put it — his mental illness.

I’d be interested, then, to know which psychiatric and psychological treatments Bedell did get, if any. That will go further to answering the “why” of this story, than a list of hobbies.

Here’s a bit of the sensational stuff, though, from WaPo:

Bedell left an electronic trail thick with written, video, and audio manifestos. In an audio address posted on the Internet, he suggested that after the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy the United States had been infiltrated by a cabal of gangsters he called the “coup regime.’’ Bedell believed that the group has continued manipulating the country “up to the present day’’ and was probably responsible for the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the Iraq war.

via Gunman troubled, friends say – The Boston Globe.

Latin America to UN drug warriors: Put this in your pipe, and smoke it

Photo: Esparta Palma/Flickr CC

Mexico, Argentina and Brazil are winding-down their roles in the no-win-scenario, war on drugs being waged (purportedly on Latin America’s behalf) by the United States.

And the UN is frustrated:

“The Vienna-based International Narcotics Control Board (INCB), in its annual report released today, stated its concern over Latin America’s “growing movement to decriminalize the possession of controlled drugs, in particular cannabis.”

via UN: Latin America undermining drug war by decriminalizing drugs / The Christian Science Monitor – CSMonitor.com.

Pot scare of the week: "may cause psychosis"

Crazy, man. (Photo: Dana Ocker/Flickr CC)

Here’s your alarmist marijuana headline for the week (from Businessweek): “Marijuana Use Can Up Psychosis Risk”

What researchers found, actually, was an association between tokers who start blazing heavily at a young age, and an increased likelihood they will develop a serious mental illness.

And, of course, we’ve known about the comorbidity of substance abuse and psychoses for many years.

But you can’t blame the media for going overboard, this time: The Australian scientists who found the association between heavy, early use of pot and psychotic symptoms (such as hallucinations), themselves suggest a causal link:

“‘This demonstrates the complexity of the relationship: those individuals who were vulnerable to psychosis [i.e., those who had isolated psychotic symptoms] were more likely to commence cannabis use, which could then subsequently contribute to an increased risk of conversion to a non-affective psychotic disorder,’” wrote the study authors.

Another possibility, of course, is that young people, experiencing early psychotic symptoms, might be engaging in drug-seeking behavior to self-medicate, period.

via Marijuana Use Can Up Psychosis Risk – BusinessWeek.

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