Thursday, October 3, 2013

New Cisco Adler Video Filmed at Buds and Roses

Cisco Adler’s second solo EP, Mahalo, contains a “cannabis protest song” called “Free Tree.” And the video for the single is a stoner’s dream. Filmed at Buds and Roses’ grow facility in Studio City, CA, Adler appears surrounded by beautiful pot plants (just a day before harvest).
According to Adler, the song “is about society approaching the Idiocracy. How long till they charge us to breathe?”
Check out the “Free Tree” video – and download Mahalo on iTunes.

Baby Taken From Mom for Medical Marijuana Usage

The Michigan Medical Marihuana Act was passed in 2008. It contained a provision to protect the families of medical marijuana patients from legal consequences, a step that the previous medical marijuana states did not envision. Section (4)(c) reads, “A person shall not be denied custody or visitation of a minor for acting in accordance with this act, unless the person's behavior is such that it creates an unreasonable danger to the minor that can be clearly articulated and substantiated."
That provision did not stop Child Protective Services (CPS) from taking away Bree Green, the six-month-old daughter of Steve and Maria Green. Maria is a patient with multiple sclerosis and a registered caregiver who was growing marijuana in a locked cultivation room in her home, in accordance with the law.
The case began with a custody dispute over another of Maria’s children, with whom she shares custody with her ex-husband. The ex claimed Maria’s home wasn’t fit for children since there was marijuana use going on. CPS got involved and sided with the ex-husband, ordering the removal of baby Bree on September 13.
Steve and Maria protested and the case was reviewed by Ingham Family Court Referee Rod Porter. Porter upheld the removal of baby Bree despite the medical marijuana law’s section (4)(c) protections. So what was the “unreasonable danger to the minor that can be clearly articulated and substantiated?"
Porter, when confronted by Michigan Marijuana News, replied, “It is reasonable to assume that marijuana is being grown in that home with children being present, and that is dangerous for children to be involved in that situation. We have homes being robbed at gunpoint -- by individuals who know that children are at home.”
If the possibility of a home invasion robbery is the standard for taking people’s kids, Michigan parents better take care not to keep any jewelry or electronics in the home. Those were the targets of a home invasion in Northwest Ottawa County just a week after Bree was taken by CPS. We were able to find through a Google News four more home invasion robberies in Michigan that occurred since Bree was taken -- one resulting in a murder and none apparently involving any home medical marijuana grows.
In 2008, medical marijuana passed in every single county in Michigan, even the ones that voted for John McCain. It passed with 63% of the vote. Certainly the people of Michigan didn’t intend a protection for medical marijuana-using parents to be valid only if they weren’t growing or using medical marijuana.

Colorado Accepting Licenses for Recreational Pot Shops

Move over Amsterdam! Colorado began accepting applications for recreational pot shops yesterday.
The applications were accepted by appointment only, which kept overcrowding in check. A far cry from the chaos in 2010 when swarming medical marijuana license seekers crowded the offices.
The Denver Post reported that the first applicants arrived at the Marijuana Enforcement Division's offices south of downtown Denver shortly before 9am, carrying heavy boxes and bulging binders. Just after 9, Andy Williams, the owner of the Medicine Man medical-marijuana dispensary, stepped into an office conference room to become one of the first to submit an application.
"We're excited," he said. "Some folks are afraid to be first, but we welcome it."
All available appointment for yesterday and today have been booked, but more days should be announced soon. Keep on mind that until July 2014, only businesspeople who own medical-marijuana dispensaries can apply to open a recreational store.
Businesses whose applications are accepted in October will receive a decision by Jan. 1, 2014, which is also the first day recreational marijuana stores can open in Colorado.
Hello, American pot-tourism!
Although the US landscape will morph into something similar to Amsterdam, the European city still has unique charms, not the least of which is the 2013 HIGH TIMES Cannabis Cup. Buy your tickets now!

10 Reasons Marijuana Should Be Legal

The readers of HIGH TIMES want marijuana legalized, nationwide, and now. Here are our top ten reasons marijuana should be legalized:
10. Prohibition has failed to control the use and domestic production of marijuana.
The government has tried to use criminal penalties to prevent marijuana use for over 75 years and yet: marijuana is now used by over 25 million people annually, cannabis is currently the largest cash crop in the United States, and marijuana is grown all over the planet. Claims that marijuana prohibition is a successful policy are ludicrous and unsupported by the facts, and the idea that marijuana will soon be eliminated from America and the rest of the world is a ridiculous fantasy.
9. Arrests for marijuana possession disproportionately affect blacks and Hispanics and reinforce the perception that law enforcement is biased and prejudiced against minorities.
African-Americans account for approximately 13% of the population of the United States and about 13.5% of annual marijuana users, however, blacks also account for 26% of all marijuana arrests. Recent studies have demonstrated that blacks and Hispanics account for the majority of marijuana possession arrests in New York City, primarily for smoking marijuana in public view. Law enforcement has failed to demonstrate that marijuana laws can be enforced fairly without regard to race; far too often minorities are arrested for marijuana use while white/non-Hispanic Americans face a much lower risk of arrest.
8. A regulated, legal market in marijuana would reduce marijuana sales and use among teenagers, as well as reduce their exposure to other drugs in the illegal market.
The illegality of marijuana makes it more valuable than if it were legal, providing opportunities for teenagers to make easy money selling it to their friends. If the excessive profits for marijuana sales were ended through legalization there would be less incentive for teens to sell it to one another. Teenage use of alcohol and tobacco remain serious public health problems even though those drugs are legal for adults, however, the availability of alcohol and tobacco is not made even more widespread by providing kids with economic incentives to sell either one to their friends and peers.
7. Legalized marijuana would reduce the flow of money from the American economy to international criminal gangs.
Marijuana’s illegality makes foreign cultivation and smuggling to the United States extremely profitable, sending billions of dollars overseas in an underground economy while diverting funds from productive economic development.
6. Marijuana’s legalization would simplify the development of hemp as a valuable and diverse agricultural crop in the United States, including its development as a new bio-fuel to reduce carbon emissions.
Canada and European countries have managed to support legal hemp cultivation without legalizing marijuana, but in the United States opposition to legal marijuana remains the biggest obstacle to development of industrial hemp as a valuable agricultural commodity. As US energy policy continues to embrace and promote the development of bio-fuels as an alternative to oil dependency and a way to reduce carbon emissions, it is all the more important to develop industrial hemp as a bio-fuel source – especially since use of hemp stalks as a fuel source will not increase demand and prices for food, such as corn. Legalization of marijuana will greatly simplify the regulatory burden on prospective hemp cultivation in the United States.
5. Prohibition is based on lies and disinformation.
Justification of marijuana’s illegality increasingly requires distortions and selective uses of the scientific record, causing harm to the credibility of teachers, law enforcement officials, and scientists throughout the country. The dangers of marijuana use have been exaggerated for almost a century and the modern scientific record does not support the reefer madness predictions of the past and present. Many claims of marijuana’s danger are based on old 20th century prejudices that originated in a time when science was uncertain how marijuana produced its characteristic effects. Since the cannabinoid receptor system was discovered in the late 1980s these hysterical concerns about marijuana’s dangerousness have not been confirmed with modern research. Everyone agrees that marijuana, or any other drug use such as alcohol or tobacco use, is not for children. Nonetheless, adults have demonstrated over the last several decades that marijuana can be used moderately without harmful impacts to the individual or society.
4. Marijuana is not a lethal drug and is safer than alcohol.
It is established scientific fact that marijuana is not toxic to humans; marijuana overdoses are nearly impossible, and marijuana is not nearly as addictive as alcohol or tobacco. It is unfair and unjust to treat marijuana users more harshly under the law than the users of alcohol or tobacco.
3. Marijuana is too expensive for our justice system and should instead be taxed to support beneficial government programs.
Law enforcement has more important responsibilities than arresting 750,000 individuals a year for marijuana possession, especially given the additional justice costs of disposing of each of these cases. Marijuana arrests make justice more expensive and less efficient in the United States, wasting jail space, clogging up court systems, and diverting time of police, attorneys, judges, and corrections officials away from violent crime, the sexual abuse of children, and terrorism. Furthermore, taxation of marijuana can provide needed and generous funding of many important criminal justice and social programs.
2. Marijuana use has positive attributes, such as its medical value and use as a recreational drug with relatively mild side effects.
Many people use marijuana because they have made an informed decision that it is good for them, especially Americans suffering from a variety of serious ailments. Marijuana provides relief from pain, nausea, spasticity, and other symptoms for many individuals who have not been treated successfully with conventional medications. Many American adults prefer marijuana to the use of alcohol as a mild and moderate way to relax. Americans use marijuana because they choose to, and one of the reasons for that choice is their personal observation that the drug has a relatively low dependence liability and easy-to-manage side effects. Most marijuana users develop tolerance to many of marijuana’s side effects, and those who do not, choose to stop using the drug. Marijuana use is the result of informed consent in which individuals have decided that the benefits of use outweigh the risks, especially since, for most Americans, the greatest risk of using marijuana is the relatively low risk of arrest.
1. Marijuana users are determined to stand up to the injustice of marijuana probation and accomplish legalization, no matter how long or what it takes to succeed.
Despite the threat of arrests and a variety of other punishments and sanctions marijuana users have persisted in their support for legalization for over a generation. They refuse to give up their long quest for justice because they believe in the fundamental values of American society. Prohibition has failed to silence marijuana users despite its best attempts over the last generation. The issue of marijuana’s legalization is a persistent issue that, like marijuana, will simply not go away. Marijuana will be legalized because marijuana users will continue to fight for it until they succeed.

Between Two Ferns with Zach Galifianakis: Justin Bieber

From Funny or Die: Zach Galifianakis sits down with Justin Bieber for an interview no one will ever forget. This may be the only Bieber interview you ever need to see.

Counterculture History: Charlie Manson's OM War with Wavy Gravy

After serving 22 months in the Army, Hugh Romney attended Boston College on the GI bill and ended up studying the newly emerging improvisational theater movement (created by Viola Spolin). After college, he moved to Greenwich Village to become a comedian and was initially managed by Lenny Bruce while sharing an apartment with Tom Paxton and becoming close friends with Bob Dylan.
Before long, Romney moved to California and joined Ken Kesey and his band of Merry Pranksters. But when Kesey fled to Mexico under threat of arrest, fellow Prankster Ken Babbs hijacked the magic bus Further, leaving the rest of the Pranksters stranded in Los Angeles.
Romney soon discovered a nearby hog farm in the mountains that was looking for a caretaker. In other words, a free place to stay. He set up a commune and called it The Hog Farm, which overnight became one of the most famous of the 1960s hippie communes. Charles Manson drove out to the Hog Farm one day in the late 1960s. He arrived in his all-black tour bus. Manson had already made contact with one of the Hog Farmers, Shirley Lake, whose daughter Diane would eventually join the Manson family.
After arriving at the commune, Manson gave Romney the title to his black bus and then tried to seduce Romney's wife Bonnie Jean (today known as Jahanara) in a nearby shed. He was undoubtedly planning on merging his family with the Hog Farm and usurping Romney as the leader.
Romney managed to break up the seduction and Manson retired to his black bus with his female followers in tow. Sensing Manson was channeling the wrong vibes, Romney gathered his troops and began an OM circle next to the bus. The OM circle is an ancient ceremony from India that may have originated with the original Soma cults (see The Soma Solution by Chris Bennett, published by Trine Day). I believe it's the best way to harmonize a group of people and ward off negative energy.
The OM circle initially became popular with the Brotherhood of Eternal Love in Laguna Beach, and was later taken up by Allen Ginsberg, who used it as a force field to protect himself and others during the riots in Lincoln Park, which took place at the Democratic convention in 1968.
Back to the story: Manson burst out of the black bus, holding his throat, choking, followed by his female followers who were quite alarmed. They tried to stop the OM circle, as they believed it was killing their leader. Manson began leading his group in an evil OM to ward off the vibes coming from the Hog Farmers.
Eventually, Romney was able to persuade Manson to drive away and not return. The following year, Romney would change his name to Wavy Gravy and become famous as the emcee of the first Woodstock festival. Manson's family would soon become the most famous serial killers in the world.
Today, Wavy remains a master of improvisational theater, which involves a deep understanding of spiritual energy. Improvisation can unblock energy stoppages and release deeply-held insights. If you ever get a chance to attend a Wavy Gravy improvisational workshop, jump at it. You won't be sorry.
Manson, meanwhile, remains in a maximum- security prison and had a parole hearing in 2012. When he entered prison, Manson listed his religion as "scientologist." He kept an E-meter at his ranch. Many believe Scientology was created by military intelligence as a brainwashing and mind-control operation.
The British offshoot of Scientology (The Process Church) ran an operation to capture prominent rock bands into their fold and became perhaps the scariest of all the creepy vibe masters, many of which began to infest the counterculture immediately after taking hold of the younger generation.
Ron Stark was affiliated with The Process Church and he went on to become the biggest connection for the Brotherhood of Eternal Love. Ron Stark, the Process Church, the Brotherhood of Eternal Love, these are all fascinating threads I will explain further in future posts.

Steven Hager is Editor Emeritus of HIGH TIMES and Founder of the Cannabis Cup. He was the first journalist to travel to the South Bronx to document the origins of hip hop and created the hemp movement with Jack Herer in 1987. In 1990, he became the first person outside Marin county to organize 420 ceremonies.

Keif in the Rif

The last strands of smoke hang in the air. The air itself is hot and still, out movements lethargic as the man next to me slowly exhales. He leans back, a distant smile playing across his face, before abruptly knocking the gray embers from his pipe and onto the floor. They aren’t much for ashtrays, these Moroccans.
It’s 2:11am in the dusty outpost of Beni Ahmed. The last game of bingo draws close to completion, and Mohammad curses under his breath: Hemar! It’s been a long evening spent in the dusky confines of the cafe, and luck has been elusive for my young host.
He stands with an exasperated grunt, tipping the stone bingo markers to the floor. “Come, we go now,” he says. The red lights on the ATM clock outside still read 32C -- almost 90F -- and we wander down the empty street, unsteady from boredom and kief.
I had arrived two days earlier in a shared taxi. The daytime temp was over 110F, and the old Mercedes struggled to keep up under the hellish heat. We stopped at a roadside well, and the other passengers drenched their faces, rinsing their mouths before carefully spitting it out -- for Muslims, even water is forbidden during the fasting of Ramadan. While the driver attempted to placate the engine’s steaming rattle, one of my fellow passengers gestured to the plots of green marking the landscape below. “Mirar, amigo. Cannabis, sí?”
Sí indeed, for we were deep in the Rif Mountains, an hour or so from Chefchaouen and surrounded by arid terrain primed to produce the fields of marijuana we could see in the distance. It is this same marijuana that will later find its way across the Strait of Gibraltar and up into Europe, condensed and smuggled as hash, destined for sale on Parisian street corners and in Dutch coffeeshops. I nodded back at our self-nominated tour guide; it’s always nice to meet a local keen to share his appreciation for the region’s top export.
We pulled back out onto the road, and I steadied myself for another round of real-life chicken, metal carrion competing for the single lane of asphalt. Our eventual arrival, miraculous as it seemed to me, was all in a day’s work -- just another instance of avoided breakdowns and blowouts -- and we were unceremoniously ejected from the car and, soon thereafter, into the hands of our couch-surfing host, a polite young man named Mohammad.
It was a short walk to his house, where we dropped our bags and, using Mohammad as an interpreter, tried to explain to his mother that we would like to wait until Iftar to break the day’s fast with them as a family. Our good intentions were well received and promptly ignored, as that renowned Moroccan hospitality was rolled out in the form of delicious tomato and onion relish, fresh orange juice and bread with a cardamom-and-cumin-spiced sauce. But Mohammad was hungry and removed himself while we ate, explaining that although he’s a good Muslim, it is much easier to resist temptation when it remains unseen.
After lunch, Mohammad told us a little bit about life in the village. Given the area’s reputation, it wasn’t overly surprising when he revealed that he grows weed. Like his father and his father’s father before him, his living comes from tending the crops that are barely hidden from the main road and its prying eyes.
Following this revelation, Mohammad took us down to the local outpost of the Gendarme Royale (the national police) for “registration.” I was naturally suspicious and, unsure what we were there for, gave fake names for my parents, then tried not laugh as the cop stutteringly misspelled them. This bizarre bit of admin out of the way, we were free to go: Mohammad explained that it was just a precaution that allowed the police to cover their ample backsides should something happen to us. I couldn’t resist the obvious next question and asked if they knew about the weed. Mohammad laughed: “They asked if you were here to smoke when we showed up.”
This seemed to me an all-too-familiar case of corruption, the cops just one more group of officials contentedly growing fat on milk from the cash cow of illegality. That evening, sipping mint tea in a small café, Mohammad laid out the drug’s ubiquity in the country. His grandfather sat behind us with some of the local bigwigs, and Mohammad discreetly pointed out the boss of the local area’s operation -- a large, balding heavy-set man with sunken eyes that conveyed an absence of amusement. With the cops’ self-protective registration process still looming large in my memory, I was only brave enough to sneak a glance at him.
Mohammad, it turned out, was very proud of his grandfather, whose service fighting the Algerians in the northern deserts had earned him some sort of immunity from searches and checkpoints. The details were vague, but we learned that this gave him the liberty to be a cash mule and exceed the status of mere farmer. Mohammad waxed lyrical about the extravagances to be found at the top of the weed chain here: imported Hummers with no papers, flashy watches,and the extraordinary tale of how the local boss paid to sleep with an unnamed Moroccan pop star.
Whatever the degree of truth to his tales, it was clear that the bosses were powerful men, and that the myths of wealth have lost none of their allure. That came as no surprise, since Beni Ahmed is a simple town: The roads are made of dirt, and the shops are few and far between. There are no extravagances to be found among the olive trees, concrete block houses and rundown cars. It would seem that whatever wealth weed brings into the area is slow to trickle down.
Marijuana is illegal in Morocco, and occasional government crackdowns can have dire consequences for a community so dependent on its cultivation. Mohammad told us about the government-sanctioned strikes in 2010, when Air Force helicopters selectively ruined crops with pesticides.
“This was a bad year, man, very bad year,” Mohammad said, then shrugged in explanation: “No money.”
Despite this ever-looming threat, the community persists in growing, and as a result, weed -- all of fairly average quality --  is everywhere. Mohammad told us that it’s the only way to make money in these parts, and the large plastic bag behind the door in his house seemed to confirm his claims of multiple plantations. But when I finally got to see one, the crop was disappointing. While respectable in size, the plants were more bush than bud, with scores of males happily releasing their pollen among the females. The final product is your typical bush weed, nearly all stems and sticks. I hadn’t the heart (or the nerve) to tell Mohammad how much better his crop would be if he adopted more modern farming methods.
In the end, though, it doesn’t seem to matter much: Most of these plants will be turned into the infamous hard brown hash you find in Europe. The rest are cut up -- seeds, stems and all -- into the locals’ narcotic of choice, the unbelievably harsh kief. It is this kief, smoked through a long, thin pipe with a clay cone, that kept me occupied the last three nights while Mohammad threw good dirham after bad in the crowded coffeehouse.
There are no women present, and in their absence the men display a surprisingly homoerotic level of affection, hanging off each other’s shoulders and strategizing about the nonexistent nuances of bingo. I sit, removed from the proceedings in more ways than one, left to play mental bingo over what they might actually be saying.
The first night at the tables had been generally positive. I made a stuttering attempt to learn numbers in Arabic and made friends over the nonverbal ritual of kief. The practiced hands laughed as I coughed; they also smiled at my waxed mustache, gesturing like they were racing a motorbike. I shook hands with countless strangers keen to meet the newest attraction in the village and drank mint tea till my teeth were saturated with the sugar.
By the third night, though, my novelty had well and truly worn off. I was now just part of the background, forced to cultivate patience amidst the din of shouted Arabic and clattering cups. In a situation like this, especially when your host turns out to be hopelessly addicted to gambling, you are more hostage than guest: There is little you can do but wait until his time or his money runs out.
We arrive back at Mohammad’s modest family home just in time for Suhoor, the final meal before daylight and its associated fasting. As we lie on the rooftop terrace preparing to sleep, I ask Mohammad if he can imagine a life without weed. After all, he is the only English speaker in town -- a fact he’s very proud of -- and doesn’t seem to smoke kief himself. Would there not be other opportunities for him?
Again, Mohammad laughs. In Beni Ahmed, a life without weed is inconceivable.
Keif in the Rif is from the current issue of HIGH TIMES, on sale now!

Marijuana Supporters Unleash Bus Ads

The American population has grown accustom to being subliminally assaulted by outdoor advertisements as a persuasive means to get civil society to buy into everything from booze to fast food -- not to mention the brainwash tactics commonly branded across park benches and other city property for the sole purpose of teaching children to just say “no” to drugs.
However, a pro-pot organization in Portland, Maine -- which is fighting for voter support at the polls next month -- has taken it upon itself to shift the proverbial gears of the traditional anti-message seen in many cities across the nation by launching a controversial new bus and shelter ad campaign advocating for the use of marijuana over alcohol.
One ad reads, “It’s less harmful to my body.” Another states, “It doesn’t make me rowdy or reckless.”
This new movement aims to strip away the stereotypes often associated with pot use by utilizing well-dressed, clean-cut adult models to spread the message that marijuana does not contribute to factors like disorderly behavior and hangovers unlike booze. The goal is to attract additional support for a referendum, scheduled to be voted on November 5, aimed at legalizing small quantities of marijuana for those people ages 21 and older.
However, the opposition, like members of the substance abuse coalition 21 Reasons, says that they cannot believe the METRO board has agreed to run a drug campaign on the same busses responsible for transporting Portland youth to school.
METRO board of director’s president Bonny Rodden says that she was personally unaware of the content expressed in the approved ads, and although she is uncertain if a second look at the nature of message will have any bearing, there is a possibility she may ask the board to reconsider their decision.
The Marijuana Policy Project is responsible for financing the advertising campaign in support of Portland’s referendum. The agency has made Maine one of the top 10 states it wants to help legalize marijuana before 2016.

New Jersey Man Texts Cops to Sell Marijuana

Everyone knows it can be an extremely regrettable experience to drunk-dial a C-list booty call in the desperate hours of the night, but man, it’s nothing compared to getting all chiefed-out on a new stash of get-loose-spruce and accidentally texting a proposed drug deal to old Johnny Law.
That is exactly what police say a New Jersey man did earlier last week: mistakenly sent a text message to an Andover Police lieutenant informing the officer that he had a significant amount of pot ready to sell.
According to police, 33-year-old Nicholas Delear Jr. set himself up for more heat than could have ever expected after sending a text message to a wrong number, which just so happened to belong to Lieutenant Eric Danielson of the Andover police department. In the message, Delear gave Danielson a detailed head’s up on a quarter-pound of dope that he was ready to unload -- a slipup that ultimately set him up as the target of an old school Jersey shakedown.
Shortly thereafter, officials from the Andover and Sparta police along with the Sussex County Prosecutors Office arranged a bogus drug deal with Delear, which was scheduled to take place in the parking lot of a nearby pizza joint. However, after Delear showed up and met with the undercover officer, he got noticeably suspicious and attempted to make a run for it.
Unfortunately, for Delear, the text messages on his phone matched identically to the communication represented on lieutenant Danielson’s. Yet, even though it appeared that he had been caught green-handed, he still did not consent to a search of his vehicle. Officers did manage to call in a search warrant, however, and serve it within the hour.
The K-9 unit assisted officers in uncovering more than an ounce of marijuana, 11 small bags, a digital scale and a little over $600 in cash. Delear was charged with possession with the intent to distribute marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of a controlled dangerous substance in a motor vehicle and a number of motor vehicle violations.
Man, and you thought texting and driving was risky. Here’s more on worst dealers ever.

Rapper Jim Jones Busted for DUI in NYC

Rapper Jim Jones was arrested in NYC early this morning for DUI after allegedly speeding in The Bronx.
TMZ is reporting that Jones was pulled over for speeding at 2am. When cops approached the car, they noticed the rapper had bloodshot eyes and seemed out of it.
Jones refused a breathalyzer, but cops booked him anyway of driving under the influence; they suspected pot.
Remember folks, smoke all you want, but take a taxi home.

Lethal Dose: Half Ton of Weed Kills a Man

Well, it finally happened -- marijuana killed a man. The good news is the poor bastard did not die from smoking it, but rather, as the result of an occupational hazard: A half ton of weed he was transporting across Brazil crushed him in an automobile accident.
According to reports, the man, who has yet to be identified, was indiscreetly smuggling 1,000-pounds of marijuana in the backseat of his car on an apparent suicidal thrill ride from Soa Paulo to Mato Grosso de Sul.
As you can imagine, it did not take long before the Federal Highway Patrol got wind of his felonious escapades and set up a roadblock as a means to try to shut him down.
Instead, the culprit decided to take authorities on high-speed, three-mile hell ride, which ultimately cost him his life after he lost control of the vehicle, crashed into a tree and was literally grudge humped by a lethal dose of marijuana bricks.
Man, we’ve had to buckle our seatbelts to smoke some dope in our day, but we’ve never had any shit that required airbags.
As you probably guessed, police confiscated what was left of the man’s car and his killer marijuana. Yet, despite the tragic events of the day, we would be willing to bet there was one hell of a party, that night, somewhere in Brazil.

Country Legend Billy Joe Shaver Talks Weed, Willie, and the Road

Forty years ago Billy Joe Shaver put his mark on country music with two seminal discs that would define the “outlaw” genre, his own Old Five and Dimers Like Me and Waylon Jennings’Honky Tonk Heroes, to which he contributed 11 of the 12 songs. His longtime chum Willie Nelson calls him America’s finest living songwriter, and he may also be one of its most singular characters.
An irascible hellraiser, Shaver may have only achieved an eighth-grade education, as he explains on his humorously boastful “I Been to Georgia on a Fast Train,” but he’s a plainspoken poet of the heart. Are there many more poignant expressions than “I’m Just an Old Lump of Coal (but I’m Gonna Be a Diamond One Day)”?
Shaver jokes he wrote half his songs to get back into the house -- back in the days when he would go carousing with Jennings, Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson, Townes Van Zandt and David Allan Coe, among others. (He’s been thrice married, to two different women, explaining recently, “The divorce didn’t take.”)
Shaver endured a rough stretch around the millennium where in the course of about two years he lost his mother and his first wife to cancer and his 38-year-old son Eddy Shaver to an OD. But he bounced back.
A few years ago, he got in a bar confrontation back home in Waco, TX, and wound up putting a bullet in a guy’s jaw in what the judge decided was self-defense. He paid tribute to the incident with “Wacko from Waco,” cowritten with Willie Nelson and released on last year’s Live at Billy Bob’s Texas. He’s currently preparing an album he feels can rival the one he wrote four decades ago.
We spoke to Shaver before a show in Kent, Ohio, where he explained he couldn’t share in a doobie before hitting the stage because “I’d start playing a song and singing the words from the one three songs ahead,” he said with a shake of his head. “Maybe after.”
HIGH TIMES: Tell me a little about Old Five and Dimers Like Me. You worked with Kris Kristofferson on that, right?
BILLY JOE SHAVER: That was the first time in the studio, my first album. Kris went and borrowed the money to do that. He had just done a 1971 album, Silver-Tongued Devil, and he did one of my tunes on it, “Onward Christian Soldier.” The thing is, his father and mother disowned him because he was supposed to go to West Point and teach literature. Instead, he went ahead to Nashville and became a janitor [at CBS Records] and a bartender. I always liked him for that.
The thing is, he heard “Christian Soldier” and then he heard some of my other songs and he said, “I feel like I got a hatchet over my head and it’s going to drop if I don’t do something with it.” So he took me out to Johnny Cash’s studio House of Cash and brought a bunch of guys in from Memphis [drummer Kenny Malone, guitarist Jerry Shook, guitarist Stephen Bruton (R.I.P.), bassist Tommy Cogbill] that are still there. Warhorses. First time they’d played in Nashville. They’re all well-known now. They’re just it.
…About six deep into the thing, Fred Foster come in and heard it and bought it off Kris, so he made a little money off it. I hope. Fred didn’t think I was worth a shit; then he heard the songs and changed his mind. They canned mine, though, because we were both on the same label. I think he bought it so I wouldn’t be competing with Kris. But there was no way to compete with Kris. He was too good. Mine didn’t come out until actually a year later. . . . By then, Waylon did a whole bunch of my songs.
HT: We’re talking about Honky Tonk Heroes.
BJS: Right. Waylon had heard “Willy the Wandering Gypsy & Me” at the Fourth of July picnic. . . . He said he’d do a whole album of my songs. He’s from Texas, I’m from Texas. He’s supposed to do what he says. . . . I finally caught up to him at a recording studio one night. . . . The walls were lined with groupies, hangers-on. And motorcycle guys all over the place. And [he sent someone] down there with a hundred-dollar [bill] folded up. Waylon got wind I was there and said, “Give this to Billy Joe and tell him to take a hike.” And I of course told him to give it back to him and tell him to stick it up his ass and twist it. He got wind of that and he comes out of the studio because he’s pissed now. He had two bikers, one on each arm, big old guys. He says, “What do you want, Hoss.” I said, “You told me you was going to do these songs. I don’t care if you do them or not, but you’re going to listen to them or I’m going to whip your ass right here in front of God and everybody.”
. . . He grabs me at the elbow, and he took me in this other room. And he said, “Hoss, you could’ve got killed doing that.” And I said, “It’s either do or die for me. I’m sick of this shit. You’re running from me.” . . . He said, “You play me one song. If I like it, we’ll go onto another.” So I did “Ain’t No God in Mexico.” And he says, “Okay, next one.” I did “Low Down Freedom.” I did a bunch of good songs and then I finally got to “Honky Tonk Heroes.” I was about five deep and he says, “Dammit. I know what I gotta do now.” And he went out there, ran everybody off, brought his band in and got going on it.
HT: It changed everything.
BJS: Willie told me [he] wouldn’t have ever done Red Headed Stranger [in ’75] if he hadn’t heardHonky Tonk Heroes. He became an instant friend but I’d known him since ’53. He lived right down the road. They used to call him Abbot Willie. . . . That’s what got me on the map, by Waylon and Kris, and then Willie started to blab about me. I was hanging out with Willie a lot. We had some great times. Him and Waylon would get together and they’d be taking something -- some pill and they’d say, “What is that?” “I don’t know, give it to Billy Joe, and see what happens.” That was just about it.
HT: You said you were the one “willing to go for it.”
BJS: Oh yeah, I had to be the gofer. I had to rocket test everything, but I didn’t mind.
HT: Tell me about the new album, and what kind of mood or spirit’s behind it.
BJS: It’s a lot about Nashville. . . . They got a deal going where they didn’t want any old guys playing. But that’s going to change. I’m fixing to change it. This next album I got is going to change it. It’s Hard to Be an Outlaw if You Ain’t Wanted No More. It’s got some great songs -- they’re all different, and you ain’t heard anything like them. I hope [producer] Ray Kennedy does it with me. Now it’s time to get real serious. My voice is where I want it. There’s some political things -- it’s going to stir things up and [have] a lot of really great songs. I’m proud of it. I think it’s going to be good as Old Five and Dimers.
HT: You’ve been over countless highways, met all kinds of people, endured trials and hardships. What have you taken from your time on the road?
BJS: I’ve always loved to travel, and if I weren’t doing music I couldn’t travel. I couldn’t afford to go to these places. I couldn’t afford to have this much fun either. If I had a whole bunch of money, I’d pay it so I could do this. I’d give it all up. Just don’t tell the promoter
For more on Billy Joe Shaver, visit his website.

U.S. administration: default 'catastrophic', can't prioritize debt payments

Reuters) - The Obama administration said the U.S. economy could fall into its deepest crisis since the Great Depression if Congress does not raise a cap on government borrowing soon and warned it would be impossible to prioritize debt payments over other obligations.
In a report released on Thursday, the Treasury Department said a U.S. debt default could force up borrowing costs, weaken investment and curb growth. This could inflict damage on the economy that could last for longer than a generation.
"A default would be unprecedented and has the potential to be catastrophic," Treasury said.
"The negative spillovers could reverberate around the world, and there might be a financial crisis and recession that could echo the events of 2008 or worse."
A standoff over financing, prompted by Republicans' determination to halt President Barack Obama's healthcare reforms, has already shut down sections of the government.
But analysts warn the economic mayhem would be even greater if the shutdown merges with a more complex fight looming later this month over raising the federal debt limit, which could cause the United States to miss debt payments.
A senior Treasury official told journalists that favoring bills to creditors over others would be unworkable and the administration was completely opposed to this approach.
Some Republicans on Capitol Hill support a plan for the Treasury to prioritize debt payments, as many economists believe a missed payment on government debt could trigger a devastating rout in global markets.
Indeed, analysts have generally believed the Treasury would at least try to prioritize debt payments over other spending on other programs.
The Treasury expects to exhaust its ability to borrow under the nation's $16.7 trillion debt ceiling by October 17, at which point the government would be down to its last $30 billion, in addition to new incoming revenues.
The Congressional Budget Office expects the nation could start defaulting on obligations between October 22 and the end of the month. Large debt payments loom on October 24 and October 31.
U.S. Treasury debt, long deemed risk-free, is the foundation of the global financial system. Assets around the world use U.S. Treasuries as a benchmark for their value.

(Reporting by Jason Lange and Alister Bull; Editing by Krista Hughes)

5 Signs You’ll Get Cancer

“You have cancer” are three words you never want to hear . . . 

Unfortunately, over 5,000 people in North America do hear those words — every single day. Even worse, cancer has become the second leading cause of death for Americans.

America’s foremost holistic health practitioner, David Brownstein, M.D., has spent much of his medical career studying cancer, and learning the best ways to avoid becoming its victim. 

And Dr. Brownstein does not shy away from the hard truth. Statistics demonstrate we are not winning the war on cancer. Far from it. In fact, cancer death rates have remained nearly unchanged over the last 80 years. Plus, traditional cancer treatments have been a dismal failure, particularly when the initial cancer returns — often with a vengeance.

Because the only big winner in the cancer treatment story to date has been the cancer industry’s multibillion-dollar profits, Dr. Brownstein has just released a complimentary video documentary revealing some of his startling findings.

In this video, you’ll discover five specific signs that you will be diagnosed with cancer during your lifetime. 

More important, you’ll see:

• Seven simple but smart steps to prevent cancer from taking over your body . . .

• How to help your body naturally kill cancer cells . . .

• Easiest ways to avoid known cancer-causing factors . . .

• The little-known relationship between iodine and cancer . . .

• And much, much more . . .

According to Dr. Brownstein, nearly all of us have cancer cells in our bodies at various times during our lives. The trick is to avoid letting those cells multiply and overwhelm the body’s natural defenses.

The good news is that you and your loved ones do not need to become cancer victims. With the simple strategies revealed in Dr. Brownstein’s eye-opening video, you can take steps to prevent this deadly disease, or even reverse it.

Editor’s Note: This video is so crucial and groundbreaking, Newsmax Health pulled out all the stops to bring it directly to you at no charge. Click here to start watching this powerful video about preventing cancer immediately. With so many people dying needlessly, there’s no time to waste.


© 2013 NewsmaxHealth. All rights reserved.


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Economic fears grow as U.S. government shutdown drags on

(Reuters) - A U.S. government shutdown entered its third day on Thursday with little sign of compromise between Republicans and Democrats and concerns grew about the economic consequences of a prolonged stalemate.
The standoff, prompted by Republicans' determination to halt President Barack Obama's healthcare reforms, appeared to be merging with a more complex fight looming later this month over raising the federal debt limit. Some feared this could stymie any attempts to end the shutdown before the middle of October.
In a report on Thursday detailing the potential economic impact of a default, the Treasury warned that failing to pay the nation's bills could punish American families and businesses with a worse recession than the 2007-2009 downturn.
"A default would be unprecedented and has the potential to be catastrophic: credit markets could freeze, the value of the dollar could plummet, U.S. interest rates could skyrocket," the Treasury Department said.
"The negative spillovers could reverberate around the world, and there might be a financial crisis and recession that could echo the events of 2008 or worse," it said.
The shutdown was beginning to hit the factory floor, with major manufacturers like Boeing Co and United Technologies Corp warning of delays and employee furloughs in the thousands if the budget impasse persists.
Companies that rely on federal workers to inspect and approve their products or on government money to fund their operations said they were preparing to slow or stop work if the first government shutdown in 17 years continues into next week.
REFUSAL TO NEGOTIATE
Republicans have tried to tie continued government funding to measures that would undercut Obama's signature healthcare law. Obama and his Democrats have refused to negotiate on a temporary funding bill, arguing it is the duty of Congress to pay for programs it already authorized.
The shutdown took effect at midnight on Monday (0400 GMT on Tuesday), leaving nearly a million federal workers sidelined without pay and many others in the private sector suffering from the knock-on effect.
If the funding issue does merge with the debt ceiling debate, the result could be a dangerous and unpredictable fiscal superstorm. It may be harder to resolve than the shutdown alone or the 2011 debt limit struggle that sent financial markets plummeting and brought the United States to the brink of default.
Republican Representative Steve King of Iowa, speaking on CNN's "New Day" program, said Republicans were looking for solutions but Democrats were refusing to negotiate. But he gave no sign of a softening in the hardline stand on healthcare reforms, which passed into law in 2010 and are in the process of being implemented.
"If there is a bump in the economic road, if there is a political penalty to be paid, we can recover from those things," he said. "But we can never recover if Obamacare is implemented on the American people, and it will diminish the trajectory of the American destiny by turning us into a dependency society."
Obama summoned congressional leaders from both parties to the White House on Wednesday evening but failed to bridge the gap, with both sides reiterating their positions and accusing each other of intransigence.
Despite the shutdown, Republicans have failed to derail Obama's controversial healthcare law, which passed a milestone on Tuesday when it began signing up uninsured Americans for subsidized health coverage.
The government on Wednesday scrambled to add computer capacity to handle an unexpectedly large number of Americans logging onto new online insurance marketplaces.
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, speaking to CNBC, described the law as a "trainwreck" that was "creating havoc across the country," and reiterated Republicans' call for a one-year delay in its implementation.
QUESTIONS ABOUT REPUBLICAN STRATEGY
Though some moderate Republicans have begun to question their party's strategy, House Speaker John Boehner so far has kept them largely united behind a plan to offer a series of small bills that would re-open select parts of the government most visibly affected by the shutdown.
The Tea Party Express, one of the anti-tax groups in the conservative Tea Party that has led the fight against Obamacare, sent an email to supporters on Wednesday evening saying that as many as 12 Republicans had indicated they were willing to "give up on the fight" and join Democrats in voting for a funding bill without conditions.
"We need your immediate support to put pressure on the weak Republicans to pass a sensible solution that allows America to avoid the Obamacare train-wreck, while fully funding the federal government," the group said in its email to supporters.
Prompted by anger of the shutdown of popular government programs such as cancer research and national parks, Republicans have presented a string of measures to fund small parts of government, a tactic Democrats have rejected, insisting on a comprehensive spending bill to fund all government operations.
The Republican-controlled House passed and sent to the Senate on Wednesday a funding bill that would re-open the National Institutes of Health, which conducts medical research, and another bill to reopen shuttered federal parks and museums, such as the Smithsonian museums, the National Gallery of Art and the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington.
Both bills passed with the support of about two-dozen Democrats, who joined Republicans. The House was expected to vote Thursday on measures to fund veterans' care and the Army Reserve.
But the measures are likely to be defeated in the Democratic-controlled Senate, and Obama said he would veto them if they reached his desk.
BIG COMPANIES WORRIED
There was increasing concern among major U.S. companies.
United Technologies Corp said nearly 2,000 workers in its Sikorsky Aircraft division, which makes the Black Hawk military helicopter, would be placed on furlough Monday if the shutdown continued.
That number would climb to more than 5,000 and include employees at its Pratt & Whitney engine unit and Aerospace Systems unit if the shutdown continues into November, the company said in a statement.
Aircraft maker Boeing said it is taking steps to deal with possible delays in jetliner deliveries, including its new 787 Dreamliner, because thousands of U.S. aviation officials needed to certify the planes have been idled.

(Reporting by Richard Cowan, Steve Holland, Jeff Mason, Susan Heavey, Alwyn Scott; Writing by Claudia Parsons; Editing by David Storey)