Makes the UK look positively civilized.
[GV]974422311845273917[/GV]
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=974422311845273917&sourceid=docidfeed&hl=undefined
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TFG wrote:I Bow to whoever managed to actually embed it. Thanks
Yeah, I didn't realize that the video thing should really be Japan related.
Anyway, at least it gives us here in Japan a taste of what some of us may miss.
PS: Hang on a sec though. Doesn't one of the women explain rolling a reefer as being like a Japanese tea ceremony?
That's close enough I guess as I rush off to SADO class. Lol
" wrote:
The cannabis- How wonderful it is!
The summer drawing room.
Trees and stones, just as they are.
Ah, how glorious!
The young leaves, the green leaves,
Glittering in the sunshine!
A grandmother who advocates cooking with cannabis was found guilty of growing and possessing the drug. Patricia Tabram, 68, was in breach of a six-month suspended jail sentence when police, acting on a tip-off, found four plants growing in a wardrobe at her bungalow in Humshaugh, Northumberland, in September 2005. They also found powdered cannabis in a jar next to her cooker.
The jury heard Tabram's claims that she used cannabis to ease her depression, as well as aches and pains she still suffers from two car crashes. The jury of six men and six women came back after 15 minutes of deliberations with unanimous guilty verdicts for the two counts, one of possessing the drug and one of cultivating it.
Judge Barbara Forrester postponed sentencing to a later date so reports can be prepared. Tabram, who is defending herself, told the court: "I am old and I am tired, and I am disappointed, not in the result by the jury. "I am disappointed in the attitude of the court regarding someone my age with my health problems and the way I deal with it. I just want to go home and get some rest."
Record numbers of teenagers are requiring drug treatment as a result of smoking skunk, the highly potent cannabis strain that is 25 times stronger than resin sold a decade ago. More than 22,000 people were treated last year for cannabis addiction - and almost half of those affected were under 18. With doctors and drugs experts warning that skunk can be as damaging as cocaine and heroin, leading to mental health problems and psychosis for thousands of teenagers, The Independent on Sunday has today reversed its landmark campaign for cannabis use to be decriminalised...more...
It is not the herb, it is due to moronic kids who already have psychological problems using it.
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