The Federal Reserve Works Best When It Sticks With Gold – Forbes

Soon, the Senate will vote on whether to approve the appointment of Judy Shelton to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. Shelton is one of our better gold standard advocates, the author ofFixing the Dollar Now (2012), and a longtime fixture at monetary conferences in Washington. The Federal Reserve absolutely should have someone on its Board who understands the policy that the Federal Reserve itself followed for the first 58 years of its history (1913-1971); and which the United States followed for the 124 years (1789-1913) that preceded the Federal Reserve.

The idea behind the gold standard is that a currency should be stable, reliable, and unchanging in value the monetary equivalent of other weights and measures like the kilogram, meter, or minute. As George Gilder described in detail in The Scandal of Money (2016), this monetary stability allows rational economic calculation of profit and loss, success and failure. When this rational economic calculation takes place properly, capital is allocated to its best uses, and the economy thrives. Capitalism works like it is supposed to.

Value of the dollar vs. gold, 1965-2017

President James Madison summed up why a mandate to use gold-based money appears in Article I Section 10 of the U.S. Constitution:

The only adequate guarantee for the uniform and stable value of a paper currency is its convertibility into specie [gold] the least fluctuating and the only universal currency.

This is a nice idea. The United States spent two centuries proving that it works. Sticking to gold-based money, the U.S. became the most successful country in the world. Today, we ask: WTF Happened In 1971?

The Federal Reserve is imagined to be a purveyor of floating currencies; and, no doubt the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913 (under veeeery suspicious circumstances) was an important step to that eventual outcome. But, for a long time, the Federal Reserve actively supported and maintained the gold standard. William McChesney Martin was Chairman of the Federal Reserve from 1951 to 1970. His first task was to implement the Accord of 1951, which effectively returned the dollar to a gold standard at $35/oz., after a period of modest wartime floating when the Fed was pressured by the Treasury to manipulate interest rates.

In 1960, Vice President Richard Nixon wanted the Fed to ease, to give him a boost in his election campaign against John F. Kennedy that year. Martin told him to pound sand. In 1965, President Lyndon Johnson physically bullied Martin for easy money. Martin stood up to this pressure. At the end of his term, in January 1970, the market value of the dollar was right at its $35/oz. gold parity.

With the help of Martins Stable Money efforts, the 1950s and 1960s are today considered the most economically prosperous time, in the U.S. and worldwide, since the Classical Gold Standard ended in 1914.

When Martins term ended in January 1970, President Nixon took the opportunity to put in his old friend, Arthur Burns, at the Fed. Burns soon opened the easy money spigot, and interest rates collapsed. The economy boomed, and Nixon won in 1972.

But, this had consequences. In August 1971, the pressure on the gold standard, from all the excess money, was so great that Nixon took the step of closing the gold window, which had the unplanned effect of creating the environment of floating currencies we have today. Nixons re-election boom quickly collapsed into stagflationary disaster.

From this, you might think that Nixon and Burns were enemies of the gold standard. But, they were not. Nixon himself attempted to put the world gold standard back together just months later, at the Smithsonian Agreement of December 1971. The dollar would be repegged to gold at $38/oz., suffering a slight devaluation, much as Britain and France had also devalued (and returned to gold) just a few years earlier. (That was the idea, although it didnt work out.) Burns, at the Fed, was distraught that the gold standard, the U.S.s super-successful monetary policy, could come to an end. In August 1971, Burns told Nixon not to close the gold window, if he could at all avoid it. Nixon recalled: He warned that I would take the blame if the dollar were devalued. Pravda would write that this was a sign of the collapse of capitalism, he said. On the economic side he worried that the negative results would be unpredictable ...

In August 1971, a reporter asked the economist Arthur Laffer, who was then the 31-year-old Chief Economist of the Office of Management and Budget, what the effects of Nixons closing the gold window would be. Laffer reportedly said: Its not going to be as much fun to be an American anymore. And, he was right. Economist Paul Krugman once called our post-1971 era: The Age of Diminished Expectations.

Another person at that fateful meeting with Burns and Nixon in 1971 was Paul Volcker, then the Treasury Undersecretary for International Affairs. Volcker was also in favor of keeping the dollars link to gold at $35/oz., although he was confused as to how to do so. During his term as Chairman of the Federal Reserve (1979-1987), the dollar ended its devaluation trend of the 1970s and stabilized again vs. gold. This came about in part through the influence of people like Arthur Laffer and Alan Greenspan, both of whom participated in Ronald Reagans Gold Commission of 1981, which discussed returning the dollar to its gold basis. Economists cheered the Great Moderation that resulted, although, with typical cluelessness, they still have no idea what created it.

Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan (1987-2006) was a gold standard advocate in the 1960s, part of a group centered around Ayn Rand. In 1981 by that time already with a stint as the head of President Fords Council of Economic Advisors under his belt, and a director of the Council on Foreign Relations he wrote an op-ed piece for the Wall Street Journal in favor of returning to a gold standard. To nobodys surprise, the value of the dollar vs. gold during his 18-year tenure was quite stable, which Greenspan later said was definitely on purpose. Today, he remains a staunch admirer of the pre-1914 Classical Gold Standard period. During Greenspans term, he enjoyed the support of Wayne Angell, a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, who, in 1991, recommended that Russia implement a gold standard for the ruble.

If we look at the history of Federal Reserve Chairmen since 1951, we find that Martin, Burns, Volcker and Greenspan were all supporters (in principle) of the gold standard system. The exception was G. William Miller (1978-1979), who presided over the worst of the Carter-era stagflation. He came from a corporate background, rather than banking or economics, and was generally considered to be in over his head. Carter kicked him out by making him Treasury Secretary before the end of his term, and replaced him with Volcker.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke (2005-2014) made his academic reputation by arguing that easy money from the Federal Reserve would have helped ameliorate the Great Depression. Perhaps it is no surprise that the value of the dollar during his watch collapsed to a low of $1920/oz. before stabilizing, less than a fifth of its value around $350/oz. during the Volcker/Greenspan years.

Janet Yellen (2014-2018) never said anything favorable about the gold standard during her tenure. But, in 2015, she invited a group of gold standard advocates (including Judy Shelton) to make presentations at the Federal Reserve, with Yellen in attendance. Perhaps it is no surprise that the value of the dollar vs. gold was surprisingly stable during her term, somewhat like it was during Greenspans.

Today, a braying mob from academia, the press, and the Federal Reserve itself wants to keep Judy Shelton from playing a role in monetary affairs. But, I would argue that whatever success we have had since the bad old days of 1970s stagflation has come about because people like Volcker, Greenspan, Angell and perhaps Yellen have kept the Fed loosely (sometimes, very loosely) anchored to gold, even during our era of floating currencies.

For some reason, the principle that made the U.S. great, over a period of nearly two centuries (1789-1971) is, to these people, unthinkable. Instead, they offer a long list of experiments zero interest rates, QE, Treasury yield control, corporate bond buying, interest on reserves, and now, Modern Monetary Theory which have no track record of success at all. Instead of rational economic calculation these schemes and tricks are all calculated to create as much economic distortion as is necessary to achieve their goals. For some reason, it seems like capitalism doesnt quite work right anymore. Why is that?

David Stockman Congressman from Michigan, director of the Office of Management and Budget, and later cofounder of the Blackstone private equity group called the monetary distortion under Bernankes term The Great Deformation: The Corruption of Capitalism in America (2013). Today, these complaints seem a little quaint, since things have become so much more distorted since then. Bank of England Governor Mervyn King begged central bankers for The End of Alchemy: Money, Banking and the Future of the Global Economy (2017). Quit deforming everything! King seemed to complain. Former Fed staffer Danielle DiMartino Booth was Fed Up: An Insiders Take on Why the Federal Reserve is Bad for America (2017).

The COVID era just made everything much more wacky. Everything that economist George Selgin warned about in The Menace of Fiscal QE (February 2020), came true with alarming speed only weeks later.

And that, basically, is why Judy Shelton should have a spot at the Federal Reserve. In the end, you have to put your faith in the PhD Standard, or the Gold Standard. One of them has never worked; one of them has always worked.

Excerpt from:

The Federal Reserve Works Best When It Sticks With Gold - Forbes

Crypto Traders Talk Bitcoin Price Direction After BTCs Swift 13% Drop – Cointelegraph

The price of Bitcoin declined by more than 13% within 30 minutes on Aug. 2. The shocking short-term price action caused $1 billion worth of liquidations in futures contracts for Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereums native token, Ether (ETH). Following the rapid sell-off, traders are cautiously optimistic and are considering both bullish and bearish scenarios.

Before delving into the various scenarios traders have in mind for Bitcoin, it is crucial to understand what caused the correction. On-chain data from Santiment suggests that warning signs emerged when the growth of daily active addresses slumped as Bitcoin topped at around $12,000.

The number of active addresses is considered a key fundamental factor for BTC because it reflects Bitcoins network activity. Shortly after the price of BTC superseded the trend of active addresses, it fell rapidly. Santiment explained that daily active addresses on the network were not keeping up with the surging price, suggesting a swift correction.

The sudden price drop also coincided with BTC hitting a historically relevant resistance level of $12,000. The $11,500$12,000 range has served as a hard resistance zone for over two years, since 2018. Every attempt to break out of the range has led to a prolonged correction.

The last attempt at a breakout over $12,000 was in June 2019. Although the price of Bitcoin eventually reached a peak of $13,880 on BitMEX, it dropped to $7,700 within three months. If BTC surpasses $12,000, there is little resistance to $14,000 and ultimately to its record-high at $20,000. As such, sellers will likely aggressively defend the $12,000 level, causing pullbacks.

However, it seems that crypto market traders are overall optimistic about the medium-term price trend of BTC. Data from Binance Futures shows that the majority of top traders on the platform are currently longing BTC.

While the price of Bitcoin dropped to as low as $10,546 on Coinbase, traders say that the market structure of BTC remains compelling. Crypto trader Koroush AK outlined Bitcoins strong recovery from the $10,800 support level after the drop as $1 billion of long contracts were liquidated. He said: Even with the crash over the weekend, $BTC still looks bullish.

After mass liquidations, some traders suggest that the market will shake off weak hands, leading to Bitcoin cooling off and funding rates stabilizing, with the entire cycle potentially strengthening its momentum. Funding rates refer to the amount in fees that long-contract or short-contract holders on Bitcoin futures exchanges have to pay. When the market is mostly long, holders of long contracts have to pay a fee to short-contract holders, and vice versa when the market is mostly short.

Prior to the drop, the funding rates of major cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin and Ether, rose to unsustainable rates, with Ether seeing its funding rate climb to 0.15% at one point. If a trader opens a long contract worth $50,000, a 0.15% funding rate would result in $225 per day in funding fees to maintain.

A pseudonymous trader known as Redxbt pointed out that there was approximately $77 million worth of bids on BitMEX after the drop. This suggests that BTC is still technically in an uptrend and that buyers are protecting the $10,500 support level: Bull market tings 77 million in bids hugging price. Perhaps theyre preparing for a very rare event, March 12th tier, to get some fills?

Subsequent to the short-term correction, cryptocurrency trader Scott Melker said a potential hidden bullish divergence is building. Prior to the fall of BTC, Melker emphasized that there were glaring bearish divergences and that a retrace was imminent. But a bullish divergence emerges when an asset falls to a local low but an oscillator does not drop to a new low. It suggests that the momentum of the asset is intact despite recent price drops. Melker explained:

It was building bear divs on multiple time frames, a retrace was inevitable. Now theres potential hidden bullish divergence brewing, not yet confirmed. Price dropped with $15 of the previous major swing high, which was the line that signified a bullish break in structure.

The overall sentiment remains optimistic around Bitcoin, but there are several bearish scenarios that can play out. Generally, most short-term bearish arguments revolve around the $10,500 support level. If BTC fails to remain above $10,500, it could hint at discontinuation of the rally.

The $10,500 level is considered to be an important support area because it marks the top of the previous rally. In February, the price of Bitcoin peaked at $10,550, establishing it as a strong resistance level. When BTC surpassed $10,500, it confirmed the level as a support area for a new range. Bitcoin trader Zoran Kole, who remains bullish, offered a bearish scenario:

As far as invalidation, I think ~10.5 is the weekly level to hold for continuation. Otherwise this distribution schematic becomes rather compelling. Remember, trading is a binary decision tree. Changes in bias should occur near potential inflection points.

Similarly, using a different technical analysis system called Ichimoku cloud, cryptocurrency analyst Josh Olszewicz suggested a break below $10,550 could lead to discontinuation. In the near term, Olszewicz said $10,559 and $10,832 would act as important support levels. He shared on Twitter: best we avoid this zone down here if we want decent continuation in near term. already had the kijun bounce.

According to Elias Simos, senior research analyst at Decentral Park Capital, Bitcoin sold-off when it matched the relative performance of gold. He explained that the sell-off coincided with the point that would have made BTC outperform the precious metal, and its potential correlation with gold could affect it in the weeks ahead.

A pseudonymous trader called Rookie foresees cryptocurrencies with low to medium market capitalizations underperforming against BTC in the future. If that happens, it raises the probability of BTC seeing profit-taking rallies, which might strengthen its momentum:

Im drastically reducing my exposure to low med cap alt plays. The move is, and always has been to have as much $BTC and $ETH exposure for now. I dont want to have money trapped in some low liquidity shit coin when / if things start going parabolic.

The confluence of a historically challenging resistance level for BTC at $12,000 and high funding rates make for strong bearish scenarios. But bullish divergences, lack of resistance from $12,000 to $14,000 and a recent flush of over-leveraged futures contacts strengthen the argument for a prolonged uptrend.

Continue reading here:

Crypto Traders Talk Bitcoin Price Direction After BTCs Swift 13% Drop - Cointelegraph

Bitcoin Just Suddenly Surged Toward $12,000 But Now Might Not Be The Time To BuyHeres Why – Forbes

Bitcoin, after a prolonged period of stability, has suddenly leaped higherjumping over the closely-watched $10,000 per bitcoin level for the first time since June and surging toward $12,000.

The bitcoin price has added some 20% over the last seven days, hitting highs of $11,420 on the Luxembourg-based Bitstamp exchange, amid equity market jitters and a rally in the price of gold, considered a safe haven asset.

However, some market watchers have warned the recent bitcoin price gains might not lastwith the options market signalling just a 7% probability of bitcoin returning to its all-time high of around $20,000 before the end of 2020.

The bitcoin price has surged higher, following the price of gold.

"Our view for the balance of 2020 is still high volatility with a year end of around $7,000 [per bitcoin] with a drive higher to new highs in 2021," Gavin Smith, the chief executive of bitcoin and crypto consortium Panxora, said via email following the publication of Finder's latest cryptocurrency prediction report, adding he expects "a short term washout this year before the true rally takes hold."

"Our view is that we still believe the markets are pulled on the one hand by the inflation hedge story driving bitcoin higher while at the same time the global economy is suffering a massive demand shock with the potential to drive bitcoin lower."

In March, the bitcoin price fell sharply, in line with global stocks and other commodities, as the coronavirus pandemic spread around the world and countries went into lockdown to contain it.

The bitcoin price quickly bounced back, boosted by a highly-anticipated supply squeeze and bullish signals including investment giant Paul Tudor Jones revealing he was buying bitcoin as a potential hedge against the inflation unprecedented central bank stimulus measures designed to prop up coronavirus-hit economies could bring.

Smith's warning chimes with comments made by Binance chief executive Changpeng Zhao (CZ) last week, who said bitcoin is still tied to the stock market and a future crash could send the bitcoin price lower.

"People should not take the description of bitcoin as a safe haven asset too literally," CZ told Bloomberg.

The bitcoin price suddenly rallied over the last couple of days after trading sideways since early ... [+] May.

Others have also warned the bitcoin price could be heading lower in the short term.

"There wont be as much money going into bitcoin while people try to survive," Jimmy Song, author of Programming Bitcoin, said in Finder's Cryptocurrency Predictions 2020 report.

"Until the prices rise in the grocery store, bitcoin wont really start taking off. I suspect thatll take another nine months or so."

Finder's report, released last week ahead of bitcoin's surge toward $12,000, revealed half of the 28 bitcoin and crypto experts surveyed thought it was the right time to buy bitcoin, with 32% recommending investors hold and 18% saying it was time to sell.

Another panelist, University of New South Wales associate professor of finance, Elvira Sojli, said she expects the bitcoin price to be under $10,000 by December 31 2020. The panel's consensus was for the bitcoin price to climb to just under $13,000 by the end of the year.

"If anything, the second or third wave of Covid-19 may drive [the bitcoin price] down," Sojli said, pointing to the coronavirus' devastating economic impact.

Meanwhile, as bitcoin began its rally past $11,000, the bitcoin options market was signalling just 7% probability of the price returning to its all-time high of $20,000 per bitcoin, data from crypto derivatives analytics firm Skew revealed, with the market putting the odds of $10,000 per bitcoin by Christmas at around 50%.

"Options market is repricing quickly the probability of [new highs] by the end of the year, from 4% to 7% over the last week," Skew chief executive Emmanuel Goh told bitcoin and crypto news site Coindesk.

Bitcoin options data suggests there's less than a 10% chance the bitcoin price will return to its ... [+] all-time highs this year.

Elsewhere, others are confident the bitcoin price is going to continue to soar.

"There are significant changes since March in the way that institutional investors view bitcoin," Joe DiPasquale, the chief executive of BitBull Capital, said via email.

"Now that institutions have moved into bitcoin in 2020, the price has shown more support over the last couple of months. We will not see a repeat of the March crash, but bitcoin will still remain somewhat more volatile than equities."

"I think the price needs to take a bit of breatherit has moved quite a lot in a short-period of time," Bill Herrmann, the managing partner of investment management firm Wilshire Phoenix, said via email, adding he could see the bitcoin price hit its all-time highs by the end of the year "if we continue to receive regulatory clarity and continued institutional adoption," pointing to last weeks decision by the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to allow banks in the country to custody digital assets as triggering the latest rally.

"It is huge for the space and that should serve as a tailwind for quite some time."

Trying to forecast bitcoin price moves has proven difficult, however, and some have warned against trying to predict market moves.

"Predicting the price of bitcoin on an exact timeline is a fools errand," Peter Wall, the CEO of UK-listed crypto miner Argo Blockchain, said via email, though adding he is "very optimistic in the medium to long-term, as we believe bitcoin will again be one of the best performing asset classes in the coming months and years."

View post:

Bitcoin Just Suddenly Surged Toward $12,000 But Now Might Not Be The Time To BuyHeres Why - Forbes

Americans to Buy Bitcoin With Their Second Stimulus Checks After Initial Investment Turned in 50% Profit – Bitcoin News

U.S. investors may be planning to use their second $1,200 stimulus money to buy bitcoin again.

The U.S. government is, on Monday, expected to approve plans for this second payout, White House officials have confirmed. The bailout is intended to cushion families against the covid-19 fallout.

Instead of buying groceries or paying rent, many Americans opted to invest in the top cryptocurrency when they received their first stimulus checks in April.

And the gamble ditching inflationary government money for deflationary crypto is paying off. Those that converted the free money to bitcoin have raked in up to 54% in profit in three months as the price of BTC barrelled past $10,700 on July 27.

At the time when the checks were first issued, each bitcoin traded for around $7,000. Today, each $1,200 check invested in BTC is worth about $1,829, a gain of more than $600.

Now, history may be about to repeat itself.

Straight to the BTC, straight to the cold storage wallet, said Reddit user Limited-Visibility, while responding to a thread started by Wocketman0351, who asked: Who else is converting their free government money straight to BTC?

Another Redditor, Rapierce0238, stated: What I do get will go straight to bitcoin, just like last time.

Its really the easiest way to avoid hitting the inflation from the stupid Fed continuously printing money, opined Girafferage.

Someone else claimed: I will be buying more car parts and bitcoin. We have plenty of food because weve been stocking up all summer.

According to U.S. government officials, the latest stimulus checks are expected to be paid out sometime in August. White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow told CNN that families will receive this second $1,200 payout as part of a $1 trillion stimulus package.

When the government first paid out the stimulus money in April, large cryptocurrency exchanges Coinbase and Binance reported a spike in exactly $1,200 equivalent deposits on their platforms.

Brian Armstrong, chief executive officer of Coinbase, said at the time that the number of $1,200-worth deposits and buys on the exchange climbed by nearly 400% that month.

Will more Americans buy bitcoin with their stimulus checks? Share your thoughts in the comments section below.

Image Credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not a direct offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation or endorsement of any products, services, or companies. Bitcoin.com does not provide investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. Neither the company nor the author is responsible, directly or indirectly, for any damage or loss caused or alleged to be caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any content, goods or services mentioned in this article.

Continued here:

Americans to Buy Bitcoin With Their Second Stimulus Checks After Initial Investment Turned in 50% Profit - Bitcoin News

Tarriona Tank Ball, Waxahatchee, The War On Drugs & More To Perform At Free Voter Registration Virtual Concert – Recording Academy | Grammys

GRAMMY-winning soprano Rene Flemingwill launch a webinar series exploring the impact of music and arts on human health and the brain.

Music and Mind Live with Rene Fleming will feature scientists and practitioners in the "intersection music, neuroscience, and healthcare" including child development, pain and anxiety and management in conversation with the singer, according to a statement. The first webinar will happen Tuesday, May 19 at 5 p.m. EST/ 2 p.m. PST withDr. Vivek Murthy.

Murthy will discussmusic, loneliness and isolation as well as his book, Together: The Healing Power of Human Connection in a Sometimes Lonely World.The series will alsoinclude a Q&A portion.

Fleming, an arts and health advocate, said now is the time to talk about how art impacts health.

"Research is revealing amazing things about the way arts influence human health and the brain, Fleming said in a statement. With our working lives halted, the covid-19 pandemic has also fostered an explosion of creativity and good will. What better time to examine our need as human beings to create and experience the arts, and the basis of this in science?"

Fleming's role as theArtistic Advisor to the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in partnership with the National Institutes of Health and the National Endowment for the Arts inspired her to create the series..

The webinars can be watched live on Facebook. Those who cannot tune into the livestream can catch a replay on theKennedy Center's website. The live episodes can also be watched on the Kennedy Center's Facebook and YouTube.

See the full schedule of the series below:

May 19 Music, Loneliness, and Isolation

Vivek H. Murthy, MD (former US Surgeon General, author)

May 26 "Community of Voices, Sound and Music Perception, and a Resource for the Future"-

Julene Johnson, PhD and Charles Limb, MD (University of California San Francisco); Sunil Iyengar (National Endowment for the Arts)

June 2 At Home with Children: Musical Tool Kit

Miriam Lense, PhD, (Vanderbilt University Music Cognition Lab); Sara Beck, PhD (Randolph College)

June 9 "Integrative Approach to COVID-19 and the Mind"

Deepak Chopra, MD (The Chopra Foundation)

June 16 "Using Music for Health and Wellbeing during COVID-19"

Wendy Magee, PhD (Temple University); Tom Sweitzer, MMT, MT-BC (A Place to Be)

3 Songs That Are Helping Me Manage My Mental Health During Quarantine

View post:

Tarriona Tank Ball, Waxahatchee, The War On Drugs & More To Perform At Free Voter Registration Virtual Concert - Recording Academy | Grammys

The potential impact of classifying CBD as a narcotic – New Food

The European Commission is reviewing whether CBD should be classified as a narcotic. Dr Parveen Bhatarah, Head of Regulatory and Compliance Unit at The Association of the Cannabinoid Industry, explains the impact this could have on both the European and UK markets.

The European Commission (EC) has said on record that it is pausing all CBD novel foods applications as it reviews whether CBD should not be classified as a food at all, but instead a narcotic.

The reasoning behind this pause relates to a line on the United Nations Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs from 1961 which states that extracts and tinctures of the flowering tops of the hemp plant (cannabis sativa) should be classed as a narcotic. CBD companies have until September to put forward their case to the EC.

It is peculiar that the EC should be reassessing their forward-looking classification of CBD as a novel food based on a 60-year-old convention that resulted in the devastating war on drugs. A battle which has been, in the words of Barack Obama, an utter failure.

You would think they would have learnt the lesson on the damage caused through making popular substances illicit, based on non-scientific evidence.

The World Health Organization (WHO) produced a critical review of CBD in 2018, in which they concluded it exhibits no effects indicative of any abuse or dependence potential and is generally well tolerated with a good safety profile. They also say in the report that there is no evidence of recreational use of CBD or any public health-related problems associated with the use of pure CBD.

These WHO conclusions do not reflect the properties that you would associate with a narcotic. WHO have put forward a series of recommendations to the UN to amend the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs from 1961, one of which is the removal of the phrase tinctures and extracts from Schedule 1 of the 1961 treaty and another to make CBD exempt from international control. The UN will vote on these recommendations in December 2020.

Beyond the impact on consumers, there will be the impact on the hundreds, if not thousands, of companies that have sprung up around the CBD economy

In the US, the FDA has approved Epidiolex, which contains CBD for the treatment of seizures associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome or Dravet syndrome in patients two years of age and older. This demonstrates that the FDA has concluded this particular drug product is safe and effective for its intended use.

The FDA is currently evaluating issuance of a risk-based enforcement policy that would provide greater transparency and clarity regarding factors they intend to take into account in prioritising enforcement decisions. They intend to balance the goals of protecting the public and providing more clarity to industry regarding their enforcement priorities as they move towards a clear regulatory pathway. This seems a well reasoned and realistic approach.

There exists a trend for consumers towards organic products and many foods are being consumed for their health benefits. The concept of food as a medicine is a powerful and healthy option, and CBD is a prime example of such a product with popularity on the rise, as reflected in sales.

Should the EC deem CBD to be a controlled narcotic it will have a devastating impact on the lives of millions of European CBD consumers who rely upon the therapeutic properties of CBD they consume. For these people, CBD has been a life-changer, if not a life-saver, and has enabled them to avoid or reduce more harmful prescription drugs, reduce smoking, decrease alcohol consumption and keep away from other dangerous drugs. You could argue that CBD would reduce demands on European health services and can make peoples lives healthier, thus making them a more productive workforce.

Beyond the impact on consumers, there will be the impact on the hundreds, if not thousands, of companies that have sprung up around the CBD economy. These companies employ hundreds of thousands of people and serve millions.

The European Commission cannot believe that consumers will simply stop buying CBD. The demand will continue to exist. This demand is increasing month on month as people spread their positive testimonies of the therapeutic benefits they experience from consuming CBD products.

The results of such a decision, should it come to fruition, would be CBD moving into the black market. There are already concerns over the safety and authenticity of CBD products on the market, and outlawing CBD will make the situation infinitely worse.

The concept of food as a medicine is a powerful and healthy option, and CBD is a prime example of such a product with popularity on the rise, as reflected in sales

Despite the resistance from many in the CBD industry as to whether CBD should be a novel food in the first place, it does have great benefits. This is because it forces the industry to generate the data to verify the safety of CBD for humans. However, all that work will be in vain should the EC decide it is in fact a controlled narcotic.

As for the UK CBD market, this decision would seem to have little impact, and could even be a golden opportunity for our domestic CBD industry, which is estimated to be worth 1 billion by 2025. The UK Foods Standards Agency (FSA) has on record said that they follow the lead of the Home Office who categorically say CBD is not a narcotic.

The FSA had also always been in agreement with the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) that CBD is a novel food and products need to go through a safety and risk assessment before they can be legally sold as a food supplement. As the UK is about to go its separate way to the rest of the European Union, the FSA has put in place a plan to bring the equivalent of novel foods assessment in-house. This leaves the UK with an excellent opportunity to take the lead and define the safety standards for the sustainable future of the CBD industry.

For more information you can contact Dr Parveen Bhatarah via the Association for the Cannabinoid Industry.

Parveen Bhatarah, PhD, FRSC, completed her PhD in organic chemistry the synthetic approach to Nagilactone" from Imperial College London and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry. She has held various directorship roles in the generic and herbal pharmaceutical industry with over 20 years of expertise in bulk drug substance and product development including clinical trials, commercial launches, technology transfers and manufacture for ANDA & MA submissions. She has developed several innovative technologies in pharmaceutical field which is clear from her patents. She has worked closelywith various international health authorities on numerous commercial generic pharmaceutical and herbal pharmaceutical product launches and submissions. Most recently, in the cannabis space she was instrumental in the THC project for seed to capsule development, passing pre-approval inspection by US-FDA.

Read this article:

The potential impact of classifying CBD as a narcotic - New Food

Social Justice & Beyond: Where’s the opportunity? Greenway Magazine – Greenway

Rasheed Samir Gresham, 45, proudly flashed the 46 laminated card certifying him as a licensed medical marijuana patient and cultivator in Missouri. Hes also a licensed caregiver who can legally provide small amounts of medical marijuana to approved patients. Greshams proudest possession, however, was his adhesive business sticker. It features him in caricature dressed in a leprechauns outfit standing next to a black pot filled evergreen cannabis. Balloon lettering introduces: Sheed with the Weed.

Greshams exuberance is understood once I heard his story. Twenty years ago, while living in New Jersey, he was apprehended with six- and one-half ounces of marijuana. Because he wouldnt cooperate with police and prosecutors, he says, they made an example of him. He was sentenced to 13 years in New Jerseys state prison. He was released after serving nine years. And he relocated to St. Louis.

Two decades later and Gresham finds himself in a changed society. The drug that sent him to prison is now legal in the state for medicinal purposes. In 2018, voters overwhelmingly backed Amendment 2 that approved the growing, cultivating, testing, and selling of medical marijuana through dispensaries.

The legal and illegal marijuana business is estimated to generate $40 billion this year alone, with more than a dozen cannabis stocks trading on Wall Street. This robust economic growth will result in new businesses and jobs and millions in tax revenues for participating states.

Gresham is ready to make his mark.

Its definitely an opportunity, especially in Missouri, he said, adding, We already know how its been done in other states, the numbers are there, the opportunities are there. This is happening. You cant stop it.

For Grisham, AKA Sheed with the Weed, this moment represents a rare opportunity for African Americans to reap the benefits from a trade they know well but where penalized disproportionately in America for decades.

Were at the front of a new frontier. But, as someone who spent time in prison for selling weed, Im also behind the frontier. Now, because its legal, its about getting your foot in the door, setting up a structure, a brand, standing on that brand, and building wealth.

The marijuana industry holds tremendous promise for all entrepreneurs. However, evidence suggests that barriers, like lack of capital and systematic economic racism, that have kept many minorities out of other mainstream industries, also exist in the new world of legalized cannabis. Blacks face the familiar challenges of competing in a burgeoning, multi-billion-dollar industry where they are under-resourced, undercapitalized, underrepresented, and, some say, unrecognized in this new frontier.

The nations coronavirus pandemic and instances of police brutality, which disproportionately impact people of color, have brought much-need attention to their plight. The new buzzword on the streets, the news, in politics, and in corporate America is Social justice. President Donald Trump and his 2020 opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden, have both pledged to explore new investment opportunities in low-income, minority communities.

Cory Elliott, photo submitted

The booming US marijuana industry could be the perfect economic jump-off point. The Cannabis Trade Industry states that by 2023, cannabis both medical and recreational is on pace to become a $100 billion industry. The US cannabis industry today employs at least 250,000 Americans which is five times as many jobs as the coal industry. Echoing Gresham, its happening!

Theres a savory sense of poetic justice to the idea of the legalized marijuana industry becoming a new avenue for opportunity and wealth-building for a population that has suffered the most from its illegal usage.

The American Civil Liberties (ACLU) recent report, The War on Marijuana in Black and White, concluded that Black people are 3.64 times more likely than white people to be arrested for marijuana possession, notwithstanding comparable usage rates. Between 2010 and 2018 alone, of the six million people arrested for marijuana possession, blacks were more likely than whites to be arrested in every state, including those with legalized marijuana.

The ACLU report also noted that blacks are nearly six times more likely to be incarcerated for drug-related offenses than their white counterparts. Almost 80 percent of people serving time for a federal drug offense are black or Latino.

The damage to individuals, families, and communities of color is multiplied exponentially when the ramifications of the 49-year-old War on Drugs implemented under the Nixon administration, is factored into the equation.

A persons arrest for even tiny amounts of marijuana comes with enormous collateral consequences. A drug conviction can forever impact their ability to obtain a decent job or business loan, receive public housing or student financial aid, threaten their immigration status, take away child custody rights, and basically ensured that future generations are locked in poverty.

Its a reality that Rasheed Gresham has experienced first-hand:

You dont do the bid by yourself; you do the bid with your family. When this happens, everybodys a victim; me, my mother, my father, my grandparents.

The whole country is also the victim of the failed war on drugs. Enforcement of marijuana laws, according to the ACLU, costs about $3.6 billion per year without diminishing the use, desire, or availability of the drug.

By legalizing marijuana, billions of taxpayer dollars thats been blown to disproportionately target, arrest and incarcerate black people can now be theoretically reinvested into wounded and broken people and communities.

Today, the $64,000 question for states, including Missouri, is whether the growing legalized marijuana industry is ready to step up and be the great social and economic equalizer for populations of color.

Cory Elliott has become an expert of sorts as it pertains to Missouris foray into the medicinal marijuana industry. Elliott, as a consultant, helped two firms prepare applications to meet the licensing requirements established by the State of Missouri.

In June, the black-owned firm, West End Cannabis, didnt win a single license with all dispensaries located in underserved areas in North St. Louis. Elliott was disheartened that West End, with its specific social justice components, won nothing.

The West End Cannabis team was really focused on providing medical marijuana to low-income communities, Elliott explained. They also had a social justice piece aimed at trying to provide positive opportunities for populations negatively impacted when (marijuana) was illegal. All their dispensaries would have been in low-income neighborhoods. For none to be awarded was very disappointing.

It was disappointing because Elliott, a former SSM health care administrator, was drawn to the developing legal marijuana industry precisely because of its potential to uplift low-income communities and individuals. She committed her time and talent to both firms because of their belief and commitment to social justice. She was able to identify trade groups for both firms to train low-income communities in the marijuana industry. She was able to negotiate the reduced cost of marijuana for low-income patients successfully. She was looking forward to marijuana, making a positive change in African American communities.

The CEO of Elliott Holding Company became interested in marijuana as an alternative treatment for illnesses such as anxiety, Alzheimers, and Crohns disease, epilepsy, and migraines in which she suffers. But, she added, it was the social justice piece that resonated and convinced her to use her skills, passions, and experience to enact positive change within the industry.

Missouri, Elliott maintains, has yet to recognize the benefits of social justice endeavors strategically intertwined with its burgeoning cannabis industry. Exhibit A, she says, is that out of the 1,163 applicants for dispensary licenses, few African American groups vying for the meager 192 permits were selected.

Its a concern shared by James Forbes, part of the Ohio-based Standard Wellness team that was awarded 3 Missouri cultivation licenses, 3 manufacturing licenses for the development of infused products but no dispensary licenses.

Forbes, who is Asian and African American, says hes one of the few people of color on Standard Wellness board. His heart, however, is firmly rooted in the social and economic justice movements. In 2013, he co-founded Good Life Growing, LLC, a St, Louis social enterprise dedicated to combatting food insecurity by creating urban farms on vacant properties and training low-income urban farmers to grow and sell fresh food.

Like it was during the Prohibition Era of the 1920s and 1930s, Forbes worries that the legalization of marijuana will exclude felons, like the country did with bootleggers, while rewarding those with wealth, political clout and resources.

You saw so much new wealth created based on a demand that was always there, Forbes said. Its just that the government regulated who the winners and losers were.

Black entrepreneurs comprise a bit more than 4 percent of the legalized cannabis business. Whites, according to Marijuana Business Daily,account for 81 percent of marijuana business owners.

To date its painfully obvious that the winners in the cannabis game are not those from underserved black or brown communities.

The Missouri Medical Cannabis Trade Association (MoCannTrade) is serious about diversity in trade, according to its Executive Director, Andrew Mullins. Since its inception in 2018, Mullins said ensuring diversity has been one of the associations core values.

Our board composition, as well as our industry committees, work to reflect diversity in geography, gender, race, and experience. We, in an ongoing way, continually try to represent these values to our membership and the rest of the industry to ensure equity when and where possible.

Gresham, Elliott and Forbes dont dispute Mullins claim. When organizations, lobbyists, and potential business owners were working to make marijuana legal in Missouri, they said, there was plenty of talk about diversity and opportunity. Since its been legalized, not so much.

Several states and cities have introduced or launched social equity programs to increase the participation of minorities in the cannabis industry. These initiatives vary from state-to-state and have various levels of impact, according to a 2020 survey conducted by blunttruthlaw.com.

Ohios social equity program set aside 15 percent of its medical marijuana licenses for minority-owned firms. Before it was later deemed unconstitutional, the state awarded more than 16% of its licenses to minority business owners.

Michigan, California and Illinois-where medical and recreational marijuana is legal-were credited for their robust social equity programs. Michigan has reduced licensing fees for applicants living in disproportionately impacted communities. Cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Oakland offer low- or no-interest loans, grants, and technical assistance to cannabis license applicants along with business training in the competitive cannabis industry. Illinois was cited as a state with one of the most progressive marijuana business licensing frameworks in the country. The moniker was earned in part because Illinois awards a significant number of points in its recreational license evaluations to members of disadvantaged communities.

Even without specific social equity legalization, Oklahoma found a way to address racial disparity by offering an unlimited number of dispensary licenses. In contrast, Missouri received more than 2,200 applications for medical marijuana cultivation, dispensary, and manufacturing facility licenses with plans to award less than 350 actual licenses.

Oklahoma was also credited for low licensing fees. California, for example, according to the Associated Press, requires a $1,000 application fee, a $5,000 surety bond, and an annual license fee ranging from $2,500 to $96,000, depending on projected revenues. In Oklahoma, the article stressed, a dispensary license costs $2,500, can be filled out online and is approved within two weeks.

Its worth noting that, in less than two years, Oklahoma where only medical cannabis is legal there are more than 2,300 dispensaries and the industry, in 2019, generated $54 million in tax revenue.

Call it what you will, social justice or social equity, there are commendable efforts to even the legalized cannabis playfield. Still, critics stress that minorities who were caught up in the illegal marijuana trade will never gain access or opportunities until the industry addresses their predicament.

Those advocating for more minority inclusion insist that attention must be given to those scarred by the war on drugs. The Marijuana Record Expungement Movement is expanding across the country. The idea is to help people remove marijuana convictions from their records so they, too, can participate in the industry. Missouri, which doesnt disqualify individuals with previous convictions from obtaining a patient or cultivation license, is among states like New Hampshire and New Jersey that have expungement initiatives pending.

Obie Anthonys personal experience is the motivation for his interest in the expungement movement. In 1995, at the age of 19, Anthony was accused of robbery and murder. He was sentenced to life in prison. With the help of The Innocence Project, Anthony was released in 2011 after serving 17 years in prison. He sued Los Angeles for wrongful imprisonment and won an $8.3 million settlement.

In 2015, Anthony founded Exonerated Nation, a nonprofit based in Oakland, CA, that works with exonerees, like him, to rebuild their lives. Just as Anthony was sent to prison, California in 1996, sparked a national movement by becoming the first state in the country to legalize marijuana for medical use. Since then, other states have legalized the medicinal and recreational use of cannabis.

Anthony, whos working to spread Exonerated Nations mission across the country, recognizes the life-changing potential of a new industry that welcomes exonerees and former marijuana felons into the fold.

This is that rare opportunity where we can bring not only money to disadvantaged communities but programs, jobs, businesses, and so forth. Tax revenues generated from marijuana sales can help build self-reliance through ownership and participation.

Gresham and Forbes introduced me to Anthony, who applied for a Missouri dispensary license but was denied. Still, he remains hopeful about initiatives aimed at expunging the records of felons who can then transform skills theyve honed on the streets into legitimate business enterprises.

Surprisingly, several individuals echo Anthonys sentiments, saying that good, old-fashioned tenacity, creativity, and due diligence will be the keys to unlocking the stubborn doors of systemized resistance within the cannabis trade.

Because Jim Crow laws forbade black people from participating in mainstream businesses, they did what they had to do for simple survival. Without licenses, they secretly bartered goods and services and created their own underground economies. Many, with few other options, gravitated to the illegal drug trade where they employed street-level supply & demand, marketing, and competitive techniques to generate income.

Weed has been my whole life since childhood. I come from the underworld, the streets, Gresham explained. So, if I learned how to do illegal sales and connect with hundreds of people, whats stopping me from taking that same energy, same knowledge, the same rules that applied then and doing it nowlegally?

Anthony also expounded on the potential of transforming once illegal skills into legitimate businesses in an industry that is now legal.

They already know the product, how to budget, what needs to be spent, and what to expect in return. Just to not be concerned about the copsthat awareness alone helps us become more creative, more connected. So now were able to bring others in and create something amongst ourselves. Its transformative; they can set up businesses modeled after what they already understand and build off that.

Because gaining a dispensary license can be cumbersome and cost-prohibitive in many states, some advocates encourage minorities to focus on ancillary businesses within the weed industry. Opportunities abound they say, in signing up medical marijuana patients, manufacturing cannabis-based products like oil or candles, providing educational and technical services, marketing, public relations, and creating cannabis-related curriculum for universities. Forbes, for example, is also an owner of Tiger Fiber LLC, a hemp business.

Gresham insists the primary caregiver category serves as an immediate opportunity for minorities. The Missouri Department of Health and Human Services (DHSS) defines a primary caregiver as someone 21 years of age or older who is responsible for managing the well-being of a Qualified Patient. Primary caregivers, who are also patients like Gresham, can obtain identification cards to cultivate medical marijuana plants for their exclusive use or that of their patients. They can be compensated for taking care of patients. Additionally, caregivers can possess legal amounts of cannabis for themselves and/or their qualifying patients.

Elliott doesnt believe the caregiver route is the most viable avenue to wealth building in black communities:

If youre talking about signing people up (as patients and caregivers); yes, but thats a one-shot thing. Its a different track and definitely not the path to riches or economic participation.

Its abundantly clear that addressing racial inequities in the mushrooming marijuana industry is an ongoing challenge for minority entrepreneurs. Although systematic barriers abound, this article outlines numerous initiatives and opportunities with the potential to positive change. Whats also clear is that Missouri, the Show-Me State, has a rare opportunity to demonstrate a progressive pathway to truly inclusive minority participation in the arena of legalized cannabis.

Sylvester Brown, Jr., pictured, above, photo from Facebook, is a former columnist for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, founder of the Sweet Potato Project, an entrepreneurial program for urban youth, and author of When We Listen: Recognizing the Potential of Urban Youth.

Go here to read the rest:

Social Justice & Beyond: Where's the opportunity? Greenway Magazine - Greenway

New York Grand Jury Indicts Two Former Leaders of Mexicos Drug War for Cartel Connections – ProPublica

ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as theyre published.

A New York grand jury on Thursday indicted two former leaders of the Mexican federal police force, including one who oversaw the anti-narcotics units that were specially vetted by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and were linked to two brazen massacres in Mexico that left dozens, possibly hundreds, of people dead and missing.

The indictments marked a stunning fall from grace for Ramn Pequeo Garca and Luis Crdenas Palomino, who had been celebrated by U.S. national security and diplomatic officials as trusted partners in the fight against Mexican drug cartels.

On Thursday, a federal grand jury found that instead of combating the cartels, there was evidence that the men had been collaborating with and accepting millions in bribes from them. Crdenas Palomino had served as the director of regional operations for the federal police force between 2006 and 2012. During that time, Pequeo was head of the federal police anti-narcotics division, which controlled the DEAs Sensitive Investigative Units.

Subscribe to the Big Story newsletter.

A ProPublica investigation in 2018 found that those units had a long history of deadly leaks to drug traffickers. One of those leaks triggered a spree of violence in Allende, a Mexican ranching town about 40 minutes from the U.S. border. The massacre left scores of innocent people dead. Another leak sparked a deadly attack on innocent guests at a Holiday Inn in the northern Mexican city of Monterrey.

Thursdays indictments do not link either Pequeo or Crdenas Palomino directly to those incidents. However, they make clear that the disastrous leaks were part of a systemic problem that reached to the highest levels of the Mexican government. And they provided more evidence of the tragic consequences of the United States role in Mexicos drug war.

The indictments are part of an investigation into Mexican government corruption that began after the conviction of Mexicos most wanted drug trafficker, Joaqun El Chapo Guzmn, in February 2019. In December, prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York arrested their first big target, Genaro Garca Luna, the former head of Mexicos federal police force and a man so powerful that The New York Times described him as that countrys Eliot Ness, one of the Americas most famous federal law enforcement agents.

Pequeo and Crdenas Palomino were two of Garca Lunas chief lieutenants. Beginning in 2006, when Garca Luna was appointed to a cabinet-level position as Mexicos security chief, the three men were celebrated on both sides of the border as the bold, new architects of Mexicos fight against drug cartels. All three men worked closely with senior U.S. security and diplomatic officials. The United States poured hundreds of millions of dollars in training and equipment into their efforts and began sharing increasing amounts of highly sensitive intelligence.

That fight led to the arrests of dozens of kingpins but also to record numbers of deaths and disappearances. It did not stop the flow of drugs across the border. Still, Mexican and American authorities defended the fight, saying the bloodshed was a necessary evil in their efforts to dismantle the cartels. And while allegations of corruption swirled around Garca Luna and his team, and evidence emerged that the intelligence channels were leaky, senior American authorities, at least for a time, appeared to shrug them off.

The indictments Thursday make clear thats changed. They allege a staggering degree of cooperation between Garca Luna, Pequeo and Crdenas Palomino and one of the worlds most notorious drug cartels. The police officials agreed not to interfere with the Sinaloa Cartels drug shipments, most of which ended up in the United States, and to provide its leaders with sensitive information about law enforcement operations targeting the cartel, as well as its rivals. Moreover, the indictment alleges, the officials targeted those rivals for arrest, instead of Sinaloa members, and assigned corrupt officials to oversee security agencies in regions of Mexico where the Sinaloa Cartel had its operations.

One of the first U.S. cases against Garca Lunas police force came in 2018 when a former chief of Mexicos SIU, and Pequeos right-hand man, turned himself in to U.S. authorities in Chicago and, later, pleaded no contest to charges that he had used his position for years to collaborate with drug traffickers. Several months after that, the trial against Chapo Guzmn included testimony from a cast of major drug traffickers who described delivering suitcases of cartel cash to Garca Luna and his aides.

Upon hearing the news of the indictments, Andrew Selee, a longtime expert on Mexico at the Migration Policy Institute, said, Thats incredible, and added that they would force us to rethink everything we thought we knew about the recent anti-narcotics efforts in Mexico.

Eric Olson, a global fellow at the Woodrow Wilson Center, was similarly stunned and said the arrests showed the ruinous results of U.S. policies in Mexico that prioritize law enforcement.

Now we see theres a trade-off to turning a blind eye to people like Garca Luna, he said. If you turn a blind eye, youre going to pay a price in the long run. The price is democracy and rule of law. How is that in our interest?

Thursdays indictments against Pequeo and Crdenas Palomino followed months of unsuccessful efforts by U.S. law enforcement agents and prosecutors to convince the two men to cooperate in the case against their former boss. Both remain at large in Mexico.

Meanwhile Garca Luna, who is alleged to have amassed a multimillion-dollar fortune in drug money, remains in custody at a federal jail in Brooklyn. Prosecutors yesterday announced that he was being indicted under the so-called Kingpin Statute, designed to target precisely the kinds of criminal leaders he was once sworn to fight. A legal expert pointed out that the statute requires prosecutors demonstrate that Garca Luna ran a criminal organization of five or more people, suggesting that there are more indictments to come.

Continue reading here:

New York Grand Jury Indicts Two Former Leaders of Mexicos Drug War for Cartel Connections - ProPublica

Philippines warned over revival of death penalty in war on illegal drugs – Gulf Today

The photo is for illustrative purposes.

A ranking Commission on Human Rights (CHR) official warned the Philippines could face sanctions from the international community if Congress would approve the call of President Rodrigo Duterte for the controversial return of the death penalty in the war on illegal drugs.

CHR Commissioner Karen Gomez-Dumpit said such sanctions could suffer consequences like the removal of the Philippines from the list of countries that benefit from lower tariffs in the European Union.

Besides, reinstating the death penalty by lethal injection would violate a UN-sponsored agreement known as the International Covenant on Civil and Political that commits to its abolition and which the Philippines is a signatory by ratifying it in 2007, Dumpit said.

There is no "opt-out provision" in the agreement as Dumpit explained in a TV interview: "It's all about commitment. It's all about confidence whether you as a state party will be able to comply and not renege on those commitments."

Dumpit insisted that reviving the death penalty would not be a deterrent, arguing that solid police work, intelligence work and proper implementation of the laws would help contain the commission of heinous crimes like illegal drugs.

Opposition Congressman Edcel Lagman of Albay province agreed with Dumpit but on another tack particularly on its repercussions to government appeals for the commutation of the death penalty on Filipinos convicted abroad.

Lagman warned the Philippines would lose its moral ascendancy in negotiating for the lifting of such death sentences already imposed on about 100 overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) mainly due to illegal drugs.

Besides, only 37 countries are implementing the death penalty "both in law and in practice" with China, Iran, Pakistan, Indonesia and South Africa accounting for 90 per cent of executions, according to Lagman.

"President Duterte's recommendation to the Congress to reimpose the death penalty aggravates his failure to disclose and discuss his administration's response to the COVID-19 pandemic which is a death sentence to countless Filipinos," he lamented.

But world boxing idol and Senator Manny Pacquiao, a staunch Duterte ally, ignored the arguments of Dumpit and Lagman in advocating the revival of the death penalty, which the country abolished during the time of then president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and replaced it with life imprisonment.

Pacquiao cited the urgent need for its revival, pointing out that drug lords, both foreign and local, have taken advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic to flood the country especially shabu (crystal meth), also known as the "poor man's cocaine."

Pacquiao noted that foreign drug lords in particular have capitalised on the absence of capital punishment to operate with impunity in the Philippines while it is busy containing the rapid spread of the virus.

The House has already approved the return of the death penalty but several bills are pending before the Senate, including those filed by Pacquiao and another Duterte supporter freshman Senator Ronald dela Rosa, the former chief of the Philippine National Police (PNP).

See more here:

Philippines warned over revival of death penalty in war on illegal drugs - Gulf Today

For Yale’s emerging psychiatrists, confronting racism is in the curriculum – Yale News

Five years ago, Yales Department of Psychiatry formally integrated anti-racism education and advocacy into its resident training program.

Through theSocial Justice and Health Equity(SJHE) curriculum, a mandatory part of the four-year program, residents learn to recognize their own biases and appreciate the lived experiences of minority patients. They gain a deeper understanding of the history of racism in medicine and the tools needed to advocate for equal access and treatment for all patients. Its one of just a few such programs in the country, and its mission is ambitious to eradicate mental health disparities through training and interventions.

The social justice curriculum is an important part of our broader effort to improve the culture of our department with respect to diversity and inclusion, and to bring the many legacies of racism to an end as rapidly as we can, said department chair Dr. John Krystal.

Racism is a major contributor to poor health outcomes. Racial and ethnic minorities have less access to mental health services than whites, are less likely to receive care, and are more likely to receive poor quality care,according to reportsfrom the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Minorities also make up a larger percentage of the homeless and incarcerated populations, and are especially susceptible to mental health disorders due to their environments. Racism adds to stress, depression, and anxiety, the reports show.

We talk about power and privilege. We talk about the racist war on drugs. We think this is just as important as psychopharmacology.

Dr. Ayana Jordan

About one-third of the members of each incoming Yale psychiatry residency class in recent years have come from groups underrepresented in medicine, and the programs anti-racism curriculumhas become a national model. Dr. Robert Rohrbaugh, residency program director and deputy chair for education and career development, said Howard University, UCLA, and Albert Einstein College of Medicine have all consulted with or sought advice from Yale as theyve developed similar anti-racism, advocacy-oriented programs.

A decade ago, when Yales psychiatry department first recognized the need to incorporate cultural awareness into its training, Dr. Esperanza Diaz, medical director of the Yale Hispanic Clinic and associate director of the psychiatry residency program, took the lead. She developed programming that trained residents to better understand patients backgrounds and motivations.

What began as a cultural competency course would expand over the years into the formal Social Justice and Health Equity curriculum, which has been a collaboration among faculty, residents, and community members since its inception.

Current curriculum director Dr. Ayana Jordan said every resident brings his or her own socialization and upbringing into the room. They have to learn, she said, how not to intentionally or unintentionally propagate racial disparities.

During discussions, said Jordan, We talk about power and privilege. We talk about the racist war on drugs. We think this is just as important as psychopharmacology.

The curriculum is taught through faculty-led case studies, group discussions, and listening sessions with community leaders. Until recently, there were three tracks: structural competency, which addresses how neighborhoods and social factors impact mental health; human experience, about understanding patient experiences and examining personal biases; and advocacy, in which residents develop skills necessary to advocate for patients and challenge inequities.

A new fourth track focuses on a critical examination of the history of psychiatry.

You cant think about changing a system unless you think about the history of how it got that way, said Rohrbaugh.

He cited the Civil War doctor who invented a psychological disorder called drapetomania, an insane impulse to flee attributed to runaway slaves, for instance, and therise in diagnoses of schizophrenia for Black menassociated with civil rights protests in the 1960s as a means to identify them as dangerous.

Said Jordan: Psychiatry has been one of the main contributors to racism. If our residents dont understand that, are we doing our job?

By directly addressing racism and its effects, Yales program attracts residents that raise issues, Diaz said, individuals who are socially conscious and like to change things.

First-year resident Dr. Amanda Calhoun is an example.

I chose the Yale Department of Psychiatry because they were truly invested in these issues, said Calhoun, a 2011 Yale College alumna. Our program director talked about systemic racism and white supremacy, and that was very powerful.

Half of the 16 first-year psychiatry residents at Yale who entered the program in 2019 and 35% of residents across all four years identify as underrepresented minorities, a marked contrast with the national average. In 2017, the most recent year for which data are available, just 17.3% of the nations first-year general psychiatry residents and 15.2% of general psychiatry residents overall identified as underrepresented minorities, according to the American Psychiatric Association.

This transformation of the residency has effectively created a pipeline of exceptionally talented people, some of whom we have been able to recruit to our faculty, Krystal said.

When there are too few racial or ethnic minorities in a program, minority students get burned out, or they end up feeling gas-lit isolated and questioning the veracity of their ideas, said Flavia DeSouza 16 M.D., 16 M.H.S., a fourth-year resident and co-director of the curriculum,

Providing a curriculum that attracts and encourages Black psychiatry residents, SJHEs leaders said, helps the field expand the number of Black providers, yielding critical representation for Black patients who may be wary of health-care interventions.

I validate their experiences, and I talk to them about my experiences, said Calhoun, who notes that she was just 4 years old when she first became aware that white skin is seen as the ideal in the U.S.A., and I didnt look like that.

In February, Calhounparticipated in a Grand Roundsfor the pediatrics department in which she described her experiences with racism in medicine. In June at another Grand Rounds, she called on the audience to help me protect our Black children from racism. On June 5 she spoke over a megaphone on the steps of the Yale Sterling Hall of Medicine at a White Coats for Black Lives rally following the police killing of George Floyd.

This white coat does not protect me, she told 300 assembled physicians. We are scared every day. We worry about our families every day.

Calhouns father, Dr. Joshua Calhoun who also graduated from Yale College (1978), completed his residency in child and adolescent psychiatry at Harvard and is the medical director of Hawthorn Childrens Psychiatric Hospital in St. Louis. He will not walk home at night in his affluent residential neighborhood, she said, because hes been stopped by the police so many times and hes concerned that things will turn violent.

Recounting their own experiences with racism and having to explain its pervasive damage has been exhausting work, the physician-advocates said. But they are hopeful that the groundwork theyve laid in Yale Psychiatry can serve as a blueprint for other departments and universities.

The time is right for the conversation, said Jordan. Its been time.

Originally posted here:

For Yale's emerging psychiatrists, confronting racism is in the curriculum - Yale News

Formerly incarcerated woman runs to be 1st Black woman in Congress from Tennessee – ABC News

August 1, 2020, 10:05 AM

5 min read

Keeda Haynes believes she brings a unique perspective to the race for Tennessee's 5th Congressional District. After spending over three years in prison for a crime she says she didn't commit, she hopes a spot in Washington will allow her to speak for vulnerable constituents -- and make a little history as well.

Haynes, a former public defender, is in a three-way race that includes 17-year Democratic incumbent Rep. Jim Cooper.

The primary election, which is slated for Aug. 6, has no Republican in the race so the winner will almost certainly be elected to Congress come November.

"I have a unique perspective that a lot of people don't have. ... I've been a defendant and defender," Haynes told ABC News. "I really saw just how this war on drugs really decimated Black and brown, low-income communities."

If elected, the progressive Democrat would make history as the first Black woman in Tennessee ever elected to Congress. The state has only had two Black representatives elected to Congress, with the last candidate elected over two decades ago, according to the U.S. House of Representatives.

Along with supporting criminal justice reform and the Black Lives Matter movement, the 42-year-old Haynes is also passionate about issues such as providing access to affordable housing, raising the minimum wage and reducing student loan debt.

"We are reimagining each and every system so that Black lives can matter across every single spectrum," she said.

Haynes, who is from Franklin and later moved to the state's capital of Nashville, was the second of five children. She graduated from Tennessee State University with a degree in criminal justice and psychology. But just two weeks after graduating college, she had to turn down a position as a legal assistant because she had to report to federal prison.

Keeda Haynes, a 42-year-old former public defender who was previously incarcerated for a crime she says she didn't commit, is running for Congress in Tennessee.

Keeda Haynes, a 42-year-old former public defender who was previously incarcerated for a crime she says she didn't commit, is running for Congress in Tennessee.

At 19, she started dating a man in Nashville for a few years and began accepting packages for his cellphone and beepers shop, she told ABC News. She later found out that those packages actually contained marijuana. She spent three years and 10 months in prison -- on what was initially a seven-year mandatory minimum sentence -- on charges of conspiracy to distribute marijuana.

In 2006, Haynes was finally released from prison while continuing to maintain her innocence. She went on to pass the bar exam and work in a public defender's office for over six years.

Her historic run comes as a record number of Black women are running for Congress across the U.S. In 2019, a record number of Black women were serving in state legislative offices, according to The Center of American Women and Politics at Rutgers University. In the last two years Black women saw the largest gain in representation at the state legislative level since 1994.

Haynes' advice for young Black girls hoping to follow in her footsteps is to remember that you have the ability to make the impossible possible.

"Prison did not deter me from doing what I said I was going to do," she told ABC News. "There will be people that will tell you that you can't do things and that things are impossible, but you have to stay focused."

Haynes called late civil rights pioneer Rep. John Lewis, who was laid to rest Thursday in Atlanta, an "iconic figure" in the fight for justice and equality, and expressed eternal gratitude for the work that Lewis accomplished throughout his remarkable life.

"Even in the face of police violence, he still believed in something bigger and still fought for liberation. ... I personally feel obligated to do this work in his name," Haynes said.

See the original post here:

Formerly incarcerated woman runs to be 1st Black woman in Congress from Tennessee - ABC News

Humboldt Has a Bunch of State Money to Promote Equity in the Cannabis Industry. So Where is It? – Lost Coast Outpost

A county infographic depicting Project Trellis its support program for the local cannabis industry, which includes the equity program.

###

Although Humboldt County has been awarded nearly $3.7 million in funding for its Cannabis Equity Program a state-funded local project designed to lift up communities disproportionately impacted by prohibition residents of Humboldt County have yet to receive any of those funds.

Thats not entirely the countys fault, however. Of the $3.7 million awarded to the county by the Bureau of Cannabis Control, the county has only received around $1.3 million in the first round of funding, with the other $2.4 million coming at a later date.

Humboldt received the $1.3 million in April, and the only money its spent so far has been on overhead. Scott Adair, economic development director for the county, that agency did not have strict criteria for how the funds should be used. Essentially, its only guidance was that the funds have to be spent in conjunction with the countys equity program, and that funds must be used within a year.

It has been frustratingly slow. And we get it, Adair told the Outpost. People are anxious to get the funding out and we are too. Things are moving very quickly now and I just want to give my reassurances to the public that we are also equally interested in getting this funding out into the community as quickly as possible.

So whats the hold-up, you might ask?

Well, there was a debate about Proposition 209, the amendment to the California Constitution that prevents discrimination or preferential treatment based on race, and how that might affect the distribution of funds within the Equity Program.

We had to have some conversations with our county counsel and with the state and it looks like we are fine and can move forward, Adair said.

This hold-up caused the California Center for Rural Policy, the agency that helped prepare the assessment, to make an update to the final report, which will have to be sent back to the Board of Supervisors before any funds are dispersed.

Once they approve that, we can then immediately go to a Notice of Funding Availability and start the application process, Adair said.

The COVID-19 pandemic also slowed the process down quite a bit, and caused a lot of the Economic Development department to redirect most of its resources to helping businesses currently struggling with the pandemic.

In fact, half of our team got moved over to the countys Emergency Operations center for about two months and during that time we were not giving the Trellis program, or the Equity Program, the amount of attention and staff time that it needed to move forward quickly, Adair said.

Because of this, the decision was made to permanently hire someone who solely focuses on Project Trellis and the Cannabis Equity Program. Adair said people have been vetted, interviews scheduled and that he hopes to hire someone for the position in the very near future.

If someone gets hired in the next two to three weeks and the CCRP makes the needed updates to the assessment by mid-August, Adair hopes to have the new assessment to the Board of Supervisors by mid-September, meaning that funds could be distributed as early as this fall.

We are definitely going to have an application period this fall, Adair said. I do not want to see this go into 2021, because we only have until April of 2021 to expend the first round of funds.

Adair estimates the maximum amount of funding a person can receive will be around $15,000, and will be based on the need of the applicant. The grants will essentially be a reimbursement program based on education and training costs, licensing or permit fees and other expenses that can be barriers preventing people from entering into the legal side of the cannabis industry.

When the county put together its application for Cannabis Equity funds, included in the report had to be a rough estimate of how many people would qualify for the grants. The county came up with a minimum of 1,531 people who will qualify for funding. This was based off of the number of cannabis permits that had been granted and a few other factors.

If we just go off of the number of licenses that Planning and Building recorded, then thats for a business, Adair said. It doesnt include how many individuals that even work at that business. There could be black market operations that still exist out there, or workers who are working for black market operations, who may have been hesitant to come forward and identify themselves, but some of this funding is to help those operations come into compliance.

###

The Outpost emailed a few further questions about the program to Adair. Here are the exact questions and his answers.

If a person was never arrested/convicted of cannabis-related charges nor had their immediate family, are they still eligible for funds? If so, why?

Yes. Arrest and or conviction is not the sole requirement for eligibility, its just one of many potential criteria which can be met for the program. There are other ways that persons were adversely impacted by the war on drugs which did not include arrest or conviction.

Do you feel that Humboldt has received a disproportionate amount of funds from the state for the Cannabis Equity program? Why or why not? (Context: The County of Humboldt received $3,798,264.15 in both rounds of funding which is one par with some urban areas such as the City of Long Beach, which received $3,613,991,77 and the City of Sacramento who received $5,029,075.27.)

No. A lack of competition made it easier for Humboldt County to secure a larger award. Our County was one of the first to act (i.e. when the funding was announced) and many other jurisdictions were not able to apply for funding or meet the criteria before the deadline. As we understand it (vis-a-vis our discussions with our state counterparts) new funding is going to be made available in future years. As such, it is anticipated that there will be opportunities for other communities to also apply for funding. This also means that were not sure yet what the denominator is, or if the amount of funding that Humboldt has received when compared to all anticipated future distributions of said funding is (or will be) disproportionate. Personally, I find it equally important to remind persons that the hills and mountains of Humboldt County served as ground zero for military backed operations related to the war on cannabis and that our neighborhoods and streets were the backdrops for police actions against those individuals who were cultivating it. The gravity and magnitude of past military and police activity in our community leads me to believe that the size of Humboldt Countys award is defensible. (C.A.M.P., Operation Green Sweep, etc.)

If people are making $100,000 or more in the cannabis industry will they qualify for the grants? How impacted could one be if they are making a six-figure salary?

I can see the argument here, and the point that is being made. Why should an individual who is doing well economically receive or benefit from an equity grant? The legislation behind SB1294, and the direction given to us from the state (i.e. for how we can disburse these funds), is very clear. This program is designed to provide recompense for those populations, communities and neighborhoods who are adversely impacted by the criminalization of cannabis and by the war on drugs. Eligibility is therefore based on the adverse impact of those prior actions, and is not based on an applicants assets, finances or income. Meaning that participation in the program is not based on whether or not an individual is financially deserving of the funds, but whether or not an applicant meets the criteria.

See the article here:

Humboldt Has a Bunch of State Money to Promote Equity in the Cannabis Industry. So Where is It? - Lost Coast Outpost

Letters to the Editor: Tuesday, August 4, 2020 | Opinion – pentictonherald.ca

Stop denying your racism

Dear Editor:

We entered this world in a profound sense of love, but along the way we learned to hate. How does this happen? Our memory works through the catalogue of stereotypes as a shortcut to thinking too much. Our preconceptions blind us with mental shortcuts, justifying what we see as normal. But what if that normal wasnt ideal?

When we see a homeless person, do we see someone who lost everything and gave up on their dreams? When we see the cornered minority being questioned by multiple police, do we see the systemic permission to harass the populations of colour with rare adverse consequences? We tell ourselves that it couldnt happen to me, so it cant be with them.

I am First Nation, and I was adopted and raised in the very white community of Kelowna in the 1970s. The white view was all Id been exposed to as I grew up. Into adulthood, things grew complex and I had to face the fact that I held racist views against my own people.

To change this, I switched my view to all First Nations being virtuous and good. Then I worked for the local band and found that they too can be corporate dictators just like every other company I worked for. While putting together a community computer lab in the centre of the reserve, my greatest lessons came from the kids who frequented the place. I realized I had a truly fortunate upbringing.

We learn stereotypes from the family or the community we grow up with.

Now those tides have turned.

The world was outraged by the actions of a cop. Domestic terrorism was used to permit the militarization of police forces. The War on Drugs was its most effective tool. Racial profiling and unrestricted bullying by police directly feed the prison industry. These actions have gone unceasing through centuries fuelled by anger and insecurities of both the aggressors and the targets. Yet the recent public outcry is shifting our views on what a secure society looks like.

Perception changes depending on the angle. We all contain a little prejudice in our past. We can cover it, contain it, and oppress it but it will not help. A proper purging requires dialogue, either with someone else or with just your pen and paper. Put it out there like a confession kept private. Hide from it no more. The pain of dealing with it is called growth, and the relief of getting past moves us all towards a better society.

Darrin LR Fiddler

Marijuana Party of Canada

Kelowna-Lake Country

A bad case of Trumpitis

Recently, I have written about our southern neighbour The Donald and I felt justified in doing so. Never in the history of the United States has a president said and done so much about so little and shown so little empathy for fellow human beings and more interest in the dollar than anything else.

Democracy as we once knew it seems to have lost its grass roots meaning of government by the people, for the people, and of the people.

What about here at home? It would appear that democracy has taken a back seat from its original meaning as well. Of course, I am referring to issues such as the WE Charity. Our illustrious leaders have bounced around this issue like a ricocheting bullet bouncing off rocks. It seems that the premise of going ahead with things and then asking for forgiveness later is the order of the day. It seems like a case of Donald Trumpitis. It centers on if you can minimize the issues in your own mind, its alright.

Both Justin Trudeau and Bill Morneau are implying the old adage, I didnt know the gun was loaded. That argument is weaker than a wet and soggy piece of tissue paper. Of course, they must have known, especially Morneau as finance minister. In his position, one would think that accountability would be first and foremost.

Apologies by both men just dont get the job done. They both should have known better but seemed not to. The lame duck apologies dont make the situation right and questions the ethics of each man. Saying Im sorry might be likened to putting a Band-Aid on a gaping wound and expecting it to heal perfectly.

The fact that both men had vested interests that were, in fact, conflict of interests, speaks for itself. Morneaus family vacation expenditure of $40,000 and Trudeaus family members gratuity payment appear to show clear indifference to anything that would reflect ethics with respect to their relative political positions.

As I said, democracy as we know it seems to have changed immeasurably. In my opinion, unless there is a realistic look at things, democracy could be on a downhill spiral. Perish the thought! It begs the question be asked what were the sacrifices of thousands of people 75 or so years ago for?

Ron Barillaro

Penticton

Liberal amount of razzle dazzle

Dear Editor:

In the movie Chicago, Richard Gere plays the role of Billy Flynn, a super-slick, fact-twisting, incurably corrupt lawyer. Flynns modus operandi is summarized in the lyrics of the song, Razzle Dazzle. Give em the old razzle dazzle. Razzle dazzle em... Give em an act with lots of flash in it and the reaction will be passionate. Give em the old hocus pocus, bead and feather em. How can they see with sequins in their eyes?

After watching Prime Minister Justin Trudeaus performance vis--vis the WE Charity, I cant help thinking of him as Canadas very own Billy Flynn.

Lloyd Atkins

Vernon

Obama selling lies at funeral

Dear Editor:

I was watching the news tonight and was absolutely sickened by former United States President Barack Obamas speech at John Lewiss funeral today. He took away from remembering a great civil rights leader, a brave man who marched the Edmund Pettus Bridge from Selma to Montgomery and took a baton on the head for his beliefs. He also walked with the late Dr. Martin Luther King.

He served the American people for many years as a great political leader for the Democratic party and at his service, former president Barrack Obama took the stage to sell a lie to all who were listening, and Im sure there were millions online and TV. He said recently, in Portland, government troops are arresting mostly peaceful protesters. If you have seen the mostly peaceful protest in Portland you know thats not entirely accurate, It looks like a war zone. Almost like the siege at Khe San in Vietnam back in 1968. There are Molotov cocktails, lasers being shot into officers eyes, fireworks and rocks thrown. There is no such thing as a peaceful protest in Portland. As I am writing this letter, the news just had a breaking report: Antifa stabbed a reporter in Portland; fortunately he lived. He was a black reporter being stabbed at a Black Lives Matter mostly peaceful protest.

The real deal in Portland (Chicago and Minneapolis) is there is lawlessness and mayhem. The President tries to help and is beat up for doing so because its against the constitution. Apparently in the United States a mayor has to ask for help.

Its a sad state of affairs on a day a great man was put to rest, these very ideals he fought for, took a police baton on the head for, and served our American friends. Shame on Barack Obama for electioneering at Lewiss funeral. Shame on the American Democrats. Its vampire politics.

Doug Rosen

Kelowna

The Theatre of the Absurd

For those of us who enjoy watching political theatre, there was a double billing in Ottawa on July 28 and 30. The Kielburger Keelhauling played in a four-hour marathon on Tuesday, followed by the seemingly shipwrecked Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his girl Friday, Katie Telford for almost as long on Thursday. These performances before the parliamentary finance committee proved good entertainment for the audience on live television, but with many lines definitely blurred between fact and fiction.

The Kielburger brothers, who co-founded the WE Charity, were trying to impersonate Bill Clintons appearance before the Grand Jury prior to his impeachment trial in 1998. His was a textbook display of non-answers and evasive tactics in dealing with Ken Starrs prosecutors reaching his zenith, or nadir, depending on your point of view when he answered the lawyer: It depends what the meaning of the word is is? He was known as Slick Willie in his native Arkansas, and the Kielburger Kids tried their best to be just as slick, but certainly didnt do themselves nor their multi-layered organization any favours.

Childish evasive tactics remained the order of the day when the PM spent 90 minutes before the same committee on Thursday, and those listening close enough could hear Little Richards early rock n roll standard: Slippin and Slidin playing in the background, as he tried to be slick, too.

Following the PMs most uncomfortable turn in the hot-seat, up rode Telford swearing to tell the truth as she took her turn in the saddle of the bucking bronco. Many watching her on Thursday remembered that fictional moving bill she claimed as expenses when relocating from Toronto to Ottawa in 2015. A large chunk of the over $80,000 she charged taxpayers, including over $23,000 made out to herself in cash, had to be returned. Not a great start for someone pledging to bring transparency, honesty and integrity into the Prime Ministers Office, but shes now settled into her job of preparing her boss for parliamentary jousting.

Hopefully, the farcical fiasco at Ottawas Theatre of the Absurd goes into summer recess for a short while.

Bernie Smith

Parksville, B.C.

Originally posted here:

Letters to the Editor: Tuesday, August 4, 2020 | Opinion - pentictonherald.ca

House to vote on protecting state cannabis laws this week (Newsletter: July 29, 2020) – Marijuana Moment

White House meets with hemp groups on CBD enforcement; McConnell says marijuana banking non-germane to COVID bill; Senators press USDA on hemp regs

Subscribeto receive Marijuana Moments newsletter in your inbox every weekday morning. Its the best way to make sure you know which cannabis stories are shaping the day.

Your support makes Marijuana Moment possible

This issue of Marijuana Moment, and our original reporting that is featured in it, are made possible by the generous support of 479 Patreon sponsors. Cannabis industry professionals receive valuable rewards for pledges of $25 and up.Check out the perks of being a sponsor on our Patreon page.https://www.patreon.com/marijuanamoment/ TOP THINGS TO KNOWPresumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden is proposing federal aid to help states expunge cannabis and other convictions.

The White House Office of Management and Budget is hosting several hemp industry groups for meetings about CBD enforcement policy this week and next week.Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said that including marijuana banking provisions in coronavirus relief legislation, as the House did, would be non-germane.

Sens. Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Jeff Merkley (D-OR) sent a letter calling on the U.S. Department of Agriculture to change several restrictive hemp regulations. They say that despite the temporary suspension of a rule allowing only labs certified by the Drug Enforcement Administration to do THC testing, USDAs site still lists only those facilities.

/ FEDERALThe Drug Enforcement Administration is proposing changes to rules for reporting theft or loss of controlled substances.Libertarian presidential candidate Jo Jorgensen tweeted, On Day One I will pardon all those who have been imprisoned for victimless crimes. Anyone convicted and incarcerated for possessing or using an illegal drug will be pardoned. End the War on Drugs now.Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) tweeted, Democrats released their socialist wish list (disguised as COVID19 relief) over two months ago, so we would forget that it included items like:Marijuana banking.Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) tweeted, Legalize marijuana nationwide and expunge records for cannabis-related offenses.Rep. Kevin Brady (R-TX) criticized Democrats for including three trillion dollars of marijuana banking in their coronavirus relief bill.Washington State Democratic congressional candidate Jason Call tweeted, It may seem an insignificant thing compared to healthcare, the environment, housing, and justice reform. But legalizing marijuana is an integral component of the general reforms that are needed. Rep Lee could not have gotten this more wrong.Tennessee Democratic congressional candidate Christopher Hale tweeted, Why is it that kids and veterans in Tennessee who smoke marijuana have criminal records but Wall Street executives who committed massive fraud and wrecked our economy do not? Ill be the most pro-weed Congressman God ever made.Florida Democratic congressional candidate Jen Perelman tweeted, Decriminalize & legalize marijuana./ STATESA former Maryland delegate who pleaded guilty to soliciting and accepting bribes from medical cannabis companies was sentenced to two years in federal prison.Nevada regulators are investigating three dispensaries for allegedly selling marijuana products that failed microbial testing.Maines top marijuana regulator said cultivation, manufacturing and processing facilities should be able to open by the end of September, with sales beginning by the end of the year.The Oregon Cannabis Commission Patient Equity Subcommittee will meet on Tuesday.Montana regulators will hold a hearing on proposed hemp rules on August 13.Alaska regulators will consider marijuana business license applications and rules on August 19 and 20.Marijuana Moment is already tracking more than 1,500 cannabis bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they dont miss any developments.Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.

/ LOCALThe Plymouth, Ohio Village Council approved a marijuana decriminalization proposal./ INTERNATIONALSt. Lucias government is drafting legislation to legalize marijuana.Dominicas government is moving ahead with plans to decriminalize marijuana./ SCIENCE & HEALTHA study found that in the first randomised clinical trial of cannabidiol for cannabis use disorder, cannabidiol 400 mg and 800 mg were safe and more efficacious than placebo at reducing cannabis use.A review found that industrial hemp biomass is an excellent alternative candidate for biofuel production and has higher cellulose content compared with other agricultural residues./ ADVOCACY, OPINION & ANALYSISThe San Diego Union-Tribune editorial board is encouraging local officials to target landlords when seeking to close unlicensed marijuana shops./ BUSINESSAphria Inc. reported quarterly net revenue of $152.2 million and a net loss of $98.8 million.The Scotts Miracle-Gro Company reported that $303 million in quarterly revenue for its cannabis-focused Hawthorne unit.The Securities and Exchange Commission charged a number of people with allegedly defrauding investors in several marijuana businesses.A Marijuana Business Daily analysis concludes that the number of people working in the U.S. cannabis industry will increase to 240,000-295,000 by the end of the year.

Make sure tosubscribe to get Marijuana Moments daily dispatch in your inbox.

Read the rest here:

House to vote on protecting state cannabis laws this week (Newsletter: July 29, 2020) - Marijuana Moment

The Fantasy and the Cyberpunk Futurism of Singapore – WIRED

An eerily prescient moment in the landmark cyberpunk film Akira about nuclear destruction predicts the cancellation of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. By preternatural coincidence, I taught the film in my Cyberpunk in Asia class on March 11the anniversary of the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster, and the last day of in-person classes. Distracting students from an apocalyptic turn of events with Akira felt both poignant and ironic.

But more poignant, while researching the class, I was returned to a piece of trivia I had almost forgot: Upon visiting Singapore for an essay in WIREDs second-ever issue in 1993, William Gibson described the city-state as Disneyland with the Death Penalty.

In some ways, I wasnt at all surprised my rabbit hole led me, well, home. Of course my interest in cyberpunk dystopias, divergently set in the future, yet always gesturing to a nostalgic, grimy past, converges in the tiny island I grew up on. A cyberpunk dystopia itself, Singapore takes pride in its emergence as a global capitalist exemplar while treating its colonial past as precious.

WIRED OPINION

ABOUT

Jerrine Tan was born and raised in Singapore. She has a PhD in English from Brown University and currently teaches Global Anglophone Literature in the English department at Mount Holyoke College.

Gibson emerged just as cyberpunk was on the rise. His landmark novel Neuromancer (1984) followed Ridley Scotts Blade Runner (1982) and preceded Katsuhiro Otomos Akira (1988), which are both set in 2019. For over 30 years, the year 2019 served as cyberpunks primary placeholder for the future. Rewatching Akira recently, I had an experience with the uncanny. Reflected in Akiras futuristic, oppressive Neo Tokyo was my home. The future was already here.

Like Neo Tokyo, much of what we see of Singapore is brand spanking new. Towering skyscrapers adumbrate the skyline as inequality undergirds society. Both cities exist as islands that rely on vast networks of connections; both are run by an all-seeing government with a distaste for protest. In his WIRED essay, Gibson refers to the island country as Singapore Ltd., micromanaged by a state that has the look and feel of a very large corporation. Indeed, capital is the citys lifeblood. Without any natural resources, Singapore exists as a financial hub and relies on trade to sustain itself. Singapores immune reaction to Gibsons piece was, of course, to ban WIRED.

In describing Singapore as Disneyland, Gibson pays homage to French philosopher Jean Baudrillards Simulacra and Simulations. (Incidentally, Simulacra is the only bookfittingly hollowed out to be used as a tool of concealmentfeatured in The Matrix, which was heavily influenced by Neuromancer.) In the simulacrum, what begins as an image of the real eventually reveals that the image is all there is. Ergo, the image does not merely conceal or distort the real, but reveals that there is no real at all. Gibson describes the sensation of trying to connect psychically with the old Singapore [as] rather painful, as though Disneyland's New Orleans Square had been erected on the site of the actual French Quarter, obliterating it in the process but leaving in its place a glassy simulacrum. In 2020, this is only more true of Singapore.

Last year, Singapore opened the snaking Lornie Road Highway. Erecting its eight lanes required clearing vast forested areas as well as the Bukit Brown cemetery, which housed thousands of grave sites of early migrants, and possibly the bodies of victims of the Japanese Occupation. It had been placed on the World Monuments Watch list, and the United Nations special rapporteur for cultural rights had demanded it be preserved, to no avail. Despite calls by the public to preserve it, the old National Library built before independence was demolished to make way for a tunnel that would save commuters five minutes. Visiting home last December, I found that a beloved park near where I grew up had been butcheredone side of the hill carved open, the lily pond full of fish filled in. New expressway, I was told. As a foreigner, Gibson intimated that the absence of the past in Singapore incited psychic pain. As a citizen, watching a resolute obliteration of the past in progress, I am haunted by gaping fish.

Read the original here:

The Fantasy and the Cyberpunk Futurism of Singapore - WIRED

Physicists Say There’s a 90 Percent Chance Civilization Will Soon Collapse – Futurism

Final Countdown

If humanity continues down its current path, civilization as we know it is heading toward irreversible collapse in a matter of decades.

Thats according to research published in the journal Scientific Reports, which models out our future based on current rates of deforestation and other resource use. As Motherboard reports, even the rosiest projections in the research show a 90 percent chance of catastrophe.

The paper, penned by physicists from the Alan Turing Institute and the University of Tarapac, predicts that deforestation will claim the last forests on Earth in between 100 and 200 years. Coupled with global population changes and resource consumption, thats bad new for humanity.

Clearly it is unrealistic to imagine that the human society would start to be affected by the deforestation only when the last tree would be cut down, reads the paper.

In light of that, the duo predicts that society as we know it could end within 20 to 40 years.

In lighter news, Motherboard reports that the global rate of deforestation has actually decreased in recent years. But theres still a net loss in forest overall and newly-planted trees cant protect the environment nearly as well as old-growth forest.

Calculations show that, maintaining the actual rate of population growth and resource consumption, in particular forest consumption, we have a few decades left before an irreversible collapse of our civilization, reads the paper.

READ MORE: Theoretical Physicists Say 90% Chance of Societal Collapse Within Several Decades [Motherboard]

More on societal collapse: Doomsday Report Author: Earths Leaders Have Failed

Read more from the original source:

Physicists Say There's a 90 Percent Chance Civilization Will Soon Collapse - Futurism

WHO Calls COVID-19 the "Most Severe" Health Crisis in Its History – Futurism

According to World Health Organization (WHO) director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the COVID-19 pandemic is easily the most severe global health crisis that the organization has ever seen.

Ghebreyesus backed his claim by citing citing the sheer scale of both confirmed coronavirus cases and the global death toll, New Scientist reports. To date, there are over 16.2 million confirmed cases worldwide and just shy of 649,000 patients have died.

COVID-19 has changed our world, Ghebreyesus said during a Monday press briefing. And the pandemic, he added, has shown what humans are capable of both positively and negatively.

During his address, Ghebreyesus said that the guidelines for how to prevent transmission havent changed in the six months since the WHO declared the coronavirus a global emergency.

Keep your distance from others, clean your hands, avoid crowded and enclosed areas, and wear a mask where recommended, Ghebreyesus said.

He then went on to praise countries that either nipped their outbreaks in the bud like Vietnam and New Zealand and those that managed to wrestle large outbreaks back under control: Canada, China, Germany, and Korea.

But clearly not every country got its rear in gear: While he didnt list any by name, Ghebreyesus didnt understate the ongoing severity of the pandemic.

The pandemic continues to accelerate, he said. In the past 6 weeks, the total number of cases has roughly doubled.

See the rest here:

WHO Calls COVID-19 the "Most Severe" Health Crisis in Its History - Futurism

We May Be Able to Extract "Movies" of the Universe From Black Holes – Futurism

Summer Blockbuster

Ever since the first-ever image of a black hole was published last year, physicists have been scrambling to learn as much about it as they can.

One of their astonishing new claims is that the swirling rings of light trapped in the orbit of the black hole Pwehi can serve as a sort of historical record, New Scientist reports. The rings of photons could be like the rings of a tree or even, tantalizingly, like frames of a movie that show the history of the universe.

The scientists studying Pwehi, who hail from a long list of universities, published work on those swirling rings back in March. In it, they argue that that the sequence of photon rings can tell them how the black hole formed, help them study its properties now, and even serve as a testing ground for theories like Einsteins general relativity.

Together, the set of subrings are akin to the frames of a movie, capturing the history of the visible universe as seen from the black hole, reads the paper.

While probing the rings could reveal many secrets about black holes, the researchers say there are limits to its value as a historical record of the universe. Each ring, New Scientist reports, is only six days older than the last, and eventually they pass the black holes event horizon and get gobbled up.

Were not going to see dinosaurs, Harvard astronomer Michael Johnson,who worked on the research, told New Scientist.

READ MORE: Black holes are hiding movies of the universe in their glowing rings [New Scientist]

More on the black hole image: The M87 Black Hole Now Has an Epic Name

Continued here:

We May Be Able to Extract "Movies" of the Universe From Black Holes - Futurism

Officials Are Investigating The Chainsmokers for Spreading the Coronavirus – Futurism

What was supposed to be a socially-distanced, drive-in Chainsmokers concert quickly degraded into the sort of packed, close-quarters event one might have attended in the Before Times.

Now, New Yorks Department of Health says it will investigate the July 25 concert as a health hazard, NBC News reports. The close quarters and spotty mask-wearing make it all but certain that concertgoers walked away from the Southampton venue with more than memories of a mediocre EDM-pop band its reasonable to expect that many will have caught COVID-19 as well.

Videos from a concert held in Southampton on Saturday show egregious social distancing violations, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo tweeted. I am appalled. The Department of Health will conduct an investigation. We have no tolerance for the illegal & reckless endangerment of public health.

Its easy to joke. These are people who went out during a pandemic and risked it all to see The Chainsmokers, after all. And the opener we are not kidding was the CEO of Goldman Sachs, who performed a DJ set.

But the concert is also a damning indictment against trying to open too many businesses or lift too many restrictions as the pandemic continues.

I am greatly disturbed by reports concerning the drive-in concert held in your town this past weekend, which apparently involved thousands of people in close proximity, out of their vehicles, a VIP area where there was no pretense of a vehicle, and generally not adhering to social distancing guidance, New York health commissioner Howard Zucker wrote to Southampton supervisor Jay Scheiderman. I am at a loss as to how the Town of Southampton could have issued a permit for such an event, how they believed it was legal and not an obvious public health threat.

View post:

Officials Are Investigating The Chainsmokers for Spreading the Coronavirus - Futurism

New Game Changers In Medicine Podcast Showcases The Backstory Of The Smallpox Vaccine – PRNewswire

The Dramatic Health and Game Changers in Medicine teams have gathered a distinguished group of experts to discuss the discovery of the smallpox vaccine and its influence on vaccines for other diseases, including COVID-19.

Dr. Arthur Boylston, professor emeritus of pathology at the University of Leeds and a senior teaching fellow at Oxford University joins this episode, alongside Dr. Paul Goepfert, Professor of Medicine and Microbiology and Director of the Alabama Vaccine Research Clinic (AVRC). Also featured are: Dr. Alice Phillips, a pediatrician at Cook Children's Physician Network in Fort Worth, TX; Dr. Michael S. Saag, Director of the UAB Center for AIDS Research and a professor of Medicine at University of Alabama/Birmingham, whose recent experience surviving COVID-19 has been featured on NPR and NBC News; and Dr. Paula Traktman, Professor and Dean of Graduate Studies at the Medical University of South Carolina, and formerly affiliated with the Medical College of Wisconsin.

Dramatic Health, a national healthcare video company, is the producer of the six-part podcast series Game Changers in Medicine. The series premiered in July with an episode about Vitamin K and an enterprising Boston house doctor. That episode, a series backgrounder, and additional material about the podcast series are available at http://www.gamechangersinmedicine.com, and the podcast can be accessed wherever you find your podcasts.

Contact: Mark G Auerbach at [emailprotected].

SOURCE Dramatic Health, Inc.

http://www.gamechangersinmedicine.com

Continued here:

New Game Changers In Medicine Podcast Showcases The Backstory Of The Smallpox Vaccine - PRNewswire