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sano

Usuário Growroom
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Tudo que sano postou

  1. Está sim! Pelo andamento do processo, o advogado está trabalhando exclusivamente no caso.
  2. Só pensamento positivo, mano! Infelizmente, não temos o que fazer além de desejar o melhor para o Pedro!
  3. Não! Vamos pensar no Pedro, que a essa hora esta preso com mais 6 candangos na tranca.
  4. Não é recomendável qualquer ataque ao magistrado do caso. Na democracia o juiz tem livre convencimento dos fatos e do direito a ser aplicado. Portanto qualquer crítica quanto ao entendimento do juiz do caso pode ser prejudicial ao Pedro.
  5. Esses nossos funcionários estão foda! Municipélas abusados! Queria ver se fosse um engravatado fumando um o que fariam!
  6. Quero ver ele colocar o Premio Tricoma Dourado emoldurado numa parede do gabinete!
  7. Irmãozinho, quantos TCs vc já assinou? E aí, vai arguir a inconstitucionalidade da lei de entorpecentes diante do juiz?
  8. hit me with music!

  9. Se conhecer o Pedro faz contato pelo sos@growroom.net ou me manda mp!
  10. Gostei muito do Lévi-Strauss! Se curte antropologia vale ler! É bem atual! O do David Nutt comecei a ler ontem, e o cara é foda, invés de se abater com a demissão do conselho de drogas da inglaterra, resolveu escrever esse livro e mostra sua lógica. E esse Ilhas da História ai, dei uma googlada e parece ser bem interessante! Fala algo sobre a pratica de surf pelos nativos dessas ilhas?
  11. Drugs Without the hot air - Minimising the harms of legal and illegal drugs - do David Nutt!
  12. L.A. repeals its ban on pot stores The 11-2 vote to rescind the measure approved in July leaves the city with no law regulating about 1,000 medical marijuana dispensaries. After struggling for years to regulate storefront pot shops, the Los Angeles City Council retreated Tuesday, voting to repeal the carefully crafted ban on medical marijuana dispensaries it approved a few months ago. The move shows the political savvy of the increasingly organized and well-funded network of marijuana activists who sought to place a referendum overturning the ban on the March ballot, when the mayor and eight council seats will be up for grabs. It also leaves Los Angeles, once again, without any law regulating an estimated 1,000 pot shops, which some describe as magnets for crime and others call a source of relief for those who are desperately ill. The council's 11-2 vote came after an impassioned plea from Councilman Bill Rosendahl, a medical marijuana patient who is fighting a rare form of cancer. Looking gaunt and speaking in a faint voice, Rosendahl asked his colleagues how sick patients like him would be able to acquire the drug if the ban remained in place. "Where does anybody go, even a councilman go, to get his medical marijuana?" he said. Like other cities in California, Los Angeles has strained to find a way to balance the state law that permits medical marijuana against federal statutes that continue to make its sale and use a crime. Federal officials recently launched a crackdown on pot dispensaries in the city, leading one council member to suggest that any regulation is beyond L.A.'s control. "That is our relief," Councilman Jose Huizar said of the federal crackdown, which included raids on several dispensaries last week in Eagle Rock, Boyle Heights and other neighborhoods. Dozens of other pot shops received letters ordering them to close within two weeks. But council opponents of dispensaries said they would try to find other ways to shut down marijuana shops by using laws that are already on the books. Immediately after the vote, Councilman Mitchell Englander called on the city to prosecute medical marijuana businesses for violating zoning laws because they are not on the city's list of approved land uses. In another motion Tuesday, exasperated council members called on the Legislature "to address the inadequacies of state law." Council members asked for clarity on what municipalities can do to regulate dispensaries and called for stricter regulations of physicians who provide medical marijuana recommendations. They also said patients should be required to demonstrate six months of medical history to obtain recommendations. The city's ban was enacted in July by council members who complained that neighborhoods were being overrun by dispensaries. It called for storefront marijuana sales to be outlawed, but allowed small groups of patients to cultivate and share the drug on their own. The ban was the last in a string of ordinances the council has adopted since 2007, when the city imposed a moratorium on dispensaries. A loophole in the first law allowed hundreds of new pot shops to proliferate. Subsequent ordinances have generated more than 100 lawsuits from dispensary operators and others, according to the office of City Atty. Carmen Trutanich. Many medical marijuana activists say they agree that there are too many dispensaries, and have asked for regulation. They have called on the city to enact an ordinance supported by Rosendahl and Councilman Paul Koretz that would allow pot shops that opened before the 2007 moratorium to remain. Tuesday's repeal of the ban marked a major victory for the coalition of marijuana activists who came together to put the referendum on the ballot. The effort was led by an advocacy group called Americans for Safe Access, a group of dispensaries called the Greater Los Angeles Collective Alliance and the United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 770, which has organized workers at more than 50 dispensaries. By collecting tens of thousands of signatures to qualify the referendum, the activists forced council members to decide whether to rescind the ordinance or put the matter on the March ballot. Huizar said he believes medical marijuana proponents would have put up a lot of money to fund the referendum to "protect their profits." "They have attorneys, they have lobbyists, they have unions," he said. Huizar accused opponents of the ban of using patients "as a pretense," and said most people who obtain medical marijuana from stores are recreational users. The council heard from several people during Tuesday's meeting who insisted that medical marijuana had been invaluable in helping them cope with their medical problems. None was more effective than Rosendahl. The 67-year-old councilman began taking medical marijuana a decade ago to manage neuropathy, a stinging pain in his feet. He told council members that he used the drug "occasionally at night" until he was diagnosed with ureteral cancer three months ago. The drug has helped him during chemotherapy, he said. He criticized President Obama's handling of the medical marijuana issue and spoke against some of the recent federal raids of dispensaries. "If I can't get marijuana, and it's medically prescribed, what do I do?" he said. Because the vote was not unanimous, the repeal will come back for a second vote next week. LA Times - http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-marijuana-ban-20121003,0,5172705.story
  13. Los Angeles reverte decisão de proibir venda de maconha medicinal O Conselho Municipal da cidade americana de Los Angeles revertou a sua própria decisão tomada há pouco mais de dois meses, de proibir lojas que vendiam maconha medicinal. Em julho, representantes do conselho aprovaram por 11 votos a 2 a decisão de proibir pontos de venda de maconha na segunda maior cidade do país. Mas apesar de os locais que vendem a erva terem autorização para seguir funcionando pelas leis do Estado da Califórnia, eles enfrentam o risco de serem fechados por autoridades federais americanas. O consumo de maconha, mesmo que para fins medicinais, segue sendo ilegal nos Estados Unidos. Lojas que vendem maconha proliferaram em Los Angeles nos últimos anos. E muitos levantam dúvidas sobre a verdadeira natureza dos estabelecimento, sob o argumento de que usuários usam recursos escusos para obter receitas médicas. BBC - http://www.bbc.co.uk/portuguese/ultimas_noticias/2012/10/121003_losangeles_maconha_bg.shtml
  14. O melhor dessa noticia é ver os ativistas do nordeste bem articulados! É pressão no proibicionismo por todos os lados!
  15. Tocaram todos os discos! SETLIST 1 - Não compre, plante 2 - Legalize já 3 - Deisdazseis 4 - Dig dig dig (Hempa) 5 - Fazendo a sua cabeça 6 - Futuro do país 7 - Phunky Buddha 8 - Mary Jane 9 - Bala perdida 10 - Zerovinteum 11 - Queimando tudo 12 - Quem tem seda? 13 - Gorilla grip 14 - Seus amigos 15 - Nega do cabelo duro 16 - Four track 17 - Adoled 18 - 100% Hardcore 19 - Ex-quadrilha da fumaça 20 - Raprockandrollpsicodeliahardcoreragga 21 - Stab 22 - Contexto 23 - Procedência 24 - A culpa é de quem? 25 - Samba makossa (Chico Science & Nação Zumbi) 26 - Mantenha o respeito BIS 27 - Yo quiero fumar (Cypress Hill) 28 - Legalize já 29 - Deisdazseis 30 - Fazendo a sua cabeça 31 - Zerovinteum 32 - Dig dig dig (Hempa)
  16. Alguém tem que lembrar que no Brasil o homicídio já é legalizado, se chama Auto de Resistência e só ao policiais!
  17. Show pressão! Circo voador lotado! Sonzeira! Muita fumaça! Cheese, pineapple, northnemlights e nossa amiga Cindy! Não percam essa turnê, porque os caras estão de volta!
  18. É o PLANET HEMP filha da putaaaaa! Ae os caras estão de volta com tudo! Showzassoooo! Chama a Cindy, tioooo!

    1. playmogil

      playmogil

      que da hora mano.. quem sabe no proximo da pra mim, tava todo mundo

      valew.... o Cindy, que saudade... rsrsrs

    2. japarj

      japarj

      Caralho mané! Que show foi esse! Muito sinistro

      Planet hemp na area!

  19. Se for o caso e seu advogado achar pertinente podemos conversar com ele! Estamos à disposição no sos@growroom.net
  20. Esses nossos funcionários estão muito abusados! Numa hora dessas é legal gravar esse tipo de fala, e também lembrá-los que os salários deles saem do nosso bolso!
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