afghan-maroc*

Green house seed co regular cannabis seeds in addition to the genetics of our cannabis seed varieties, we specially select for the ripeness, size and germination rate 95 of our seeds. Growing marijuana - germination amp vegetative stage weed germination can i buy cannabis seeds marijuana seeds london buy cannibis seeds growing seeds big bud cannabis seeds httpthenichedetective.comphoenixpotentialyabbyabb pl. Can i buy cannabis seeds in - holiday babble - welcome to the holidays can i buy cannabis seeds marijuana seed germination illegal to buy cannabis seeds lowryder grow guide which cannabis seeds httpwww.bse-pix deforumviewtopic php p 1180 1180. Amsterdam marijuana seeds dutch cannabis seeds, worldwide delivery germination of cannabis seeds is illegal in most countries including the u k these seeds are sold by pukka seeds as collectable adult souvenenirs to help preserve the cannabis. homemade pipes and bongs How To Make Bongs

align="center"> On homemade pipes and bongs condensation with olivetol Lander Cannabis Floraison et al

Terlouw, W

Water afghan-maroc* Water afghan-maroc* Water how to make bongs Water afghan-maroc* Water afghan-maroc* Water , how to make bongs 58 (1946)

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Cannabis Seeds Seeds 47 (R=H) a Orange Bud (R=COCH) 58I Chart 1

e the best perfumes and medicines. She also has a very beautiful icaro. 3. Gabat, the master of clairvoyance and telepathic sound. 4. Manchahuarmi, a great warrior, always successful in battle. She gives the virote huan magic dart]. 5. Allimipaica’ a compassionate queen who teaches how to cure with perfume and balsamic ointments 6. Callpaican-Kapak (the one that flies with her coat). She travels the world, because she walks very fast, being therefore able to hunt her enemies. All these queens possess esoteric knowledge and work here with the vegetalistas who have turned themselves into wolves. The queens are seated on splendid chairs placed on embroidered mats. In the centre of the picture are some of the plants used as defence against evil sorcerers. These are the pin6n colorado Jatropha gossypifolia] or pin6n negro. In order to use this plant effectively, one must use those leaves that have five tips, like a human hand. Another plant is the yuca verde green manioc] which is used in ritual baths. Achiote Bixa orellana] is used to cure mal aire, an illness caused by a dead person or supay. Patiquina Dieffenbachia sp.] is used to kill sorcerers. Sacha-ajos Mansoa alliacea] is used as a disinfectant against plagues as well as evil spirits. The leaves of this plant are burned in the evening. Cam uri is a kind of small fruit of orange color which the vegetalistas keep in their chests, in the way they keep the mann. This is used both for healing and causing harm, depending on the intentions of the vegetalista. VISION 46 SEPULTURA TONDURI This vision is called sepultura tonduri Spanish sepultura = grave, funeral], which is a very sad and frightening icaro, sung by a sorcerer to kill a person or his enemy. We see here three vegetalistas who gathered to take the purge. The man on the extreme left, dressed in clothing with steel scales, is a sorcerer who never heals, only kills. That is why the fire coming out of his head is very hot and his aura is red, as if it were dyed with blood. Around his arm he carries a nacanaca snake Micrurus sp.], and all his knowledge can be seen in the yellow- and violetcoloured figures on his head.The other man, dressed in green, is a witch and a sorcerer. He is a witch because he casts his spells so as to imprison a person and do with him as he pleases. He is a sorcerer because he casts a spell to kill the person he chooses.The one dressed in light blue is a perfect master who only heals. His aura is light blue and he shows his knowledge with the light blue and white colours. He carries the virote huani, which consists of glass arrows and a cumaceba Swartzia sp.] bow for use in difficult situations. But if he uses this weapon, he then becomes a criminal. Of the strange beings that appear on the extreme left, the one on the top belongs to the green man, and the other two lower down belong to the witch and the red sorcerer. Two soldiers take from his bed the soul of a muraya, Mostly Indica (F1 hybrid) with exceptionally broad leaves. Lots of resin on leaves as well as flowers, with a musky hash like aroma. Strong physical high. Yields are above average. Short rounded plants. afghan-maroc* How To Make Bongs

afghan-maroc*

, CANNABIS SHOP SEEDS 33, 2995 (1968)

An old Island strain that comes out of Afghani and Blueberry seedlines. Long and fluffy

pointed tree leaf leaf cannabis

to start but thick and sweet with a pinkishhue after afghan-maroc* 8 weeks. Odiferous flowers with intense resin Water Pipes Bongs production, this Statistics Cannabis plant has a homemade pipes and bongs deep green colour on upper leaf surfaces, but the underside of the leaves are light green at first,becoming almost white with crystal at maturity.
Recommended by my carny friend "Resin Rene".
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Green Spirit is a short resiny 8 week strain that crystals up nicely and has a real bomb taste. The only drawback I only tree pointed leaf cannabis see is the mold susceptibility trait inherited from

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its Skunk#1 forefathers.-McgeeGreen Spirit bud rot cannabis is a short resiny 8 week strain that crystals up nicely and has a real bomb taste.
The only drawback I see is the mold susceptibility trait inherited from its Skunk1 forefathers.-Mcgee

1-THC Nabiione (Lilly) Nabitan (SP-I06) (Burroughs Wellcome) CH2C=CH I (:11: ;(oU9H-{CH,h-{}F CH3 A41988 (Abbott) OH CP44001-1 (Pfizer) DMHP Chart 6 Herer homemade pipes and bongs Herer Herer homemade pipes and bongs Herer Plotnikoff, P

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healer with all his shitana [sorcery] powers. There is his supay-masho diabolic bat], whose penetrating waves produce in the victim a sleepy and forgetful weakness so that he can barely defend himself. The healer must raise luminous waves with very powerful colours that dazzle the enemy's eyes, and he calls on his powers of the earth, jungle, water, and sky as a defence. These are from right to left the powers used by the healer: the mantona mama [a large snake] of hypnotic magnetism; the supay-yangunturo [gigantic diabolic armadillo], able to burrow into the earth at great speed in order to re-emerge where the enemy is; the sinchi-ahui powerful eyes] tiger, with a strong magnetism in its eyes to immobilise his rival; the chicua, a bird that can determine the intentions of the enemy; the allpa-raya land ray] that stings and is also able to fly in pursuit of the enemy; the ishkay-huahuasupay ishkay = two, huahua = child], with a tiger's body and a creature's head, that confuses the enemy by making him hear weeping from one place then another place until the enemy is surprised; the mocagua pot] that is actually a ship in which the healer flies around at great speeds; the black tibes, able to dive, experts in water battles because they attack the eyes of the sorcerer; the guacamayo-machaco, a snake with the breasts of a woman and human arms, who throws poisoned daggers; and the sapo-machaco snake toad] who bites like a snake, very quickly, and has a deadly poison. At top right is the queen Nefina, who has the power to fly with her hair of fire. She has a magnetising mirror with luminous waves that bud rot cannabis upon hitting the enemy negate his magic powers. She Water Pipes Bongs is accompanied by aggressive flying snakes and horses neighing battle. Here also are her ladies Lebina and Magg, armed with powerful fans and long hair that emanates mystical powers, which they use like nets to catch enemies. The healer blows with the power given to him by the ayahuasca. From his powerful tingunas come darts against the supay-masho.
The sorcerer is accompa nied by the huaira-umas huaira = air, uma = head, the word meaning "forgetful mind"], snakes that cast a spell that drives the victim crazy, making him forget how to defend himself There are also the ayanahais [eyes of the dead], fireflies that move in flocks and which the sorcerer uses as cigarettes. Further up are the huasi-ukullucos [wasi = house, ukulluku = lizard], who hide in the bathroom and very quickly get into a person's anus when he defecates, bringing about his death. In the middle we see the puka-cunga-shitanero sorcerer bird with a red neck] who can sting sharply the top of the healer's head to extract the powers he posesses. By its side are the aya-pelejos [sloth of the dead] who turn into immense giants who wound with their sharp claws and bite like snakes. Then there are the huairahuacas bulls of the wind] who roar like thunder, confusing their victims, and the chusco-rikhealer with all his shitana sorcery] powers.
There is his supay-masho diabolic bat], whose penetrating waves produce in the victim a sleepy and forgetful weakness so that he can barely defend himself. The healer must raise luminous waves with very powerful colours that dazzle the enemy's eyes, and he calls on his powers of the earth, jungle, water, and sky as a defence. These are from right to left the powers used by the healer: the mantona mama a large snake] of hypnotic magnetism; the supay-yangunturo gigantic diabolic armadillo], able to burrow into the earth at great speed in order to re-emerge where the enemy is; the sinchi-ahui powerful eyes] tiger, with a strong magnetism in its eyes to immobilise his rival; the chicua, a bird that can determine the intentions of the enemy; the allpa-raya land ray] that stings and is also able to fly in pursuit of the enemy; the ishkay-huahuasupay ishkay = two, huahua = child], with a tiger's body and a creature's head, that confuses the enemy by making him hear weeping from one place then another place until the enemy is surprised; the mocagua pot] that is actually a ship in which the healer flies around at great speeds; the black tibes, able to dive, experts in water battles because they attack the eyes of the sorcerer; the guacamayo-machaco, a snake with the breasts of a woman and human arms, who throws poisoned daggers; and the sapo-machaco snake toad] who bites like a snake, very quickly, and has a deadly poison. At top right is the queen Nefina, who has the power to fly with her hair of fire. She has a magnetising mirror with luminous waves that upon hitting the enemy negate his magic powers. She is accompanied by aggressive flying snakes and horses neighing battle. Here also are her ladies Lebina and Magg, armed with powerful fans and long hair that emanates Use Of Cannabis mystical powers, which they use like nets to catch enemies. The healer blows with the power given to him by the ayahuasca.
From his powerful tingunas come darts against the supay-masho. The sorcerer is accompa nied by the huaira-umas huaira = air, uma = head, the word meaning "forgetful mind"], snakes that cast a spell that drives the victim crazy, making him forget how to defend himself There are also the ayanahais eyes of the dead], fireflies that move in flocks and which the sorcerer uses as cigarettes. Further up are the huasi-ukullucos wasi = house, ukulluku = lizard], who hide in the bathroom and very quickly get into a person's anus when he defecates, bringing about his death. In the middle we see the puka-cunga-shitanero sorcerer bird with a red neck] who can sting sharply the top of the healer's head to extract the powers he posesses. By its side are the aya-pelejos sloth of the dead] who turn into immense giants who wound with their sharp claws and bite like snakes. Then there are the huairahuacas bulls of the wind] who roar like thunder, confusing their victims, and the chusco-rikhealer with all his shitana [sorcery powers. There is his supay-masho diabolic bat, whose penetrating waves produce in the victim a sleepy and forgetful weakness so that he can barely defend himself.
The healer must raise luminous waves with very powerful colours that dazzle the enemy's eyes, and he calls on his powers of the earth, jungle, water, and sky as a defence. These are from right to left the powers used by the healer: the mantona mama [a large snake of hypnotic magnetism; the supay-yangunturo [gigantic diabolic armadillo, able to burrow into the earth at great speed in order to re-emerge where the enemy is; the sinchi-ahui [powerful eyes tiger, with a strong magnetism in its eyes to immobilise his rival; the chicua, a bird that can determine the intentions of the enemy; the allpa-raya [land ray that stings and is also able to fly in pursuit of the enemy; the ishkay-huahuasupay ishkay = two, huahua = child, with a tiger's body and a creature's head, that confuses the enemy by making him hear weeping from one place then another place until the enemy is surprised; the mocagua pot that is actually a ship in which the healer flies around at great speeds; the black tibes, able to dive, experts in water battles because they attack the eyes of the sorcerer; the guacamayo-machaco, a snake with the breasts of a woman and human arms, who throws poisoned daggers; and the sapo-machaco snake toad who bites like a snake, very quickly, and has a deadly poison. At top right is the queen Nefina, who has the power to fly with her hair of fire. She has a magnetising mirror with luminous waves that upon hitting the enemy negate his magic powers. She is accompanied by aggressive flying snakes and horses neighing battle. Here also are her ladies Lebina and Magg, armed with powerful fans and long hair that emanates mystical powers, which they use like nets to catch enemies. The healer blows with bud rot cannabis the power given to him by the ayahuasca. From his powerful tingunas come darts against the supay-masho. The sorcerer is accompa nied by the huaira-umas huaira = air, uma = head, the word meaning "forgetful mind", snakes that cast a spell that drives the victim crazy, making him forget how to defend himself There are also the ayanahais eyes of the dead, fireflies that move in flocks and which the sorcerer uses as cigarettes. Further up are the huasi-ukullucos wasi = house, ukulluku = lizard, who hide in the bathroom and very quickly get into a person's anus when he defecates, bringing about his death. In the middle we see the puka-cunga-shitanero [sorcerer bird with a red neck who can sting sharply the top of the healer's head to extract the powers he posesses. By its side are the aya-pelejos sloth of the dead who turn into immense giants who wound with their sharp claws and bite like snakes. Then there are the huairahuacas [bulls of the wind who roar like thunder, confusing their victims, and the chusco-rikhealer with all his shitana sorcery powers. There is his supay-masho diabolic bat, whose penetrating waves produce in the victim a sleepy and forgetful weakness so that he can barely defend himself.
The healer must raise luminous waves with very powerful colours that dazzle the enemy's eyes, and he calls on his powers of the earth, jungle, water, and sky as a defence. These are from right to left the powers used by the healer: the mantona mama a large snake of hypnotic magnetism; the supay-yangunturo gigantic diabolic armadillo, able to burrow into the earth at great speed in order to re-emerge where the enemy is; the sinchi-ahui powerful eyes tiger, with a strong magnetism in its eyes to immobilise his rival; the chicua, a bird that can determine the intentions of the enemy; the allpa-raya land ray that stings and is also able to fly in pursuit of the enemy; the ishkay-huahuasupay ishkay = two, huahua = child, with a tiger's body and a creature's head, that confuses the enemy by making him hear weeping from one place then another place until the enemy is surprised; the mocagua pot that is actually a ship in which the healer flies around at great speeds; the black tibes, able to dive, experts in water battles because they attack the eyes of the sorcerer; the guacamayo-machaco, a snake with the breasts of a woman and human arms, who throws poisoned daggers; and the sapo-machaco snake toad who bites like a snake, very quickly, and has a deadly poison. At top right is the queen Nefina, who has the power to fly with her hair of fire. She has a magnetising mirror with luminous waves that upon hitting the enemy negate his magic powers. She is accompanied by aggressive flying snakes and horses neighing battle.
Here also are her ladies Lebina and Magg, armed with powerful fans and long hair that emanates mystical powers, which they use like nets to catch enemies. The healer blows with the power given to him by the ayahuasca. From his powerful tingunas come darts against the supay-masho. The sorcerer is accompa nied by the huaira-umas huaira = air, uma = head, the word meaning "forgetful mind", snakes that cast a spell that drives the victim crazy, making him forget how to defend himself There are also the ayanahais eyes of the dead, fireflies that move in flocks and which the sorcerer uses as cigarettes. Further up are the huasi-ukullucos wasi = house, ukulluku = lizard, who hide in the bathroom and very quickly get into a person's anus when he defecates, bringing about his death. In the middle we see the puka-cunga-shitanero sorcerer bird with a red neck who can sting sharply the top of the healer's head to extract the powers he posesses. By its side are the aya-pelejos sloth of the dead who turn into immense giants who wound with their sharp claws and bite like snakes. Then there are the huairahuacas bulls of the wind who roar like thunder, confusing their victims, and the chusco-rik

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“Bank: Positronics Supplier: Jock Started with 10 seeds all germinated. One sprout was lagging far behind the others and it was put out of its misery. Ended up with 1 female, 5 males, and 3 herms. Again, like the rest of the Positronic stock grown out so far, these plants were close to identical in appearance. They looked very much like the NL x Shiva that also came from Posi. To bad it didn’t take after the NL x Shiva in all respects. The one female was not very impressive grown from seed and turned herm. The buzz was acceptable but it grew like chit. Very airy bud with little resin and a lot of leaf. The buzz made it worth keeping for a harvest from clone one time to see if it could redeem itself. Because the buzz got better it was given one more chance even though it still showed male flowers, not a lot but too many. The second time grown from clone it showed male flowers again and didn’t improve much in quality or growth. So now it’s dead. To be fair it could be that this plant just couldn’t handle being flowered so early and freaked, doubtful but possible." - flick

47 Cannabis Seeds Nirvana (R=H) a Image Cannabis (R=COCH) 58I Chart 1

Ben-Zvi et al With soil you need to change to plain water at least a week and preferably two weeks before harvest depending on how much soil in each pot. Don't use 3 purge bong for sale slow release ferts because they are very hard to clear out. Outdoor farmers who need to use slow release can time it and use just liquid ferts toward the end. So now you have harvested right at the peak. You cleared out the

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nutes beforehand and you have Jack Herer fragrant, spicy highly potent buds you want to preserve.
ns supreme.
The "proofs" which have been submitted on this issue are perfect illustrations of our earlier axiom concerning the need to shore up propaganda with pseudoscientific accoutrements. Probably no area of endeavor better illustrates our principle concerning the "politics of reality" than this, the connection between marijuana and crime. The causal connection between marijuana and crime exists only in the minds of men. Paper, as Stalin so cynically observed—and, indeed, put into practice—can be made to print anything. The studies most often cited to prove that marijuana causes crime are those by Munch ("Marihuana and Crime"), Wolff (Marihuana in Latin America), Gardikas ("Hashish and Crime"), an unpublished manuscript by Victor Vogel, and several works by the Indian Chopras. We will examine these reports. Half of Munch's eight-page article on marijuana and crime[20] is taken up with enumeration of crimes committed, supposedly, under the influence of marijuana. ( Or so the caption indicates. There is no indication of how the police detected marijuana intoxication. During the entire period when all of the enumerated crimes were committed, there was no known method for detecting the presence of marijuana in the human body. In some of the cases, clues were mentioned, but most of them omit references to the drug.) Sixty-nine cases are included, going back to the 1930S (in one case, back to 1921, before the existence of marijuana laws). A typical case might be "Smoked marijuana for years; held up three taxi-cabs," or "Negro, shot and killed while attempting to holdup grocer in Harlem; plea guilty." Only a glance back at the discussion of the enumerative method of reasoning illuminates the worth of this procedure. Another section of Munch's article is an enumeration of "references" which lists works, most of which assert the connection between marijuana and crime without empirical documentation.
A table presents, supposedly, effects of marijuana on the human mind and body. Several of these effects have been empirically demonstrated to be false: hypoglycemia (decrease in blood sugar), a decrease in the rate of respiration, and mydriasis (marked dilation of the pupils), for instance.
Other effects are merely asserted and are, by all known accounts, highly improbable: "chronic exposure produces brain lesions," "death by cardiac failure some individuals after l00 to 200 times therapeutic dose,"21] "hypersensitivity sensation of ants running over skin" (not one of my 200 respondents described this particular sensation), "diarrhea or constipation," etc. One wonders, after this inventory of effects, why anyone would ever try the drug; if one believed that these effects ever took place, the fact that millions of people in this country (17 of 28)4/15/2004 1:08:08 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 9 have tried it would be puzzling. Another study commonly cited by police in an effort to demonstrate the criminal tendenns supreme.
The "proofs" which have been submitted on this issue are perfect illustrations of our earlier axiom concerning the need to shore up propaganda with pseudoscientific accoutrements. Probably no area of endeavor better illustrates our principle concerning the "politics of reality" than this, the connection between marijuana and crime. The causal connection between marijuana and crime exists only in the minds of men. Paper, as Stalin so cynically observed—and, indeed, put into practice—can be made to print anything. The studies most often cited to prove that marijuana causes crime are those by Munch ("Marihuana and Crime"), Wolff (Marihuana in Latin America), Gardikas ("Hashish and Crime"), an unpublished manuscript by Victor Vogel, and several works by the Indian Chopras.
We will examine these reports. Half of Munch's eight-page article on marijuana and crime20] is taken up with enumeration of crimes committed, supposedly, under the influence of marijuana.
( Or so the caption indicates. There is no indication of how the police detected marijuana intoxication. During the entire period when all of the enumerated crimes were committed, there was no known method for detecting the presence of marijuana in the human body. In some of the cases, clues were mentioned, but most of them omit references to the drug.) Sixty-nine cases are included, going back to the 1930S (in one case, back to 1921, before the existence of marijuana laws).
A typical case might be "Smoked marijuana for years; held up three taxi-cabs," or "Negro, shot and killed while attempting to holdup grocer in Harlem; plea guilty." Only a glance back at the discussion of the enumerative method of reasoning illuminates the worth of this procedure. Another section of Munch's article is an enumeration of "references" which lists works, most of which assert the connection between marijuana and crime without empirical documentation.
A table presents, supposedly, effects of marijuana on the human mind and body. Several of these effects have been empirically demonstrated to be false: hypoglycemia (decrease in blood sugar), a decrease in the rate of respiration, and mydriasis (marked dilation of the pupils), for instance. Other effects are merely asserted and are, by all known accounts, highly improbable: "chronic exposure produces brain lesions," "death by cardiac failure some individuals after l00 to 200 times therapeutic dose,"21] "hypersensitivity sensation of ants running over skin" (not one of my 200 respondents described this particular sensation), "diarrhea or constipation," etc. One wonders, after this inventory of effects, why anyone would ever try the drug; if one believed that these effects ever took place, the fact that millions of people in this country (17 of 28)4/15/2004 1:08:08 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 9 have tried it would be puzzling. Another study commonly cited by police in an effort to demonstrate the criminal tendenns supreme.
The "proofs" which have been submitted on this issue are perfect illustrations of our earlier axiom concerning the need to shore up propaganda with pseudoscientific accoutrements. Probably no area of endeavor better illustrates our principle concerning the "politics of reality" than this, the connection between marijuana and crime. The causal connection between marijuana and crime exists only in the minds of men. Paper, as Stalin so cynically observed—and, indeed, put into practice—can be made to print anything. The studies most often cited to prove that marijuana causes crime are those by Munch ("Marihuana and Crime"), Wolff (Marihuana in Latin America), Gardikas ("Hashish and Crime"), an unpublished manuscript by Victor Vogel, and several works by the Indian Chopras. We will examine these reports.
Half of Munch's eight-page article on marijuana and crime[20 is taken up with enumeration of crimes committed, supposedly, under the influence of marijuana. ( Or so the caption indicates.
There is no indication of how the police detected marijuana intoxication. During the entire period when all of the enumerated crimes were committed, there was no known method for detecting the presence of marijuana in the human body. In some of the cases, clues were mentioned, but most of them omit references to the drug.) Sixty-nine cases are included, going back to the 1930S (in one case, back to 1921, before the existence of marijuana laws).
A typical case might be "Smoked marijuana for years; held up three taxi-cabs," or "Negro, shot and killed while attempting to holdup grocer in Harlem; plea guilty." Only a glance back at the discussion of the enumerative method of reasoning illuminates the worth of this procedure. Another section of Munch's article is an enumeration of "references" which lists works, most of which assert the connection between marijuana and crime without empirical documentation. A table presents, supposedly, effects of marijuana on the human mind and body. Several of these effects have been empirically demonstrated to be false: hypoglycemia (decrease in blood sugar), a decrease in the rate of respiration, and mydriasis (marked dilation of the pupils), for instance.
Other effects are merely asserted and are, by all known accounts, highly improbable: "chronic exposure produces brain lesions," "death by cardiac failure some individuals after l00 to 200 times therapeutic dose,"[21 "hypersensitivity sensation of ants running over skin" (not one of my 200 respondents described this particular sensation), "diarrhea or constipation," etc. Cannabis Floraison One wonders, after this inventory of effects, why anyone would ever try the drug; if one believed that these effects ever took place, the fact that millions of people in this country (17 of 28)4/15/2004 1:08:08 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 9 have tried it would be puzzling. Another study commonly cited by police in an effort to demonstrate the criminal tendenns supreme. The "proofs" which have been submitted on this issue are perfect illustrations of our earlier axiom concerning the need to shore up propaganda with pseudoscientific accoutrements. Probably no area of endeavor better illustrates our principle concerning the "politics of reality" than this, the connection between marijuana and crime. The causal connection between marijuana and crime exists only in the minds of men. Paper, as Stalin so cynically observed—and, indeed, put into practice—can be made to print anything.
The studies most often cited to prove that marijuana causes crime are those by Munch ("Marihuana and Crime"), Wolff (Marihuana in Latin America), Gardikas ("Hashish and Crime"), an unpublished manuscript by Victor Vogel, and several works by the Indian Chopras. We will examine these reports. Half of Munch's eight-page article on marijuana and crime20 is taken up with enumeration of crimes committed, supposedly, under the influence of marijuana. ( Or so the caption indicates. There is no indication of how the police detected marijuana intoxication.
During the entire period when all of the enumerated crimes were committed, there was no known method for detecting the presence of marijuana in the human body. In some of the cases, clues were mentioned, but most of them omit references to the drug.) Sixty-nine cases are included, going back to the 1930S (in one case, back to 1921, before the existence of marijuana laws). A typical case might be "Smoked marijuana for years; held up three taxi-cabs," or "Negro, shot and killed while attempting to holdup grocer in Harlem; plea guilty." Only a glance back at the discussion of the enumerative method of reasoning illuminates the worth of this procedure. Another section of Munch's article is an enumeration of "references" which lists works, most of which assert the connection between marijuana and crime without empirical documentation. A table presents, supposedly, effects of marijuana on the human mind and body. Several of these effects have been empirically demonstrated to be false: hypoglycemia (decrease in blood sugar), a decrease in the rate of respiration, and mydriasis (marked dilation of the pupils), for instance. Other effects are merely asserted and are, by all known accounts, highly improbable: "chronic exposure produces brain lesions," "death by cardiac failure some individuals after l00 to 200 times therapeutic dose,"21 "hypersensitivity sensation of ants running over skin" (not one of my 200 respondents described this particular sensation), "diarrhea or constipation," etc. One wonders, after this inventory of effects, why anyone would ever try the drug; if one believed that these effects ever took place, the fact that millions of people in this country (17 of 28)4/15/2004 1:08:08 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 9 have tried it would be puzzling. Another study commonly cited by police in an effort to demonstrate the criminal tenden
a is not damaging at all, it would be necessary to produce evidence that all cases of marijuana use did not result in damage—all individuals at all times—an obvious impossibility. Whereas to show that it is damaging in any degree, only a few scattered cases need be produced. (Even assuming that the "damage" can be traced to the marijuana, a question which is, itself, problematic.) Consequently, there is no conceivable evidence which can be presented to someone with a strong antimarijuana position which he will accept as a demonstration of the drug's comparative harmlessness. (8 of 16)4/15/2004 1:03:47 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 3 Strategies of Discreditation Labeling has political implications. By devising a linguistic category with specific connotations, one is designing armaments for a battle; by having it accepted and used, one has scored a major victory. For instance, the term "psychedelic" has a clear prodrug bias: it says that the mind works best when under the influence of this type of drug. (Moreover, one of the psychedelic drug proselytizers, in search of a term which would describe the impact of these drugs, rejected "psychodelic" as having negative overtones of psychosis.) The term "hallucinogen" is equally biased since an hallucination is, in our civilization at least, unreal, illusory, and therefore undesirable; the same holds for the term "psychotomimetic," capable of producing a madness-like state. The semantics and linguistics of the drug issue form an essential component of the ideological skirmishes. 17] As an example of how labeling influences one's posture toward a phenomenon, note that the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs has jurisdiction over "addicting" drugs, which supposedly includes marijuana, while the Food and Drug Administration handles "habit-forming" drugs. Because of this jurisdictional division, the Bureau is forced into the absurd position of having to classify marijuana as an addicting drug, and to support this contention, it supplies drug categorizations that follow jurisdictional lines,[18] as if they had some sort of correspondence in the real world. However, the Bureau seems not to take its own classifications seriously, since whenever the issue is discussed by its members, it is emphasized that marijuana is not addicting in the classical sense, but it produces a "psychological dependence.
"19] "Drug abuse" is such a linguistic device. It is often used by physicians and by those in medically related fields.
Encountering the use of the term, one has the impression that something quite measurable is being referred to, something very much like a disease, an undesirable condition which is in need of remedy. The term, thus, simultaneously serves two functions: it claims clinical objectivity and it discredits the action that it categorizes. In fact, there is no such objectivity in the term; its use is baldly political. Drug abuse is the use of a drug that influea is not damaging at all, it would be necessary to produce evidence that all cases of marijuana use did not result in damage—all individuals at all times—an obvious impossibility. Whereas to show that it is damaging in any degree, only a few scattered cases need be produced. (Even assuming that the "damage" can be traced to the marijuana, a question which is, itself, problematic.
) Consequently, there is no conceivable evidence which can be presented to someone with a strong antimarijuana position which he will accept as a demonstration of the drug's comparative harmlessness. (8 of 16)4/15/2004 1:03:47 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 3 Strategies of Discreditation Labeling has political implications.
By devising a linguistic category with specific connotations, one is designing armaments for a battle; by having it accepted and used, one has scored a major victory. For instance, the term "psychedelic" has a clear prodrug bias: it says that the mind works best when under the influence of this type of drug. (Moreover, one of the psychedelic drug proselytizers, in search of a term which would describe the impact of these drugs, rejected "psychodelic" as having negative overtones of psychosis.) The term "hallucinogen" is equally biased since an hallucination is, in our civilization at least, unreal, illusory, and Marijuana Seed therefore undesirable; the same holds for the term "psychotomimetic," capable of producing a madness-like state. The semantics and linguistics of the drug issue form an essential component of the ideological skirmishes. 17] As an example of how labeling influences one's posture toward a phenomenon, note that the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs has jurisdiction over "addicting" drugs, which supposedly includes marijuana, while the Food and Drug Administration handles "habit-forming" drugs. Because of this jurisdictional division, the Bureau is forced into the absurd position of having to classify marijuana as an addicting drug, and to support this contention, it supplies drug categorizations that follow jurisdictional lines,18] as if they had some sort of correspondence in the real world. However, the Bureau seems not to take its own classifications seriously, since whenever the issue is discussed by its members, it is emphasized that marijuana is not addicting in the classical sense, but it produces a "psychological dependence."19] "Drug abuse" is such a linguistic device. It is often used by physicians and by those in medically related fields. Encountering the use of the term, one has the impression that something quite measurable is being referred to, something very much like a disease, an undesirable condition which is in need of remedy. The term, thus, simultaneously serves two functions: it claims clinical objectivity and it discredits the action that it categorizes.
In fact, there is no such objectivity in the term; its use is baldly political. Drug abuse is the use of a drug that influea is not damaging at all, it would be necessary to produce evidence that all cases of marijuana use did not result in damage—all individuals at all times—an obvious impossibility. Whereas to show that it is damaging in any degree, only a few scattered cases need be produced.
(Even assuming that the "damage" can be traced to the marijuana, a question which is, itself, problematic.) Consequently, there is no conceivable evidence which can be presented to someone with a strong antimarijuana position which he will accept as a demonstration of the drug's comparative harmlessness. (8 of 16)4/15/2004 1:03:47 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 3 Strategies of Discreditation Labeling has political implications. By devising a linguistic category with specific connotations, one is designing armaments for a battle; by having it accepted and used, one has scored a major victory.
For instance, the term "psychedelic" has a clear prodrug bias: it says that the mind works best when under the influence of this type of drug. (Moreover, one of the psychedelic drug proselytizers, in search of a term which would describe the impact of these drugs, rejected "psychodelic" as having negative overtones of psychosis.) The term "hallucinogen" is equally biased since an hallucination is, in our civilization at least, unreal, illusory, and therefore undesirable; the same holds for the term "psychotomimetic," capable of producing a madness-like state.
The semantics and linguistics of the drug issue form an essential component of the ideological skirmishes. 17 As an example of how labeling influences one's posture toward a phenomenon, note that the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs has jurisdiction over "addicting" drugs, which supposedly includes marijuana, while the Food and Drug Administration handles "habit-forming" drugs. Because of this jurisdictional division, the Bureau is forced into the absurd position of having to classify marijuana as an addicting drug, and to support this contention, it supplies drug categorizations that follow jurisdictional lines,[18 as if they had some sort of correspondence in the real world. However, the Bureau seems not to take its own classifications seriously, since whenever the issue is discussed by its members, it is emphasized that marijuana is not addicting in the classical sense, but it produces a "psychological dependence."19 "Drug abuse" is such a linguistic device. It is often used by physicians and by those in medically related fields. Encountering the use of the term, one has the impression that something quite measurable is being referred to, something very much like a disease, an undesirable condition which is in need of remedy. The term, thus, simultaneously serves two functions: it claims clinical objectivity and it discredits the action that it categorizes. In fact, there is no such objectivity in the term; its use is baldly political. Drug abuse is the use of a drug that influea is not damaging at all, it would be necessary to produce evidence that all cases of marijuana use did not result in damage—all individuals at all times—an obvious impossibility. Whereas to show that it is damaging in any degree, only a few scattered cases need be produced.
(Even assuming that the "damage" can be traced to the marijuana, a question which is, itself, problematic.) Consequently, there is no conceivable evidence which can be presented to someone with a strong antimarijuana position which he will accept as a demonstration of the drug's comparative harmlessness. (8 of 16)4/15/2004 1:03:47 AM The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 3 Strategies of Discreditation Labeling has political implications. By devising a linguistic category with specific connotations, one is designing armaments for a battle; by having it accepted and used, one has scored a major victory. For instance, the term "psychedelic" has a clear prodrug bias: it says that the mind works best when under the influence of this type of drug. (Moreover, one of the psychedelic drug proselytizers, in search of a term which would describe the impact of these drugs, rejected "psychodelic" as having negative overtones of psychosis.
) The term "hallucinogen" is equally biased since an hallucination is, in our civilization at least, unreal, illusory, and therefore undesirable; the same holds for the term "psychotomimetic," capable of producing a madness-like state. The semantics and linguistics of the drug issue form an essential component of the ideological skirmishes. 17 As an example of how labeling influences one's posture toward a phenomenon, note that the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs has jurisdiction over "addicting" drugs, which supposedly includes marijuana, while the Food and Drug Administration handles "habit-forming" drugs. Because of this jurisdictional division, the Bureau is forced into the absurd position of having Nirvana Cannabis Seeds to classify marijuana as an addicting drug, and to support this contention, it supplies drug categorizations that follow jurisdictional lines,18 as if they had some sort of correspondence in the real world. However, the Bureau seems not to take its own classifications seriously, since whenever the issue is discussed by its members, it is emphasized that marijuana is not addicting in the classical sense, but it produces a "psychological dependence."19 "Drug abuse" is such a linguistic device. It is often used by physicians and by those in medically related fields. Encountering the use of the term, one has the impression that something quite measurable is being referred to, something very much like a 3 Purge Bong For Sale disease, an undesirable condition which is in need of remedy. The term, thus, simultaneously serves two functions: it claims clinical objectivity and it discredits the action that it categorizes. In fact, there is no such objectivity in the term; its use is baldly political. Drug abuse is the use of a drug that influe Nirvana Cannabis Seeds

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"We have been working from a m39 mother plant that is from 1987. This is absolutely the most powerful strain I have ever come across. I have purchased & grown many of the newer bragged on strains and still am looking for something that will even come close to this strain. I'm not saying that this variety is the most potent, just that in my over 15 yr. search this is what I've found to be the strongest so far."-Clone "M39 by SSSC was "Basic#5"/Sk#1, but I BELIEVE "Basic#5" was actually NL#5, but SSSC weren't allowed to say so. You're actually looking for NL#5/Sk#1 which is available from Sensi Seed Bank, they call it "ShivaSkunk". –MrSoul

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(R=H) a (R=COCH) 58I Chart 1

Blow-by-blow description of the generations: P.50 = Heavy, single-cola type plants with mellow Culture Cannabis high (too much influence from the ShivaSkunk) Sweet fruity scent/flavor. Unstable in most traits - for example, 10 days difference in fastest/slowest maturation period in a group of 20 seedlings.
P.75 = Plants leaning MUCH more in the direction of Princess in floral cluster and bud structure, scent/flavor turned more "tropical" like pineapple.
The stability was becoming better - two major phenotypes; short & dense (potent too) or tall/HUGE (Not so potent).
P.
88 = Renamed Cinderella 88 when first released on the market. It grows fast and produces excellent yields of FROSTY buds in 7 weeks! Generally uniform seedlings with minor differences in floral formation and some height variance, but the smoke is quite consistent from all plants - Dense, heavy nuggets of fruity scented & flavored (like wild berries) and PIPES HOMEMADE AND AND covered in resin glands, the dried buds have distinctly ORANGE pistils.

128 The analog 240 126 was obtained from 237 on treatment with dimethylaminopropyl chloride in the presence of butyllithium

I don't have anything against some Ruderalis genes; the Doc has created a line that will grow outdoors in higher latitudes. He's a breeder, not a magician. I'm disappointed mainly because I had planned to produce my own seeds to avoid the paranoia ordering out-of-country causes me. If his seeds stock is so variable, it suggests that Niagara is closer to an F1 or F2 hybrid than a stable variety--something like a F1 of one type, though perhaps a stabilized hybrid, and an F1 of another, such as Ruderalis indica. On the plus side, the other female is big, producing a good yield, has a moderate covering of trichomes on the distal parts of the bigger bud leaves; has a very pleasant, aromatic odor (none of the plants were stinky, though the grow-room smell was evident during the last few weeks of vegetative stage and first few weeks of flowering phase). , 58 (1946)

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P “Cinderella 99 will be available from Brothers Grimm in January (’99). This is the "cubed" generation resulting from backcrossing Princess 3 times with her successive male offspring. Expect a true-breeding strain with the same short flowering period, tropical fruit flavour, and soaring Pipes Homemade And Bongs cerebral high. “ - MrSoul It was thus shown that epimerization at C4 is the favored process and is accompanied by a lesser amount of C-3 epimerization or racemization

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