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The Book of the Week is “Brave New Weed, Adventures into the Uncharted World of Cannabis” by Joe Dolce, published in 2016. The author interviewed several individuals in various places associated with growing, using and /or selling parts of the marijuana (or cannabis) plant in the medicinal, recreational and entrepreneurial realms, and related his own personal experiences with it. The terms “marijuana” and “cannabis” will be used interchangeably hereinafter, to refer to the whole plant but other terms will be used to refer to specific parts, such as buds.
At the book’s writing, many American states had yet to pass laws decriminalizing or regulating cannabis. Dolce spoke with people who dispensed it for medicinal purposes, legally and illegally. On the latter score, some Americans dispense marijuana to treat medical conditions without proper licensing or credentials. But they aren’t just out to make a buck. They truly care about their patients. They do their homework, experimenting with the chemicals in cannabis, and consulting with others in Israel, Spain, the United Kingdom, Scandinavia, the Netherlands and Czech Republic.
Anecdotally, Dolce was told that cannabis contains double the carcinogen benzopyrene that tobacco does, yet cannabis can be used to allow easier breathing in treating COPD in the short term. He also related that preliminary studies showed that people who were potheads in their youth are turning out to have lower rates of Alzheimer’s disease in their old age, than those who weren’t.
There is still so much secrecy and false information that is disseminated accidentally and / or intentionally about cannabis, that Americans have had difficulty in learning the truth about it. The author attempted to state facts when he found a reliable source of them. One such fact is that cannabis-related scientific research on mice cannot be perfectly extrapolated to humans because humans are an infinitely more complicated life-form than mice. Israel is one place whose laws have allowed extensive marijuana research on humans.
Dolce tried a concentrated cannabis oil illegally dispensed from an individual in California. It made him so ultra-sensitive to all the stimuli around him– the lights, road, sidewalk, other cars, the sky, the car radio, etc.– he was having trouble driving. On a related note, in 2023, in Boca Raton, Florida near State Road 441, drivers would know they were similarly overstimulated when they saw the wording and graphics of a certain billboard. Without explanation, the billboard disappeared in a few weeks.
On a negative note, the places that grow cannabis-buds are extreme electricity hogs– their bills can run into the thousands of dollars monthly after a Colorado state discount is subtracted. All business is done in cash, and the IRS collects a large amount of tax revenue. Further, high-volume consumers of cannabis lose their ability to dream while sleeping.
Nonetheless, the author’s ideal vision for the future of cannabis is one in which Americans spurn Big Agriculture, Big Tobacco and Big Pharma in favor of toxin-free, contaminant-free, and environmentally-friendly products they can use to relieve their suffering; with the profits of such an industry reinvested in the local community. Good luck with that.
It still remains to be seen what kinds of regulation various states will impose, given their current political climates, and how much of a role the federal government will continue to play– given the nature of political donors and lobbyists, voter-demographics, and propaganda wars.
Read the book to learn about: how hemp is different from marijuana; the best way to store buds to extract optimal medicinal benefit; Colorado’s decriminalization of cannabis that began in 2009 and the legalization of dispensing it that began in January 2014; various dispensing businesses there; marijuana’s different forms including oils, sprays and vaporizers; what transpired when, in 2015, Dolce quit cannabis for sixty days; the lingo, the etiquette, dosing, strains, forms, biological effects, and interesting medical factoids including, “Cannabis is so dose specific that large and small amounts create opposite effects.”