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Good article…
https://www.foxnews.com/health/several-groups-say-cannabis-may-help-aging-americans-manage-pain
Several groups say cannabis may help aging Americans manage pain
Some studies show that marijuana-using seniors reduced their intake of opioids and pharmaceuticals
Bret Baier By Bret Baier , Amy Munneke Fox News
Published June 10, 2024 7:23pm EDT
Close...
Walter Conkrite or Spanky the clown gets that honor.
Go PVSP!
(burp)
Pretty bad I’m stuck for over $173k in profits thus far. Would have been much worse had I sold everything at .01!!!!
Pvsp
Man, is this spin-off ever going to happen. I can't believe this thing went to shit like it did.
Sounds about right. Looks like PVSP is in even worst shape than even KRTL. And, that's really bad. How long you been stuck with this loser?
Kaptain Kangaroo (with Mr. Green jeans)
Kevin Kreisler - google Kevin Kreisler fraud - for lots and lots of bedtime reading
What does the acronym "KK" stand for?
KK, and others, seem like a network of business men plays a couple of companies in stock market.
The most important thing: don't believe anything they tweet, all what they want is a couple of thousands from the market every month.
They have many promises under their clown's sleeves, but no real business behind.
I'm not following PVSP much other than knowing they are a KRTL affiliate. I do own KRTL shares, turned out to be real loser for me.
What does KK stand for?
I do find it very interesting that Paul Riss can be connected to so many OTC companies that turn out to be nothing but losers in the end.
He is a KK teaser. He is enslaved to him somehow, but I never have been able to figure it out exactly.
Just another PVSP teaser.
I think for the most part, that the OTC companies that Paul Riss can be associated with over the years are just his side hussle of some sort. Many have fallen of the radar completely and others seem to always fall short of expectations. It does appear to be something of a pattern to occur so many time before.
$PVSP Our CEO talking about rescheduling cannabis on the Leaf Podcast https://t.co/1voSvp2mEX
— Pervasip Corp (@PervasipC) June 7, 2024
I agree, maybe 1s but nothing else.
When will German Burtscher say anything? Those 3 (20M) looks tasty, but will not add anymore at this point.
You don’t have to love PVSP you just have to embrace it
Incompetence at every level is astonishing!!!Amateurs on display!!!
Zen
"Wreaks of a strong smell of bullshit IMO."
Exactly!
🤡
Tragic but somehow funny, how can you be so slow in executing anything?
Management says they were aware of burglaries in the surrounding area, yet did nothing to prevent their own facility from being burglarized? no security guards, no monitoring system? alarms? to protect a multi million dollar grow operation? Wreaks of a strong smell of bullshit IMO.
LOL .. why .05?
50 cents by the end of the year .. stock of the year
GoingGreenPick ..AKA BJones ,, AKA Paul Riss
Wonder where you’ll go when we break out above .05. I’m betting on, not here. Good luck Shake Down.
Well, this is being drug out for sure-Can't wait to hear the end results. Should be good. lol
Sure would be nice to get some kind of update from Management, Sigh
Same difference at this point
Good one 🤣
Why use the stolen money to buy their shares? This is a sin!
The kosher way is to issue themselves free shares 😂
They could at least buy shares
Total agreement. Let’s get an update on Spinoff- and everything attached to it
They just stole the inventory, sold it private, ripped the cash, and now want money from the market to buy new weed! 🤣
Congrats weed holders 😂
Come on PVSP, the market is hot and we are ice cold. Really tired of this forever waiting game. Management gone fishing?
Marijuana is currently classified on the same level as heroin and as more dangerous than fentanyl. We are on the path to changing that. pic.twitter.com/TE1iKFVF3T
— Vice President Kamala Harris (@VP) May 19, 2024
They posted it on their Instagram. They seem to be active on there now. https://www.instagram.com/p/C69RIloJR60/?igsh=cHgwbXcxa2pvZXg1
The beginning of the end of cannabis prohibition
The federal government is moving toward “rescheduling” cannabis to recognize its medicinal use. That’s not far enough — but it’s a major step forward.
By Paul Armentano,
Guest Columnist
May 15, 2024
The federal government is moving toward “rescheduling” cannabis to recognize its medicinal use.
For the first time in its history, the Justice Department is calling for a change in the federal legal status of cannabis — which is currently classified as one of America’s most dangerous drugs.
The Attorney General’s office recently confirmed that it’s circulating a proposal to reclassify marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III under the federal Controlled Substances Act. The move, which affirms a prior recommendation by the Department of Health and Human Services and the FDA, marks an about-face for bureaucracies that have traditionally maintained a “flat earth” perspective for all things cannabis.
Under federal guidelines, Schedule I substances possess “no currently accepted medical use in the United States” and “lack accepted safety for use under medical supervision.” By contrast, Schedule III substances, like ketamine and anabolic steroids, are recognized as having well-established medical use and an acceptable safety profile for patients.
The federal government’s decision to finally recognize cannabis as a legitimate therapeutic agent is historic.
For decades, federal officials maligned patients and doctors who spoke out about the benefits of cannabis. One former federal drug czar even accused physicians who supported medical marijuana of practicing “Cheech & Chong medicine.”
For years, the government actively campaigned against statewide medical cannabis legalization initiatives — and even went so far as to try and strip physicians of their medical licenses for daring to discuss cannabis therapy with the sick and dying.
Not anymore.
According to HHS, an estimated 30,000 health practitioners in the United States are currently authorizing medical marijuana for their patients. The department also acknowledged that “the vast majority of individuals who use marijuana are doing so in a manner that does not lead to dangerous outcomes to themselves or others.”
The government’s stunning reversal validates the experiences of tens of millions of Americans. But it still falls well short of the changes necessary to bring federal marijuana policy into the 21st century. Specifically, the proposed change fails to harmonize federal marijuana policy with the cannabis laws of most U.S. states, particularly the 24 states that have legalized its use and sale to adults.
These jurisdictions regulate marijuana in a manner far more akin to alcohol — a substance omitted from the Controlled Substances Act — than a prescription drug. As a result, the state-licensed adult-use cannabis industry — and those who patronize it — will continue to operate in legal limbo, without any clear guidance from the federal government.
Nevertheless, as a first step forward, this policy change dramatically shifts the political debate surrounding cannabis.
Specifically, it delegitimizes many of the tropes historically exploited by opponents of marijuana policy reform. Claims that cannabis poses unique harms to health, or that it’s not useful for treating chronic pain and other ailments, have now been rejected by the very federal agencies that formerly perpetuated them.
Going forward, these specious allegations should be absent from any serious conversations surrounding cannabis and how to best regulate its use.
Of course, the longstanding politicization of cannabis won’t go away overnight. For decades, marijuana’s critics have derided both the plant and its consumers. Some will no doubt continue to try and do so despite the federal government’s decision to change course. But their claims will increasingly fall upon deaf ears.
After nearly a century of cannabis criminalization, prohibition is coming to an end.
Paul Armentano is the Deputy Director for NORML, the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. This op-ed was distributed by OtherWords.org.
So?...where are the fact checkers?
we're going to swallow a whole "X" post without chewing on it first?
There is no "incident report"...no cops? No hired security report?
Maybe they were from outer space...got wind that Zen had some good shit?
Pretend I'm from Missouri...
Pretend I was born, just not last night...
agreeable $$$$$ thanks
Yeah, been lurking here and decided to make an account today. Been holding my PVSP share for probably a year and a half now with no movement whatsoever, it's getting pretty frustrating lol.
Definitely not proactive more like reactive. Top notch security should have been top priority.
Congratz on joining ihub yesterday!! New job I see!!!
Zen
Why don't we ever get any updates from management? Just don't understand it's like they don't want the stock to run, but I guess it is a little difficult when there are 5 billion shares outstanding.
Only a dope would try to lol a 70mm share dump.
Zen
So the paid pumper agrees that 63 millions worth less than toilet tissues?
Lololo .. Zen .. to the moon!🤪
Must have some great security in place
White House Announces Cannabis Rescheduling
Iris Dorbian
Contributor
May 16, 2024,02:34pm EDT
White House announces cannabis rescheduling
In October 2022, President Biden requested federal agencies review reschedule cannabis. After an ... [+]GETTY
In an unprecedented but widely anticipated move made by a U.S. president, today Biden announced that his administration is rescheduling cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III under the Controlled Substances Act. A 60-day public comment period will commence before this action is finalized and implemented.
The news was first reported by the Associated Press on April 30.
Currently, cannabis is categorized as a Schedule I substance, meaning it is criminally prohibited by federal law and has a "high potential for abuse." Rescheduling cannabis as a Schedule III substance means it is legal to posses in licensed pharmacies under a doctor's prescription. Examples of Schedule III drugs are anabolic steroids and ketamine.
For leading professionals and practitioners, the news is a major step in the history of the fragmented legal U.S. cannabis industry. Although it doesn't end prohibition and inequities still remain, rescheduling is yet another sign of the increasing mainstream acceptance of cannabis.
Brian Vicente, founder of Vicente LLP, a cannabis law firm, said rescheduling would greatly alleviate the herculean tax burden of many licensed cannabis businesses since they are currently selling a Schedule I substance.
"We work with hundreds of licensed cannabis businesses, and the ability to deduct ordinary operating costs under the Schedule III proposal would be a game-changer for them," explained Vicente. "This proposal will release cannabis businesses from the crippling tax burden they are currently shackled with and allow these businesses to grow and prosper.”
Emily Paxhia, a managing partner at cannabis-focused investment firm Poseidon Asset Management, also applauded this historic White House action particularly as it follows solid evidence that legalization and regulation at the state level do work. "The tired and fear-based tactics of the prohibitionists are thin and will not play well in a fight against this progress," said Paxhia. "The industry, the states, the HHS, and the medical community have data to show that reform has been productive. We will continue to work the process with pragmatism and facts until the final scheduling is achieved."
Wendy Bronfein, co-founder, chief brand officer and director of public policy at medical cannabis brand Curio Wellness, also expressed jubilation; however, she tempered her celebratory tone with caution, underscoring the ultimate goal—descheduling.
“The only way to eliminate stigma and legitimize the legal cannabis industry is to fully remove cannabis from the Controlled Substances Act,” stressed Bronfein. “For as long as cannabis is listed as a scheduled substance, there will always be an inherent conflict between federal and state law. We encourage the federal government to seek a balance between exercising federal oversight and enforcement responsibilities while preserving each state’s ability to determine the best approach to cannabis within its borders.”
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