Riding the wave.
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Man... i just added a little more to my portfolio again this morning as this low stock price will not be here in the spring and beyond. This company is poised to rapidly increase revenues and the stock price will follow. my guestimation is that this stock will be above 2 dollars per share by summer.
MyHumbleOpinion
i'll keep up to date on my rags to riches pot stock story here. i have moved on to other adventures in cannabis but i'm still hoping the weedTV thing plays out well for everyone.
i may be back....sidelining it for now.
good luck.
Nick... not a big whale...
This Green revolution will happen once in my lifetime and i am "all in" as they say. The people have voted. there are 29 states with legal MJ and growing. MPXEF is moving (growing/expanding) fast and i expect revenues will move upward quickly this year too!
i added about 70,000 shares today! so glad... i feel like i am on the starting line and the race is about to begin.
MPXEF just keeps getting better and better. i am expecting 2018 and 2019 .... to be spectacular!
MyHumbleOpinion
CanniMed Therapeutics Inc. Announces Director Resignation
https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20180116006900/en/CanniMed-Therapeutics-Announces-Director-Resignation
Why such a high stock price? the stock is trading above the Aurora offer. that is not a good idea.
Why did the director resign yesterday? what is going on here?
TM42. thanks for sharing that post.... it made me smile!
i read every post on this bog almost every day. i watched the video. i was tempted to dump my shares.... for a second. i realize that this industry is new. these guys have a grow facility. they have applied for licenses. they have political connections. they are working hard. i am in this for the long duration and i am NOT interest in the violent undulations from day to day of the MJ sector as a whole. i am in this for the LONG payoff. day traders and those who cant handle a little "less than perfect" news can do their thing. i'm doing mine. holding LONG.
MyHumbleOpinion
https://www.theunion.com/news/local-news/nevada-cannabis-industry-amid-record-sales-poised-for-massive-growth-in-2018/
"Early on, the state adopted temporary regulations for recreational use patterned after medical marijuana laws, but the state has been drafting permanent regulations for recreational cannabis."
old news.....
GMAson
Those are beautiful adolescent MJ plants. I hope they are living in their new homes soon!
i am expecting .....BIG revenues coming this year!
This IS the year for PNTV. Expect some volatility. This gem is priced low because it is an UNKNOWN gem. When everyone else discovers this long play then they will pile on and SP will increase. I can hardly wait to see how much $$$$ PNTV got from recent settlement!! I'm expecting at least 75 mil.
Why would the judge NOT agree with the commission's findings? ridiculous and a wast of time. can you say stall tactic? the writing is on the wall. Just because CanniMed's CEO does not want to be acquired by Aurora does not make it so. CanniMed should have remained a private company. The stock price is over inflated BECAUSE of the Aurora offer. Who wants to own a shares of a company that sues its shareholders? AND the 2 companies together will be better for the SHAREHOLDERS, but not for the CEO who seems to have his best interest in mind.
MyHumbleOpinion. do your own due diligence!
Citron has a "questionable" reputation to say the least. i would recommend doing a google search and you'll find some interesting information.
JK18
post a link with the information that you mentioned.....
i dont think that the biggest market for ACBFF is Canada.... how about Germany:
http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/ACBFF/news/Aurora-Acquires-German-Medical-Cannabis-Market-Leader-Pedanios-GmbH?id=160263
Aurora Acquires German Medical Cannabis Distributor Pedanios
Australia: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-cann-grp-stake/canadas-aurora-cannabis-boosts-stake-in-australia-based-cann-group-idUSKBN1DY24E
Canada's Aurora Cannabis boosts stake in Australia-based Cann Group
Green houses: https://www.newswire.ca/news-releases/aurora-cannabis-acquires-leading-global-greenhouse-design-firm-larssen-ltd-659528303.html
Aurora Cannabis Acquires Leading Global Greenhouse Design Firm Larssen Ltd.
i think Aurora Cannabis is going to ramp up revenues so fast in 2018 and 2019 that it will be hard to keep the share price down. I purchased more shares on Thursday and Friday and I hope to add to my position on Tuesday. It can be scary to see blood red in your portfolio but these irrational down days are days to ADD. Good luck to everyone in the Green revolutions.
New York
https://www.forbes.com/sites/janetwburns/2018/01/11/will-new-york-finally-consider-legalizing-cannabis-this-week/#5f464ef06ff5
they are going to need a strong, large, good supplier.
This week, Vermont and New Hampshire moved to legalize cannabis for adult use, signifying a major step in states' acceptance of the plant along the East Coast, and in their opposition to Attorney General Jeff Sessions' tenacious stance.
In New York, where legislators have largely left drug laws unchanged since the '70s, and where marijuana arrest rates continue to lead the nation, a panel of lawmakers will now hear testimony from some of the state's most experienced--and patient--advocates for reform.
On Thursday morning, the New York State Assembly Standing Committees on Codes, Health, and Alcohol and Drug Abuse will convene a public hearing to discuss the Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act (MRTA), aimed to legalize the use, distribution, and production of cannabis for adults aged 21 and over.
As part of their research on the bill, which was floated to little effect in previous assembly sessions, the legislative panel will hear testimony from a range of medical, legal, and policy experts in the state who are calling for an end to the ban (with livestreamed video available from 10:30 EST, and after the fact here).
According to the Drug Policy Alliance, a national nonprofit focusing on drug reform advocacy and education, and which helped to build and promote the bill, MRTA would create a system to tax and regulate marijuana in a similar way to alcohol, and "effectively end marijuana prohibition in New York State."
On the whole, New Yorkers have increasingly indicated that they're ready to 'green-light' the state's cannabis industry. Late last year, a poll found that around 62% favored legalization, while more than 60% supported its taxation and regulation for the sake of addressing New York's budget deficit.
See also: WHO Report Finds No Public Health Risks Or Abuse Potential For CBD
As the country's leader in marijuana arrests, New York was estimated to have spent over $1 billion on enforcement between 2002 and 2012, and $675 million in 2010 alone. Experts have also estimated that the state spends between $1,000 and $2,000 in police, court, and jail costs to process each arrest for simple marijuana possession.
Today's testimony comes from representatives of such legal, immigrant, and human rights groups as LatinoJustice, the National Action Network, Brooklyn Defender Services, the Legal Aid Society, VOCAL-NY, and the Partnership for the Public Good, as well as numerous medical professionals and researchers.
In addition to the cost of enforcing prohibition and the benefits and relative safety of marijuana, speakers will emphasize the enormous impacts that New York drug laws have had on immigrants, communities of color, young people, and state residents as a whole.
Since 1997, New York State has performed more than 800,000 arrests related to cannabis, with the vast majority being for small-scale possession or use in public (not distribution), as is the case with arrests in the rest of the U.S., according to Start SMART NY. Today, the state's population is close to 19.75 million, meaning marijuana arrests have occurred at a rate of nearly 1 per 25 residents in the past two decades.
Cannabis plants grow in the greenhouse at Vireo Health's medical marijuana cultivation facility on August 19, 2016 in Johnstown, New York. (Credit: Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
While possession is now considered a ticket-able violation in New York, and not a crime, nearly 23,000 people were nevertheless arrested across the state in 2016, close to a 2300% increase from 1990, according to research compiled by the DPA. And while New York's Black and Latino populations account for just over a third of the state's total residents, more than 80% of people arrested annually for marijuana possession in the state belong to those groups, researchers say.
For Black New York residents, marijuana arrests rates are approximately 4.5 times that of white residents, despite the fact that use patterns hold steady across ethnic groups, according to an American Civil Liberties Union report. Predominantly, those arrested are teens and young adults in some of the state's poorest areas. In many documented cases, marijuana enforcement has led to arrestees' and bystanders' deaths.
Kassandra Frederique, New York State Director for the DPA, said her testimony today will address the massive scope of marijuana prohibition in New York to date, which has forced thousands of mostly Black and Latino residents to lose access to work and social benefits, accept strict plea bargains, and get stuck on Riker's Island in lieu of costly bail, among other things.
Frederique commented by email, “New York’s marijuana arrest crusade has resulted in significant harms for those who are most vulnerable and has been used as a justification for the hyper-policing of communities of color, funneling tens of thousands of New Yorkers into the maze of the criminal justice system every year and putting people at risk of deportation, losing custody of their children, and barring them from employment and housing for nothing more than possessing small amounts of marijuana.”
She continued, “As New York finally sheds its embarrassing distinction of being the marijuana arrest capital of the world, we must repair the harms of prohibition and end the biased policing practices that have ruined the lives of so many young Black and Latino New Yorkers. Ultimately, the best way to address the disparities and challenges posed by prohibition is to legalize and regulate marijuana in New York.”
See also: Iran's Women Need The Internet Right Now, And You Can (Really) Help
Juan Cartagena, President and General Counsel of LatinoJustice PRLDEF, also plans to tell legislators that New York can no longer wait on the sidelines, and continue to jail residents at the highest national rates, while other states are tackling the work of meaningful drug reform.
“It is time that New York State joins the cadre of progressive states that are acting smart on marijuana regulation," Cartagena commented by email. "We need to pivot and address the pressing needs of regulation while simultaneously eliminating the criminal consequences of marijuana possession and restoring the previous harms that prohibitionist modalities created. In short, we need New York State to help lead a marijuana revolution, because it’s just, it’s rational, and it’s time."
Shaleen Title, Commissioner with the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission and founding board member of the Minority Cannabis Business Association, will also be on hand to emphasize the need for one of the country's most populous and well-known state to get its cannabis laws and enforcement plans in good order. Speaking on her own behalf, Title commented by email, “With marijuana legalization we have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be honest and intentional in addressing the past harms conducted by our respective states in the name of the war on drugs.”
“The worst thing we could do right now would be to regress to a time when prohibition and regressive policies like the Rockefeller Drug Laws took root," Title continued. "I hope New York will join Massachusetts instead in creating the future that most Americans want--an equitable, safely regulated industry with new jobs and tax revenue.”
In acknowledgement of longstanding U.S. myths about cannabis as a dangerous, 'gateway' drug, which a handful of top lawmakers still promote, medical experts will seek to finally put these ideas to rest at today's hearing, too.
See also: Study Explores Chemical Links Of Cannabis, Exercise, And Sexual Bliss
Dr. Julie Holland, a psychiatrist specializing in psychopharmacology who operates a private practice in New York City, explained by email, “The vast majority of adults are unharmed by the responsible use of cannabis, [while] health risks of cannabis misuse are significantly less than those of alcohol and tobacco."
Importantly, Holland added, "Evidence does not support a causal ‘gateway’ relationship between the use of cannabis and the later use of more harmful drugs.” However, public health and safety are indeed crucial considerations in this matter, she noted.
“Legalization and regulation benefits public health by enabling government oversight of the production, testing, labeling, distribution, and sale of cannabis," she continued. To this end, Holland said, "I encourage the state of New York to join the growing number of states that are embracing the future, to legalize, tax, and regulate the sale of cannabis for adult use."
It will ultimately be up to state legislators to decide how to handle this massive issue going forward, of course, but witnesses at today's hearing hope that the evidence and experiences they share will help New York lawmakers' state of mind of the subject to finally evolve. Given the decisions of several nearby states to overhaul their cannabis stances, Albany may currently be feeling more pressure than ever to keep up with the Joneses, or at to least see what all the fuss is about.
When it comes to acknowledging voters' demands and the recommendations of legal and medical experts, at least, it seems that a certain kind of peer pressure may not be such a bad thing.
PROGRESSIVE
https://www.forbes.com/sites/janetwburns/2018/01/11/will-new-york-finally-consider-legalizing-cannabis-this-week/#5f464ef06ff5
This week, Vermont and New Hampshire moved to legalize cannabis for adult use, signifying a major step in states' acceptance of the plant along the East Coast, and in their opposition to Attorney General Jeff Sessions' tenacious stance.
In New York, where legislators have largely left drug laws unchanged since the '70s, and where marijuana arrest rates continue to lead the nation, a panel of lawmakers will now hear testimony from some of the state's most experienced--and patient--advocates for reform.
On Thursday morning, the New York State Assembly Standing Committees on Codes, Health, and Alcohol and Drug Abuse will convene a public hearing to discuss the Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act (MRTA), aimed to legalize the use, distribution, and production of cannabis for adults aged 21 and over.
As part of their research on the bill, which was floated to little effect in previous assembly sessions, the legislative panel will hear testimony from a range of medical, legal, and policy experts in the state who are calling for an end to the ban (with livestreamed video available from 10:30 EST, and after the fact here).
According to the Drug Policy Alliance, a national nonprofit focusing on drug reform advocacy and education, and which helped to build and promote the bill, MRTA would create a system to tax and regulate marijuana in a similar way to alcohol, and "effectively end marijuana prohibition in New York State."
On the whole, New Yorkers have increasingly indicated that they're ready to 'green-light' the state's cannabis industry. Late last year, a poll found that around 62% favored legalization, while more than 60% supported its taxation and regulation for the sake of addressing New York's budget deficit.
See also: WHO Report Finds No Public Health Risks Or Abuse Potential For CBD
As the country's leader in marijuana arrests, New York was estimated to have spent over $1 billion on enforcement between 2002 and 2012, and $675 million in 2010 alone. Experts have also estimated that the state spends between $1,000 and $2,000 in police, court, and jail costs to process each arrest for simple marijuana possession.
Today's testimony comes from representatives of such legal, immigrant, and human rights groups as LatinoJustice, the National Action Network, Brooklyn Defender Services, the Legal Aid Society, VOCAL-NY, and the Partnership for the Public Good, as well as numerous medical professionals and researchers.
In addition to the cost of enforcing prohibition and the benefits and relative safety of marijuana, speakers will emphasize the enormous impacts that New York drug laws have had on immigrants, communities of color, young people, and state residents as a whole.
Since 1997, New York State has performed more than 800,000 arrests related to cannabis, with the vast majority being for small-scale possession or use in public (not distribution), as is the case with arrests in the rest of the U.S., according to Start SMART NY. Today, the state's population is close to 19.75 million, meaning marijuana arrests have occurred at a rate of nearly 1 per 25 residents in the past two decades.
Cannabis plants grow in the greenhouse at Vireo Health's medical marijuana cultivation facility on August 19, 2016 in Johnstown, New York. (Credit: Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
While possession is now considered a ticket-able violation in New York, and not a crime, nearly 23,000 people were nevertheless arrested across the state in 2016, close to a 2300% increase from 1990, according to research compiled by the DPA. And while New York's Black and Latino populations account for just over a third of the state's total residents, more than 80% of people arrested annually for marijuana possession in the state belong to those groups, researchers say.
For Black New York residents, marijuana arrests rates are approximately 4.5 times that of white residents, despite the fact that use patterns hold steady across ethnic groups, according to an American Civil Liberties Union report. Predominantly, those arrested are teens and young adults in some of the state's poorest areas. In many documented cases, marijuana enforcement has led to arrestees' and bystanders' deaths.
Kassandra Frederique, New York State Director for the DPA, said her testimony today will address the massive scope of marijuana prohibition in New York to date, which has forced thousands of mostly Black and Latino residents to lose access to work and social benefits, accept strict plea bargains, and get stuck on Riker's Island in lieu of costly bail, among other things.
Frederique commented by email, “New York’s marijuana arrest crusade has resulted in significant harms for those who are most vulnerable and has been used as a justification for the hyper-policing of communities of color, funneling tens of thousands of New Yorkers into the maze of the criminal justice system every year and putting people at risk of deportation, losing custody of their children, and barring them from employment and housing for nothing more than possessing small amounts of marijuana.”
She continued, “As New York finally sheds its embarrassing distinction of being the marijuana arrest capital of the world, we must repair the harms of prohibition and end the biased policing practices that have ruined the lives of so many young Black and Latino New Yorkers. Ultimately, the best way to address the disparities and challenges posed by prohibition is to legalize and regulate marijuana in New York.”
See also: Iran's Women Need The Internet Right Now, And You Can (Really) Help
Juan Cartagena, President and General Counsel of LatinoJustice PRLDEF, also plans to tell legislators that New York can no longer wait on the sidelines, and continue to jail residents at the highest national rates, while other states are tackling the work of meaningful drug reform.
“It is time that New York State joins the cadre of progressive states that are acting smart on marijuana regulation," Cartagena commented by email. "We need to pivot and address the pressing needs of regulation while simultaneously eliminating the criminal consequences of marijuana possession and restoring the previous harms that prohibitionist modalities created. In short, we need New York State to help lead a marijuana revolution, because it’s just, it’s rational, and it’s time."
Shaleen Title, Commissioner with the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission and founding board member of the Minority Cannabis Business Association, will also be on hand to emphasize the need for one of the country's most populous and well-known state to get its cannabis laws and enforcement plans in good order. Speaking on her own behalf, Title commented by email, “With marijuana legalization we have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be honest and intentional in addressing the past harms conducted by our respective states in the name of the war on drugs.”
“The worst thing we could do right now would be to regress to a time when prohibition and regressive policies like the Rockefeller Drug Laws took root," Title continued. "I hope New York will join Massachusetts instead in creating the future that most Americans want--an equitable, safely regulated industry with new jobs and tax revenue.”
In acknowledgement of longstanding U.S. myths about cannabis as a dangerous, 'gateway' drug, which a handful of top lawmakers still promote, medical experts will seek to finally put these ideas to rest at today's hearing, too.
See also: Study Explores Chemical Links Of Cannabis, Exercise, And Sexual Bliss
Dr. Julie Holland, a psychiatrist specializing in psychopharmacology who operates a private practice in New York City, explained by email, “The vast majority of adults are unharmed by the responsible use of cannabis, [while] health risks of cannabis misuse are significantly less than those of alcohol and tobacco."
Importantly, Holland added, "Evidence does not support a causal ‘gateway’ relationship between the use of cannabis and the later use of more harmful drugs.” However, public health and safety are indeed crucial considerations in this matter, she noted.
“Legalization and regulation benefits public health by enabling government oversight of the production, testing, labeling, distribution, and sale of cannabis," she continued. To this end, Holland said, "I encourage the state of New York to join the growing number of states that are embracing the future, to legalize, tax, and regulate the sale of cannabis for adult use."
It will ultimately be up to state legislators to decide how to handle this massive issue going forward, of course, but witnesses at today's hearing hope that the evidence and experiences they share will help New York lawmakers' state of mind of the subject to finally evolve. Given the decisions of several nearby states to overhaul their cannabis stances, Albany may currently be feeling more pressure than ever to keep up with the Joneses, or at to least see what all the fuss is about.
When it comes to acknowledging voters' demands and the recommendations of legal and medical experts, at least, it seems that a certain kind of peer pressure may not be such a bad thing.
I'm looking forward to the CanniMed and Aurora merger ....working together and forging ahead into this new Green Universe. Together both companies will be stronger and the shareholders of both companies will be wealthier. Apart, CanniMed will be gobbled up by someone else or linger behind while Aurora continues its expansion. Big fish eat little fish. that is the way it works. good luck to everyone in the Green industry. i am bullish, no doubt!
Suing the SHAREHOLDERS! Wow. now that gives shareholders confidence in CEO. What does he expect the outcome to be? That just feels bad and no doubt the company and the public will loss confidence in CMed. He is setting up the company to fail.... bad karma and negative culture, bad reputation among consumers too.
CMed should be a private company, not a publicly traded company.
HAPPY NEWS!!
https://www.marijuanamoment.net/new-congressional-bill-handcuffs-sessionss-marijuana-enforcement/
A new congressional bill would effectively prevent U.S Attorney General Jeff Sessions from cracking down on people who are following state marijuana laws. But it wouldn’t change cannabis’s status under federal law.
Instead, the proposal, filed in the U.S. House on Thursday by Congresswoman Barbara Lee (D-CA) and four cosponsors, would restrict the Justice Department and other federal agencies from spending money to “detain, prosecute, sentence, or initiate civil proceedings against an individual, business or property, that is involved in the cultivation, distribution, possession, dispensation, or use of cannabis” in accordance with state law.
The legislation would also protect banks that work with state-legal cannabis businesses.
The text of the bill has not yet been uploaded to Congress’s website, but Marijuana Moment has obtained it (see below).
The funding prohibition goes beyond the annual medical cannabis appropriations rider, commonly known as Rohrabacher-Farr, in a number of ways.
First, it doesn’t just shield medical cannabis patients, providers and laws; it covers everyone complying with a state marijuana law, including recreational businesses and consumers.
Second, it doesn’t just restrict the Department of Justice; it also applies to the Treasury Department, the Department of Homeland Security and every other federal government agency that could potentially go after people for violating federal marijuana prohibition.
Third, and perhaps most important, it is permanent. Unlike the existing medical cannabis rider, it wouldn’t need to be renewed every year as part of annual spending bills. If enacted, its language would exist in statute until a future Congress proactively changed it.
Last week, Sessions rescinded Obama-era guidance that has generally allowed states to implement their own cannabis laws without federal interference. A large number of members of Congress and state officials have pushed back against the move, which is also deeply unpopular with voters.
“It is time we expand the protections of Rohrabacher-Farr to ensure that no government agency targets marijuana companies and their partners in ancillary businesses,” Congresswoman Dina Titus (D-NV), one of the cosponsors of the new bill, told Marijuana Moment via an email. “Taxpayer dollars should not be used to crackdown on law-abiding taxpayers operating legally in states.”
If the legislation passes, the most significant practical marijuana policy and enforcement reform to date would be accomplished without actually changing cannabis’s status under the schedules of the Controlled Substances Act.
GREAT NEWS!
https://www.marijuanamoment.net/new-congressional-bill-handcuffs-sessionss-marijuana-enforcement/
A new congressional bill would effectively prevent U.S Attorney General Jeff Sessions from cracking down on people who are following state marijuana laws. But it wouldn’t change cannabis’s status under federal law.
Instead, the proposal, filed in the U.S. House on Thursday by Congresswoman Barbara Lee (D-CA) and four cosponsors, would restrict the Justice Department and other federal agencies from spending money to “detain, prosecute, sentence, or initiate civil proceedings against an individual, business or property, that is involved in the cultivation, distribution, possession, dispensation, or use of cannabis” in accordance with state law.
The legislation would also protect banks that work with state-legal cannabis businesses.
The text of the bill has not yet been uploaded to Congress’s website, but Marijuana Moment has obtained it (see below).
The funding prohibition goes beyond the annual medical cannabis appropriations rider, commonly known as Rohrabacher-Farr, in a number of ways.
First, it doesn’t just shield medical cannabis patients, providers and laws; it covers everyone complying with a state marijuana law, including recreational businesses and consumers.
Second, it doesn’t just restrict the Department of Justice; it also applies to the Treasury Department, the Department of Homeland Security and every other federal government agency that could potentially go after people for violating federal marijuana prohibition.
Third, and perhaps most important, it is permanent. Unlike the existing medical cannabis rider, it wouldn’t need to be renewed every year as part of annual spending bills. If enacted, its language would exist in statute until a future Congress proactively changed it.
Last week, Sessions rescinded Obama-era guidance that has generally allowed states to implement their own cannabis laws without federal interference. A large number of members of Congress and state officials have pushed back against the move, which is also deeply unpopular with voters.
“It is time we expand the protections of Rohrabacher-Farr to ensure that no government agency targets marijuana companies and their partners in ancillary businesses,” Congresswoman Dina Titus (D-NV), one of the cosponsors of the new bill, told Marijuana Moment via an email. “Taxpayer dollars should not be used to crackdown on law-abiding taxpayers operating legally in states.”
If the legislation passes, the most significant practical marijuana policy and enforcement reform to date would be accomplished without actually changing cannabis’s status under the schedules of the Controlled Substances Act.
CHIcago Paul
that makes me happy too. Aurora 2018... what a great opportunity. I am riding this Green Revolution. there will be ONLY ONE Green Revolution, at least in my lifetime. I am glad to be part of it as a shareholder.
Long ACBFF!
Yee haw!
What a ride the MJ sector has provided the last 2 days. I was able to snatch up some cheaper shares. Cannabis is just about to launch. there are so many tumultuous things happening in the MJ sector.... if you are long like me then you expect some rough riding. the long term plan has not changed and MJ is THE play for 2018 and 2019 and.....
holding long and strong!!
jrf30
i was referring to this report about teen use of MJ in CO.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2017/12/11/following-marijuana-legalization-teen-drug-use-is-down-in-colorado/?utm_term=.fc15eb7d135d
Dog5 there you go again. slamming the most significant cannabis play i own... in terms of dollars...again. I have purchased more shares yesterday and today. 2018 will be a good year.
Great day for me. I added to my cannabis position. I only wish that I was more liquid. I’ll be able to add more shares next week. I hate to miss out in these cheap share!!
Buy this gift from the market’. I have added as much as I could today! These opportunities are rare!
ADDing MORE
I wish that I had more cash to buy more... dang. I have purchased as much as I can today.
I hate to miss opportunities like today.
This is a gift!! I just added to my substantial position. Big news coming next week with USA budget. Then more news coming through spring and summer.
Take advantage of these low prices! Load up while you can.
Longs are here to stay. Day Traders get in and get out.
My favorite message board... here ... is soooo quiet tonight!
just remember.... we are LONG cannabis. expect a little up and down action day to day.... and measure your success in months and years.
i am long.
This is INTERESTING... from a BEER guy...
http://www.newsweek.com/marijuana-craft-beer-budweiser-exec-710529
Scary... it is a FACT that in states (and DC) where recreational cannabis is legal several things happen (or at least it is true in CO):
#1 alcohol consumption decreases
#2 opioid overdoses decrease
#3 teen use of marijuana decreases
#4 lots of tax dollars get collected
#5 most driving violations are related to driving too slow.... ok. kidding. just made that one up. #5. The rest are true.
Dog5. I like your posts. you dont want an Aurora/CMed merger? Are you an insider... inside CMed? Why wouldnt you want to be a global leader in the cannabis business? Aurora and CMed would be better together. I think that the MERGER WILL go through. I am banking on it.
I ADDED shares to my portfolio today! Nice discount! I'm not sure how many opportunities there will be like this but.... I WILL take advantage.
I am LONG Aurora.
The Boston Herald report and posts here make me smile.... BIG SMILE!!
I am long and strong. I would NOT dare risk a sell with hopes of "getting back in".... there is a good chance that a dip in price could very well be followed by an increase in price that never looks back.
Bullish for cannabis 2018, 2019, 2020...