Week in Weed – July 29, 2023

Week in Weed – July 29, 2023

This past week on StratCann, we covered Surrey city council’s new proposal for the city to regulate cannabis stores, and that Council sent the report back to staff to make changes before it would consider it further. We also covered Aurora closing its sale on a former cannabis greenhouse, Vancouver’s High Hopes launching a cannabis substitution project, and another look at how the media continues to misreport issues relating to hospitalizations from edibles

Outside of StratCann’s coverage, the big news this week was the Canadian Press story on the BC Supreme Court approving a cannabis ‘fire sale’ as Tantalus Labs entered bankruptcy, with the CRA stayed from taking any actions against Tantalus with respect to cannabis stamps and cannabis inventory. Court documents show Tantalus with more than $14 million in debt to creditors and other companies, including $4 million to the CRA.

The Tyee uncovered an auditors’ report from 2022 that says BC’s provincial agency responsible for ensuring that licensed cannabis retail stores follow the law is understaffed and lacks key tools. The 26-page report, Compliance and Enforcement of Cannabis Retail Stores, made 14 recommendations that the in-house government auditors said would improve the program and make it more efficient and effective. 

Some cannabis retailers in Saskatchewan expressed frustration at competing with what they say are unregulated cannabis retailers selling unregulated products on First Nations land in the province, including one store that made headlines recently. Local First Nations store owners say they are governed by their own regulations. 

Natoaganeg First Nation in New Brunswick announced a new therapy program run by the Gitpo Spirit Lodge, which has received $1.2 million from Health Canada for two years. Dr. Shelley Turner, a member of Pimicikamak First Nation in Manitoba and an expert in medical cannabis, will educate healthcare providers on the use of medical cannabis for this therapy, also called cannabinoid therapy. CBC reports that in Turner’s practice, she starts patients on THC and CBD in one-milligram increments.

A new research paper out of Ontario says there is an ​​association between non-medical cannabis legalization and emergency department visits for cannabis-induced psychosis. The article attributes this increase to something it calls “cannabis commercialization.” While the abstract doesn’t note why they chose this start date, the timing correlates with when edibles became more common in both the legal and illicit markets (March 2020–September 2021). Increases were seen only for those above the legal age of purchase.

In financial news, Tilray released their Q4 financials, showing a net revenue increase of 20 percent, and a net loss of USD$120 million in the fourth quarter compared to the net loss of the prior year quarter. Cannabis gross margin for Tilray increased to 61 percent in the quarter from -36 percent in the previous year’s quarter, which the company attributes to contributions from the HEXO arrangement. Tilray says its market share in Canada is about 13 percent.

On the other hand, Quebec-based producer Cannara Biotech reported Q3 2023 net revenue of $15.9 million and $39.3 million for the first nine months of 2023, a 57 percent and 63 percent increase respectively, compared to the three and nine-month period in 2022. Cannara sells under the brands Tribal, Nugz, and Orchid CBD. The company primarily sells in Quebec but has products in BC, Ontario, and Alberta.

Meanwhile, The Deep Dive had fun swimming amongst the schadenfreude that is the collapse of the once-mighty Canopy Growth—a fun read for anyone who has followed the highs and lows of this sector.

In cannabis banking news, Turtle Island News reported that the Six Nations Cannabis Commission (SNCC) has been unable to find a bank willing to work with them. The SNCC has licensed three retail stores within its territory. The regulator issued its first production licence to Bloom Cannabis last year.

“I’ve met with every bank across Canada, including credit unions,” said Kathy Mair, the Six Nations Cannabis Commission’s (SNCC) chief commissioner. “Everybody takes me along, and everybody says they can help, and then something comes up, and they can’t. Nobody is willing to go against the banking charter.” 

A new medical cannabis access platform, MyMedi.ca, announced its initial product offering on its website, launching on August 1, with more than 30 brands. MyMedi says it’s providing “continuity of care” for Medical Cannabis by Shoppers Drug Mart patients following a partnership between Avicanna and Shoppers Drug Mart signed in March.

GrowerIQ, a seed-to-sale tracking system based in Canada, announced it was partnering with the Barbados Medicinal Cannabis Licensing Authority (BMCLA), the island’s regulatory body for the medicinal cannabis industry, to manage tracking and reporting of all cannabis production there for the next five years.

International

Big news in the US this week, Mastercard told financial payment companies they must stop allowing US customers to buy cannabis with its debit cards. Mastercard said the move comes after it found some stores accepted debit payments despite the federal ban.

Uruguay has sold more than 10 million grams of cannabis in the six years when first legalized. Authorized pharmacies in Uruguay have sold 10,693,210 grams between July 19, 2017, and July 19, 2023, according to the IRCCA, the agency that oversees both medical and adult-use cannabis. People can buy three different types of cannabis in the country, with varying amounts of THC and CBD, with the highest level of THC at 15 percent—not much below the averages shown by analytical testing of supplies in the US and Canada.

As of February in Uruguay, 5 grams of legal cannabis from a pharmacy costs approximately $400-450, or about $15 Canadian. There is a 10-gram per week purchasing limit, with three exclusive modes of access that someone must choose: buying through a pharmacy, growing at home, or growing as part of a cooperative.


To Boldy Know What No One Has Known Before

To Boldy Know What No One Has Known Before

www.self-inflictedphilosophy.com

To Boldy Know

What No One Has Known Before

by Gary Z. McGee

“The art of knowing is knowing what to ignore.” ~Rumi

Knowing things has always been an esteemed ability. Knowledge increases our ability to adapt and survive. The more we know, the better we can navigate the labyrinth of life. But knowing things can also hinder our ability to know more. There are landmines of cognitive dissonance that arise from knowing. Especially when we become certain about what we think we know.

Knowledge is a quagmire that can easily turn into a sticky web. There’s the extraction and the abstraction of knowledge. There’s our perception of that knowledge, which very well could be wrong. There’s the mortal anxiety and existential angst that comes from the knowledge of death. And then there’s the deliciously heavy weight of knowing that we know nothing. A tangled web indeed.

So how do we extract ourselves from the web? How do we escape the quagmire? How do we climb out of the abyss of not knowing that we don’t know? We use curiosity to trump our certainty. We allow ourselves to be wrong. We climb up onto the summit, into a state of knowing that we don’t know.

It’s like that old Zen Proverb about the empty cup. The experience of knowing that we don’t know empties our cup. It allows us to “not know” so that we can become “empty” enough to receive new knowledge. “I don’t know” frees us to thrive in a state of prepared learning. Education by perpetual astonishment becomes the thing. We use the philosophical tool of “I don’t know” in order that we may be astonished by knowing something new.

As Iris Murdoch said, “We live in a fantasy world, a world of illusion. The great task in life is to find reality.”

We are tasked as freethinking individuals to “find reality” despite the “world of illusions” that surrounds us. We are tasked with a Truth Quest. We are the tip of the spear of the evolution of our species. It is our task to know what has never been known before.

But before we can do that, we must be able to get out of our own way. In that regard, here are four ways to boldly know what no one has known before…

1.) Transcend yourself (practice nonattachment):

“Think lightly of yourself and deeply of the world.” ~Miyamoto Musashi

What you call knowledge is an attempt to impose something comprehensible onto something incomprehensible. Your knowledge hitherto is an abstraction of an abstraction, but that does not mean it’s not useful. In fact, it’s vital. It has made you who you are. And who you are, right now, in this moment, is a powerful thing. Because who you are right now is precisely what you must transcend in order to know what has never been known before.

So there you sit, a collection of memories, the embodiment of your own unique historical knowledge. You are grounded, centered, and prepared to receive new knowledge. Now it’s time to let it all go. Let go of your memories, your culturally conditioned reality, your attempt to impose something comprehensible onto something incomprehensible. Surrender. It’s time to sacrifice your knowledge to your imagination.

When you sacrifice your knowledge to your imagination you become detached (nonattached) to the past or the future. You become present, open, circumspect. Your sacrifice feeds the animal of higher learning. Its appetite becomes your appetite. And suddenly you are hungry for more, for novelty, for something extraordinary, for something otherworldly, for knowledge that has never been known before.

2.) Transcend culture (think outside the box):

“A good philosopher is one who does not take ideas seriously.” ~Edward Abbey

Culture is an illusion. Employ your mind as a mirror. Reflect the illusion. Receive but do not keep. Absorb but do not cling. Learn but do not dwell. Question but remember to never settle on an answer. Settling for an answer is giving up on your goal of knowing something that has never been known before. Never settle. Even if the answer seems convincing. Question it. Always question it. Especially if it is presented as something you must believe in.

Asking difficult questions (challenging culture) will always be more important than receiving simple answers (accepting culture).

As Ernest Becker said, “The essence of normality is the refusal of reality.” You’re not seeking normality. You’re seeking novelty. You’re seeking higher knowledge. You’re seeking that which has never been known before. Therefore, you cannot afford to refuse reality. You must embrace it. Refuse the cultural illusion instead.

Allow reality to sink it’s claws into you. Let it demolish your comfort zone, tear to shreds your existential veil, break apart your protective shell. The path toward knowing that which has never been known before is about vulnerability not invulnerability. So be vulnerable to the primordial horrors. Show your belly to the existential doom. Let infinity drag you kicking and screaming into the pain of higher knowledge lest the bliss of ignorance keep you trapped in lower knowledge.

3.) Transcend nihilism (integrate death):

“Much of our lives are spent running from our own shadow. The denial of death and the division of the human soul go together.” ~John Gray

So, you’ve transcended the psychosocial comfort blanket of mother culture. You’ve been left hanging in absolute nothingness. Absurdism is all consuming. Now, it’s time to bring meaning to the meaninglessness. You’ve already pierced through the blinding light of culture with your powerful tenebrosity, now it’s time to shine a light into the darkest darkness of all: nihilism.

The cure for nihilism is embracing absurdism. You either integrate absurdity or absurdity disintegrates you. You either loosen your grip or your own grip chokes you. You must integrate death, meaninglessness, and pointlessness. You must subsume your mortality and turn it inside out. Use it to absorb the interconnectedness of all things. Once again, you must fall into “not knowing.” Loosen your grip. Fall into Infinity.

As William Shakespeare said, “Life is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.” So be it. Embody that nothingness and then transform it into something profound through the sieve of your imagination.

4.) Transcend transcendence (write poetry):

“Outlaws, like poets, rearrange the nightmare.” ~Tom Robbins

Once you have integrated death and resolved nihilism by embracing absurdism, the nightmare is seen for what it is. And the nightmare needs color. It must be hijacked by the imagination. So, it’s time to express yourself. It’s time to tap the Fountainhead. It’s finally time to know that which has never been known before.

Now enter the poet. The poet’s job is to reorder outdated order through artistic disorder. Poets are fierce discoverers. They are the tip of the spear of human imagination. They penetrate rigidness. They go beyond boundaries. They forsake all comfort zones. They dare to lose their footing and “slip into the masterpiece.”

The magic of poetry is the shaman in the abyss transforming darkness into light. It’s the blacksmith of the soul sharpening metal into Mettle. It’s a nonviolent dance-off in place of a violent stand-off. It’s planting seeds of curiosity in the rigid compost heap of certainty.

Poets tonalize an otherwise atonal world. They breech social constructs. They reimagine imagination. They inject what’s never been known into the vein of the known. They reinvent God. They do so for the survival of the human soul despite the nightmare that outflanks it.

Left alone, knowledge (and the culture that creates it) is a house of mirrors that will trap you in its illusions unless you are able to escape. Art is an escape. Music is an escape. Poetry is an escape. Cinema is an escape. When you are able to create these, you build bridges out of the so-called “real world” into Reality.

As Jim Harrison said, “A poet is a ‘thief of fire’.” Such fire burns all illusions. It awakens all delusions. It opens the closeminded. It allows access to that which has never been known before.

So there you are, a poet, nonattached, thinking outside the box, death integrated, sitting on the highest branches of human knowledge seeing further than all the giants of the past. You are an eternal fisherman fishing in the cosmic waters of the Unknown. You are both Hook and Lure, cast and castor, grounded and swimming, discovered and seeking. What you’ve known is behind you. What you can know is ahead of you. What you can never know is beside you. But what has never been known before is just a leap of imagination away.

But fisherman beware. As Nietzsche said, “I cast my net into the poet’s sea hoping to catch a fine fish; but I always drew out an old god’s head.”

Image source:

Transcend by Jacky Gerritsen

About the Author:

Gary Z McGee, a former Navy Intelligence Specialist turned philosopher, is the author of Birthday Suit of God and The Looking Glass Man. His works are inspired by the great philosophers of the ages and his wide-awake view of the modern world.

This article (To Boldly Know What No One Has Known Before) was originally created and published by Self-inflicted Philosophy and is printed here under a Creative Commons license with attribution to Gary Z McGee and self-inflictedphilosophy.com. It may be re-posted freely with proper attribution, author bio, and this statement of copyright.

420 with CNW — How to Make Marijuana Websites Compliant with ADA Requirements

420 with CNW — How to Make Marijuana Websites Compliant with ADA Requirements

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For more than 30 years, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) has protected people with disabilities from discrimination in all public places on the basis of their disabilities. This legislation ensures that all public places, including schools, public transportation and office buildings, are designed to accommodate the needs of people living with disabilities. Now that ecommerce is one of the most dominant forms of trade across the country, businesses in America’s state-legal cannabis sector should also make their websites ADA-compliant.

In many ways, websites have replaced the brick-and-mortar stores of old. They allow people to visit different “shops” and make purchases from the comfort of their homes. For people with disabilities, ecommerce websites can save a lot of hassle, especially if the sites also offer home deliveries.

Making your website ADA-compliant will make it more navigable for people with disabilities, and could help you attract and retain customers. Although the ADA Act currently doesn’t apply to business websites, taking the plunge will likely do more good than bad for your business.

Andrea Golan, a lawyer at Vicente, a cannabis law firm in Denver, said that California does not extend the ADA Act to websites while some courts in other states view websites as public places and expect them to be ADA compliant.

Liz Hartsel from Fortis Law Partners in Denver, said that even if the ADA Act does not explicitly cover websites, businesses are at risk of being sued if they are inaccessible to people with disabilities. It is a matter of when you will be sued, not if, Hartsel explained, adding that as a business owner, it is in your best interest to make your websites ADA-compliant.

Making your business more accessible to consumers is always a win, and it may help you stand out from the rest of the competition. It will also save you the hassle of dealing with a lawsuit if you are sued. Hartsel notes that she has seen some 50 cases involving website accessibility in the last two years, and they all settled without a trial. According to Barclay Damon partner Rob Thorpe, settling a lawsuit will be less expensive than defending one in court, so most companies prefer to settle when they are sued.

If you are currently facing an accessibility-related lawsuit, Hartsel recommends immediately making the website more accessible and ADA compliant. Since websites are always being updated, Hartse recommends making your website accessible in the present and keeping it as accessible as possible as time passes.

This includes making sure there are alt tags to allow the use of screen readers if there are a lot of images or providing ways such as captions to allow hearing and vision-impaired people to access the information in videos. In addition, figuring out the best color contrast balance will make it easier for people with color blindness or limited vision to read your website.

The need to adhere to ADA requirements doesn’t only apply to marijuana companies. Even companies such as Advanced Container Technologies Inc. (OTC: ACTX) should consider the needs of persons with disabilities when designing their websites.

NOTE TO INVESTORS: The latest news and updates relating to Advanced Container Technologies Inc. (OTC: ACTX) are available in the company’s newsroom at https://cnw.fm/ACTX

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Study Suggests SNRIs, SSRIs Reduce Effects of Psilocybin

Findings from a recent study have revealed that SSRI and SNRI use may weaken the effects of psilocybin (magic mushrooms). The researchers were specifically interested in the extent to which antidepressants could diminish the effects of psilocybin when they were taken alongside the psychedelic and after antidepressant use is halted.

Psychedelics are predicted to revolutionize the psychiatric industry in a major way due to their purported mental health benefits. A series of studies have found that psychedelic drugs such as psilocybin, MDMA and LSD may be able to treat mental conditions  anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and even eating disorders.

If the FDA approves the use of psychedelic-based treatments, psychedelics could replace selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) as primary psychiatric medications.

Psilocybin has proven to be especially effective at treating major depressive disorder and treatment-resistant depression, offering patients in clinical trials relatively long-term relief with barely any serious side effects. Given the increasing mainstream popularity of psilocybin, the new study was designed to determine how the psychedelic would react with traditional antidepressants.

The team found that SNRIs and SSRIs may have a dampening effect on psilocybin, which could diminish the psychedelic’s effects for up to three months after the patient stops taking antidepressants. The researchers conducted an online retrospective poll of 2,153 people who had taken antidepressants while using psilocybin and individuals who had taken magic mushrooms within 24 hours of discontinuing antidepressant use.

The 611 individuals who reported using psilocybin while taking conventional antidepressants said that psilocybin’s effect was weaker than they expected. Members of this group indicated that they were also on either bupropion, SSRIs, or SNRIs when they used psilocybin. The remaining 1,542 individuals who had stopped using antidepressants at the time they took psilocybin also reported weakened effects.

Interestingly, the probability of experiencing weaker psilocybin effects was not that different between people who had ceased antidepressant use a week before taking psilocybin and people who had stopped taking antidepressants three to six months before using psilocybin. Even individuals who had stopped taking antidepressants several months prior experienced weaker effects, indicating that antidepressants take some time to clear out of the system completely.

The researchers concluded that SSRI/SNRI antidepressants can dampen the effects of psilocybin while nonserotonergic antidepressants don’t seem to have a similar dampening effect on psilocybin. These findings could have implications for subsequent psilocybin clinical studies depending on whether the participants are taking antidepressants or have stopped antidepressant use in the recent past.

Companies that are studying various psychedelics with a view to developing medicines from them, such as Seelos Therapeutics Inc. (NASDAQ: SEEL), are likely to bring to light even more insights into how these substances work and how they could interact with other medications.

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Vancouver’s High Hopes launches cannabis substitution project

Vancouver’s High Hopes launches cannabis substitution project

The High Hopes Foundation, a community group providing access to medical cannabis in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, recently launched a pilot project to explore the potential for cannabis as a substitute for people with severe alcohol dependence.

The group was selected by the Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research as a partner in launching the project, which will evaluate cannabis substitution intervention as a component of its Managed Alcohol Programs (MAPs) for people with alcohol use disorders who are experiencing unstable housing. 

The project is funded through Health Canada’s Substance Use and Addiction Program (SUAP) and is based on a feasibility study from several researchers in Canada, primarily in BC.

That study, titled, in part, “If I knew I could get that every hour instead of alcohol, I would take the cannabis,” explores the potential of using cannabis within MAPs. Many of the participants in the MAPs program said they were already using cannabis as a substitute for cravings and withdrawals, preferring dried cannabis, followed by edibles and oil capsules. 

The paper concludes that cannabis substitution was a viable approach but noted a need for proper funding and “inexpensive, legal, and reliable sourcing of cannabis.” High Hopes typically provides cannabis to registered patients through its own medical cannabis sales licence at a few dollars a gram, but the Health Canada program will cover the cost of cannabis used within the program.

Sarah Blyth, High Hopes’ founder, has deep roots in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside community and says she and her team are excited to begin their work. 

“As research partners, High Hopes is eager to further explore cannabis as an alcohol harm reduction tool,” Blyth tells StratCann. “Our prior work has demonstrated cannabis’ promise in reducing opioid misuse and improving patient quality of life. We now aim to apply that expertise to studying cannabis as a potential therapeutic for alcohol addiction.

“With our experienced team of researchers and peer workers, High Hopes will continue pioneering safe, effective cannabis treatments to address major community health concerns.”

High Hopes notes that early feasibility study data shows promising results for cannabis as an alcohol substitution:

  • 63% already substitute cannabis for alcohol. Of those, 52.6% use cannabis daily and 42.1% use it weekly for alcohol substitution.
  • 78.9% use cannabis for alcohol cravings, 52.6% for withdrawal symptoms.
  • 84% would participate in a cannabis substitution program if offered. 57.9% felt cannabis could help reduce drinking but cited availability and cost as barriers.
  • 78.9% are open to partial substitution, 63.2% to complete substitution.

The community organization received their medical sales licence in 2022 and, after a long search, secured its first supply partnership with Canna Farms, a cannabis grower located just a few hours outside Vancouver in Hope, BC.

Blyth says they have also established two discreet, official pick-up locations for its patients, with plans to add more soon.

Learn more about the project here.


High Tide to open Canna Cabana location in St. Thomas, Ontario

(CNW) Calgary — High Tide Inc., the high-impact, retail-forward enterprise built to deliver real-world value across every component of cannabis, announced today that its Canna Cabana retail cannabis store located at 1010 Talbot Street, St. Thomas, Ontario will begin selling recreational cannabis products and consumption accessories for adult use on Sunday, July 30.

This opening marks High Tide’s 154th Canna Cabana branded retail cannabis location in Canada and its 50th in the province of Ontario, Canada’s largest province.

Located in the heart of southwestern Ontario’s industrial belt and known as “The Railway City,” St. Thomas grew around passenger and commercial railways during the 1900s, transitioning into a major centre for automobile manufacturing. This Canna Cabana location is on a major thoroughfare in St. Thomas, steps away from a provincially owned liquor retail chain, a major discount retailer and a national grocery chain. Cabana Club and our ELITE members can take advantage of this strategic location while completing other day-to-day shopping tasks.

“Opening our 50th Canna Cabana location in Ontario is a huge milestone for us, and I am so thankful to our ELITE and Cabana Club members who continue to support our innovative and unique discount club model. From our first Ontario store opening in 2020, we have maintained our focus on executing our exemplary retail strategy, securing top locations in high-density retail neighbourhoods, including major power centres, and this store location is an excellent example of this dedication.” — Raj Grover, president and CEO, High Tide

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“This location will serve as a pilot for a potential new concept that focuses heavily on our proprietary Fastendr retail kiosk technology, given the success we are seeing with the current roll-out of this technology across our network. The remainder of 2023 will see us open more Canna Cabana locations as we continue to expand our footprint in Canada’s largest province. With the current strength of our Canadian bricks-and-mortar sales, every new high-quality location we add brings us another step closer to achieving our previously communicated goal of achieving positive free cash flow by the end of this calendar year. I look forward to providing the market with a meaningful update in this regard when we report our financials for the third fiscal quarter by mid-September.” — Raj Grover, president and CEO, High Tide

The MyMedi.ca medical cannabis care platform is preparing to launch August 1, 2023

(Globe Newswire) Toronto — Avicanna Inc. a biopharmaceutical company focused on the development, manufacturing and commercialization of plant-derived cannabinoid-based products is announcing its initial portfolio offering and network in anticipation of the MyMedi.ca platform’s launch in early August.

In line with the company’s commitment to provide continuity of care to Canadian patients serviced by Medical Cannabis by Shoppers and to make available a new cannabis care platform that will offer patients a broad and diverse portfolio of products, the company is pleased to present the initial network of brands available on MyMedi.ca.

“We are pleased by the level of commitment towards patients that we have seen and the concrete support of this distinct group of Canadian licensed producers that have worked towards the timely launch of the new cannabis care platform, MyMedi.ca. We look forward to continuing to work collaboratively towards the goals of establishing MyMedi.ca as a leading cannabis care platform and towards taking steps to enhance the patient journey.” — Aras Azadian, CEO, Avicanna

The featured brands that will be available for purchase on MyMedi.ca include the list below, with more to come.

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   CB4    Organigram
   Bhang    Peace Naturals
   Big Bag O' Buds    Pure Sunfarms
   Canna Farms    Pura Earth
   Countryside    re+PLAY
   Edison    RHO Phyto
   Ellevia    Sanna
   Spinach FEELZ    Shatterizer
   Highly Dutch    Shred
   Indiva    Shred'ems
   Kaiser Day    SOURZ by Spinach
   Medipharm Labs    Spinach
   Medisenol    The Green Organic Dutchman
   Monjour    True North
   Northbound    Viola
   Ollive    Wana
   Olli    White Rabbit