Ganja Vibes Blog

Gallery: SweetDee7

The Gorgeous Sweet Dee
Originally from Oceanside, CA.  This vixen is not only one our first and hottest models we will ever have, but also a photographer, Office Manager and all around badass for our cause.

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[caption id="attachment_9722" align="alignright" width="584"]Model: Denessa Sims Photographer: Heather Schnurr Model: Denessa Sims
Photographer: Heather Schnurr[/caption] [caption id="attachment_9714" align="alignleft" width="300"]Model: Denessa Sims Photographer: Heather Schnurr Model: Denessa Sims
Photographer: Heather Schnurr[/caption] [caption id="attachment_9718" align="alignright" width="300"]Model: Denessa Sims Photographer: Heather Schnurr Model: Denessa Sims
Photographer: Heather Schnurr[/caption] [caption id="attachment_9716" align="aligncenter" width="584"]Model: Denessa Sims Photographer: Heather Schnurr Model: Denessa Sims
Photographer: Heather Schnurr[/caption] http://gifboom.com/x/36793db3 IMG_9032 final image Photographer: Heather Schnurr; @HeatherBGanjaVibes Model: Denessa Sims; @SweetDee7 All Photos are original content created and owned by: Ganja Vibes; Heather B Ent, LLC

It's International Bacon Day

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San Diego, CA is going hard in the grease for this one...

http://youtu.be/FPTmEvTZzl8

http://www.sdbaconfest.com/

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So celebrate and revel in bacon ecstasy ya'll!

~HeatherB

 

Medical Marijuana State

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VICTORY! Harborside Health Center, World's Largest Medical Pot Dispensary, Wins Battle To Avoid Shutdown

A federal magistrate on Monday ruled that the Harborside Health Center located in Oakland and San Jose, Calif., can continue to operate, despite a bid by federal prosecutors to shut it down. Harborside is widely considered the world's largest medical cannabis dispensary. The ruling comes as the latest move in a larger battle over the fate of medical marijuana dispensaries in California, where shops operating in full compliance with state law have come under pressure from the federal government. Harborside's landlords have called on the court to order an immediate halt of cannabis sales at their properties in Oakland and San Jose on the grounds that the activity is illegal under federal law. Meanwhile, the city of Oakland, which last year received more than $1 million in tax revenue from Harborside, has filed suit against the federal prosecutors to challenge the forfeiture action. Chief Federal Magistrate Maria-Elena James ruled that it is the role of the government -- not Harborside's landlords -- to determine whether the business should be shut down for its alleged violation of the Controlled Substances Act. Landlords "are attempting to use a procedural rule in a civil forfeiture proceeding to bring what amounts to an enforcement action ... against Harborside," the 17-page ruling said. "This is a measure which the Government -- the entity charged with enforcing the statute -- has elected not to pursue." Judge James also declined to grant a motion from the City of Oakland to immediately prohibit the federal government’s legal efforts to close Harborside. A hearing is scheduled later this month to hear further arguments in the City of Oakland’s lawsuit. Medical cannabis is currently legal in 18 states and the District of Columbia, but U.S. prosecutors have argued federal law -- which forbids the substance -- should take precedence. Harborside's lawyer, Henry Wykowski, underscored the importance of Monday's decision. "We are gratified that Judge James listened to and analyzed the parties' arguments so thoroughly and has now rendered an opinion that will ensure Harborside has the right to present its case to a jury," Wykowski said in a press release on Harborside's website. "Despite the government's efforts to shortcut the case, Harborside will now be able to fully defend itself at trial. That is all we had asked, and the court has now agreed. The stage is now set for a jury trial on the underlying issues of the litigation, which will probably take place in about one year.”  via Harborside Health Center, World's Largest Medical Pot Dispensary, Wins Battle To Avoid Shutdown.  

FadedFools – OG Kush Pictures

Tahoe OG Kush 2011 23rd February, 2011 Here is some more Tahoe OG Kush for 2011. Tahoe is one of the newer and most popular cuts of OG Kush now. Some people argue that Lake Tahoe CA is the birthplace to the legendary OG Kush strain. I on the other hand believe that the San Fernando Valley was the breeding ground to what we now know as OG Kush. Please leave a comment and tell me where YOU think OG Kush came from…

via FadedFools – OG Kush Pictures.  

Doug Fine // Too High To Fail

Too High To Fail

From the bestselling author of Farewell, My Subaru, Too High to Fail is the first in-depth look at the burgeoning legal cannabis industry and how the “new green economy” is shaping our country. “Fine has written a well-researched book that uses the clever tactic of making the moral case for ending marijuana prohibition by burying it inside the economic case.” -Bill Maher in The New York Times “Fine examines how the American people have borne the massive economic and social expenditures of the failed Drug War, which is ‘as unconscionably wrong for America as segregation and DDT.’ A captivating, solidly documented work rendered with wit and humor.”  -Kirkus (Starred Review) “In his entertaining new book…(Fine) successfully illuminates an unusual world where cannabis growers sing ‘Happy Birthday’ to (friendly law enforcement) while crossing their fingers against the threat of federal raids.This informative book will give even hardened drug warriors pause.” -Publisher’s Weekly “An important book.” -Michael Pollan The nation’s economy needs a jump start, and there’s one cash crop that has the potential to help turn it around: cannabis (also known as marijuana and hemp). According to Time, the legal medicinal cannabis economy already generates $200 million annually in taxable proceeds from a mere five hundred thousand registered medical users in just sixteen states. Though thanks to Dick Nixon and America’s longest war — the War on Drugs — cannabis is still technically synonymous with heroin on the federal level even though it has won mainstream acceptance nationwide – 51% of Americans support full legalization (cannabis regulated for adults like alcohol), and 80% support medicinal cannabis legalization. ABC News reports that underground cannabis’s $35.8 billion annual revenues already exceed the combined value of corn ($23.3 billion) and wheat ($7.5 billion). Imagine if the American economy benefited from those numbers, instead of going into criminal drug gang bank accounts.  Actually, you don’t have to imagine: it’s already happening in Canada and Europe, though as yet U.S. leaders won’t heed the call to end the forty-year, trillion-dollar Drug War you have been financing to almost no effect since 1971. Considering the economic impact of cannabis prohibition—and its repeal—Too High to Fail isn’t a commune-dweller’s utopian rant, it’s an objectively (if humorously) reported account of how one plant can drastically change the shape of our country, culturally, politically, and economically. In what can now be called his usual wild, hysterical fashion, and with typically impeccable investigative journalistic result, globe trotting, vegetable oil truck-driving rugged individualist goat herder Doug Fine extrapolates a model for the multi-billion-dollar legal, sustainable, cartel-crippling economy that can result when the failed Drug War is finally called off and cannabis is regulated like alcohol in North America. Too High to Fail covers everything from a brief history of hemp to an insider’s perspective on a growing season in Mendocino County, California, where cannabis drives 80 percent of the economy (to the tune of $8 billion annually). Fine follows one plant from seed to patient in the first American county to fully legalize and regulate cannabis farming. He profiles an issue of critical importance to lawmakers, venture capitalists, climatologists and ordinary Americans—whether or not they inhale. In classic Doug Fine fashion, Too High to Fail is a wild ride that includes swooping helicopters, college tuitions paid with cash, cannabis-friendly sheriffs (a decorated lawman who says, “I woke up and realized the sun still rises and there is still an America with legal cannabis”), and never-before-gained access to the world of the emerging legitimate, taxpaying “ganjaprenneur.” What the critics are saying: Fine examines how the American people have borne the massive economic and social expenditures of the failed Drug War, which is “as unconscionably wrong for America as segregation and DDT.” A captivating, solidly documented work rendered with wit and humor.  -Kirkus (Starred Review) In his entertaining new book…(Fine) successfully illuminates an unusual world where cannabis growers sing “Happy Birthday” to (friendly law enforcement) while crossing their fingers against the threat of federal raids.This informative book will give even hardened drug warriors pause. -Publisher’s Weekly “Fine has written a well-researched book that uses the clever tactic of making the moral case for ending marijuana prohibition by burying it inside the economic case.” -Bill Maher in The New York Times “An important book.” -Michael Pollan http://youtu.be/W-i79S13YPA via Doug Fine // Too High To Fail.    

California NORML's conference marking the 100th anniversary of marijuana prohibition in California

  All are invited to California NORML's conference marking the 100th anniversary of marijuana prohibition in California.   Cannabis in California: Ending the 100 Year War January 26 & 27, 2013 Ft. Mason Conference Center, San Francisco All are invited to California NORML's conference marking the 100th anniversary of marijuana prohibition in California. This two-day event, held January 26 & 27, 2013 at Ft. Mason Conference Center in San Francisco, will explore the history, causes and costs of the war on cannabis, and strategies for ending it. Speakers at this historic conference will include leading experts on cannabis, reform movement leaders, public officials, attorneys, scientific and medical experts. Following up on Cal NORML's "Next Steps" conferences of 2011, we will discuss concrete measures to reform California's cannabis laws, both medical and otherwise, through legislation, litigation and ballot initiatives. Special early bird CalNORML Member Registration is $65 for both days. Non-Member Earlybird Registration is $75. The Radisson at Fisherman's Wharf is offering a special room rate for attendees. Call 415-392-6700 and ask for the California NORML group rate. Proposals for participation and sponsorship are invited at: conference@canorml.org or (415) 563-5858.    
 
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