Saturday, May 30, 2015

Wax/Hash Oil is it safe???

                                                                               


Wax Is Weed’s Next Big Thing And No One Knows If It’s Safe




California dispensaries say butane hash oil, or “wax,” now accounts for 40% of sales — despite potential health risks and home lab explosions on the rise.
 With no regulation and a lack of good information, stoners turn to self-appointed, and self-interested, “experts” like Matt Rize — but at what cost?


                                                                     

Police all over the country are warning people of a new potent marijuana drug called pot wax.
Pot wax or Wax is 10-20 times more potent than normal marijuana.  It's made from THC that's extracted from the marijuana plant.

Authorities say it's anywhere from 85-99% pure THC, and it's being blamed for fires and deaths all over the country.
It looks like ear wax, but listen to this:  
"Very concerned for the young people who are experimenting with the drugs and those using this potent form of marijuana," 
Authorities say pot wax or has oil as some call it  is the latest 'cannabis craze' sweeping the country. Because of how the drug is manufactured, authorities say pot wax is highly addictive and explosive.
"These labs are similar to meth labs in that the chemicals used is extremely flammable and explosive," 


                                                                           

Effects on the body from normal marijuana 
THC stimulates cells in the brain to release dopamine, creating euphoria, according to NIDA. It also interferes with how information is processed in the hippocampus, which is part of the brain responsible for forming new memories. 
THC can induce hallucinations, change thinking and cause delusions. On average, the effects last about two hours, and kick in 10 to 30 minutes after ingestion. Psychomotor impairment may continue after the perceived high has stopped, however. 
"In some cases, reported side effects of THC include elation, anxiety, tachycardia, short-term memory recall issues, sedation, relaxation, pain-relief and many more," said A.J. Fabrizio, a marijuana chemistry expert at Terra Tech Corp, a California agricultural company focused on local farming and medical cannabis.

Risks

The effects of marijuana make it a popular drug. In fact, it is considered one of the most commonly used illicit drugs in the world. But these effects also concern mental health advocates. THC can trigger a relapse in schizophrenic symptoms, according to NIDA.
Another possible risk of consuming THC comes in the form of impaired motor skills. Marijuana may impair driving or similar tasks for approximately three hours after consumption and it is the second-most common psychoactive substance found in drivers, after alcohol, reports the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. People taking medical marijuana are instructed not to drive until it has been established that they can tolerate it and conduct motor tasks successfully.
getting back to Wax or hash oil as some call it 20 times the potency of regular old TCH  be your own guide but ask me this stuff is very unsafe especially for the children!
Would love some feedback on this issue

Peace!

Dennis Hastert paid him to hide sexual abuse!


                                                                  


The Following Article is copied not mines just sharing in hopes you the reader as well the rest of america will wake up!







The former US House of Representatives speaker Dennis Hastert, who was indicted on Thursday on federal criminal charges, was paying a man from his past to try to conceal sexual misconduct, the Los Angeles Times 
reported on Friday, citing two unnamed federal law enforcement officials.
One of the officials said the alleged misconduct involved a man and occurred during Hastert’s time as a high school wrestling coach and teacher in Yorkville, Illinois, before he became a lawmaker.
Hastert could not immediately be reached for comment.
Prosecutors said the charges related to Hastert’s alleged effort to hide $3.5m in payments he was making to a person to conceal past misconduct, but did not detail the nature of the misconduct.
Asked why Hastert, an Illinois Republican who become his party’s longest-serving House speaker before leaving Congress in 2007, was making the payments, the official told the Times that it was intended to conceal Hastert’s past relationship with the man.
“It was sex,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Hastert, 73, was charged on Thursday with structuring the withdrawal of $952,000 in cash to evade the requirement that banks report cash transactions over $10,000, and lying to the FBI about his withdrawals.
Each count of the two-count indictment carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Before his terms in Congress, Hastert served three terms as an Illinois state representative and was a teacher at Yorkville high school in suburban Chicago for 16 years.
The Yorkville school district that employed Hastert from 1965 to 1981 said in a statement on Friday it “has no knowledge of Mr Hastert’s alleged misconduct, nor has any individual contacted the district to report any such misconduct”.
The district said it was first made aware of any concerns regarding the former congressman when the indictment was released.
Judge Thomas Durkin has been assigned to the case, but has not yet set a date for Hastert’s first appearance. The former congressman has not been arrested and is not considered a flight risk, a spokeswoman for the US attorney’s office in Chicago said.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest, during his daily briefing, declined to comment specifically on the allegations against Hastert but said: “There’s nobody here who derives any pleasure from reading about the former speaker’s legal troubles at this point.”
Hastert has resigned from the board of advisers to the J Dennis Hastert Center for Economics, Government and Public Policy at his alma mater Wheaton College in Illinois, the school said on Friday. He graduated from Wheaton College in 1964, where he was also a wrestler.
On Thursday, he resigned from the Washington lobbying firm Dickstein Shapiro, which he joined in 2008, and resigned as a board member of the exchange operator CME Group.
with great hopes this borrowed material will stretch far and wide the republican party is a threat and menace to america
#SOMEONETHATCARES
Would love opinions either comment or message me 
wallacephillips700@gmail.com