How Vape Pens Could Threaten The Pot Legalization Movement

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Last year, I joined some parents from my son's preschool for their semiregular "Dad's Night Out." We were at a crowded bar in Oakland, and somehow it emerged that I'd done some stories about marijuana. A dad immediately asked if I'd written about hash oil. Within a few minutes (for the sake of journalism, of course), I was trying a hit of nearly odorless vapor from what looked like a miniature flashlight. A single puff, and I was too high to order a second beer.

It might be an understatement to say that marijuana concentrates smoked from so-called vape pens–the pot version of e-cigarettes–accomplish for stoners what flasks full of moonshine do for lushes: Portable, discreet, and fantastically potent, they're revolutionizing the logistics of getting high, and minimizing the risk of discovery. Stories abound of people using vape pens to blaze away undetected at baseball games, city council meetings, kids' soccer matches, and, of most concern to parents and educators, high schools. Even if pot brownies have been around forever, this is probably not what your average Colorado or Washington voter had in mind when they cast a ballot to legalize recreational marijuana.

The concentrates typically used in vape pens are made by extracting THC from pot with water ("bubble hash"), transferring it into butter ("budder"), or refining it into what's known as butane hash oil (BHO, or "errrl," since stoners need a slang term for everything pot-related). From there, it can be refined further into a wax or an amber-like solid ("shatter"). These products are up to three times stronger than the most mind-bending buds. In short, it ain't your father's schwag, and its snowballing popularity among young people is reshaping the culture of the pot scene: One customarily smokes (or "dabs") BHO from specially designed bongs known as "oil rigs," and not at the designated hour of 4:20, but rather at 7:10–which, in case you're wondering, is "OIL" upside down and backwards.

"Baking Bad," the headline of a recent Slate piece on the concentrates scene, aptly sums up how the trend could become a PR nightmare for the legalization movement. As the name implies, making butane hash oil involves extracting THC from cannabis using butane–you know, lighter fluid. The growing rash of butane lab fires and explosions could suggest that potheads are going the way of meth tweakers. And when BHO is improperly made, it can be tainted with toxins.

But perhaps the biggest emerging concern with concentrates is how they may enable minors to abuse pot. Though many high schoolers use vape pens to inhale candy-flavored oils that don't contain psychoactive substances, a study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that 10 percent had used the devices in 2012 to consume nicotine concentrates (i.e., they'd tried "e-cigarettes"), double the number from the previous year–and that number is likely an underestimate. Emily Anne McDonald, an anthropologist at the University of California-San Francisco, told me her interviews with teens and young adults in New York suggest that the use of vape pens for pot is gaining steam–"especially for getting around the rules and smoking marijuana in places that are more public." She's currently applying for a grant to study the use of pot-concentrate vape pens by young people in Colorado.

Not surprisingly, some cities and states that allow medical marijuana don't look kindly on concentrates. In July, an appeals court in Michigan, where pot is legal for medical use and decriminalized for recreational use in many cities, ruled that concentrates aren't allowed under the state's medical marijuana law. In 2012, the Department of Public Health in pot-friendly San Francisco asked the city's dispensaries to stop carrying concentrates. (It later reversed itself in the face of a backlash.) A recently introduced California bill supported by law enforcement interests would revise its medical pot rules to ban pot concentrates statewide.

The rising popularity of BHO "certainly is a safety issue," acknowledges Bill Panzer, a member of the board of directors of the California chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). Yet Panzer doesn't see prohibition as the solution. "You can either tell people to stop using concentrates, which they won't," he says, "or you can say, 'Let's regulate it and make sure it's done safely."

After some fierce debates, lawmakers in Colorado and Washington have ultimately decided to permit and regulate concentrates. Colorado requires anyone who makes BHO to operate out of a facility that is separate from a grow operation and that has been certified by an industrial hygienist or professional engineer. Washington state's Legislature last week passed a bill allowing state-licensed pot shops to sell concentrates, as long as the amount sold to any one customer doesn't exceed seven grams. But there are plenty of do-it-yourself recipes online.

Although more states may decide to regulate the production and sale of concentrates (see our maps of the pot regulation landscape), they'll have a much harder time preventing people from toking from vape pens on the sly. NORML's Panzer isn't worried. He brings up the example of an obnoxiously drunk baseball fan who sat next to his son at a recent Oakland A's game. "I have never seen anybody on weed doing that," he says. "Anytime you are replacing alcohol with cannabis, that's positive."

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News Moderator - The General @ 420 MAGAZINE ®
Source: Motherjones.com
Author: Josh Harkinson
Contact: Contact Us | Mother Jones
Website: How Vape Pens Could Threaten the Pot Legalization Movement | Mother Jones
 
Out with the 'booze', in with the 'dabs'...at frighteningly fast speeds, no less! The market for distillates is exploding across America. Vape pipes n pens are now as ubiquitous as smartphones. How you gonna stop it once you've started it? The genie is ALREADY out of the bottle, people! Pandora's box and all that goes with it no longer houses the simple buds n flowers of the Cannabis plant, but rather...kick ass, mucho potent thick viscous remnants of plant materials extracted from a simmering bath of Everclear right from the kitchen stove! BHO is for hard-core pot fanaticos. Simple simmering in a bath of Everclear alcohol is all it takes to produce concentrated liquid medicine. And, you wonder why this stuff was banned in the first place? Because Big Pharma doesn't want you all to reach for your teaspoon as Americans USED TO do away back in the 1800's when distilled liquids of Cannabis sativa L. were LEGALLY prescribed in America for D. tremens, for Nausea, for Insomnia, etc. How much does it cost for a farmer to grow a batch of buds from a weed, and then distill it all down, stems, leaves, seeds, et al...and, then strain that mixture into a jar that can be sealed and placed up there in the medicine cabinet? Answer: Cheaper than the $1,000 per dose of Cancer fighting drugs concocted in the laboratory of Big Pharma's profit machines, that's for sure! Dab responsibly, people! And, enjoy our new found freedom!
 
Hear,hear, @hempaz !
Cannabis decriminalization is for everything the plant can make, not JUST it's raw flowers.
I personally am elated I found concentrates as an adult user, for I use cannabis products for PAIN RELIEF, and this does the charm.
My CBD tincture helps too but for almost immediate relief, more than I can get from flowers, I vaporize cannabis concentrates.
Do I think children need concentrated cannabis ? No. What escapes the article is vaping is already illegal for those under 18 (high school age) so I don't see how kids are 'vaping in the hallways'.
Also, don't we argue against the same logic when applied to cannabis flowers ? That we have to 'save the children' ? Let's not be marijuana hypocrites. Vote AGAINST the criminalization of cannabis concentrates ! This would be unfair to responsible adults who have smoked flowers for 20-30 years and need the potency of concentrates.
Vaporzing concentrates is also saving my lungs. I'm 45 now, and can't handle most modes of 'smoking' cannabis, like bongs, joints, pipes.. too much on my luings. With concentrates, I only need 1 or 2 VAPORIZED puffs and I"m good for 1/3 of the day. MUCH less wear and tear on the old air sacs.
So, in closing, I just would like all of you to consider the fact we want cannabis freedom for everything the plant can produce, not just what we personally use.
 
Kids vaporize in the hallways just as kids used to go out to the parking lot and 'powder their noses' with vodka and orange juice (no alcohol smell).

Experimentation at young ages will always be with us.

The 'John Elway' of pot in Colorado now runs about six or seven legal dispensaries in various parts of the state.

He started smoking dweeb in the 6th grade.

His dispensaries are now worth about $4 mill USD each.

Now, for sure some kids are not going to be able to handle the strength of #MedMj.

But, some kids may make it through.

Which ones? You'll have to peer into their genetic make-up to see if they have the gene that mops up excess dopamine in the cerebral cortex.

For if not, the kids will remain in a fog, all cheesed up, their network of synapsis unable to calculate.

Not good!

RH
 
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