Topical Pot - Injection-Like Delivery Of Cannabis Through Your Skin With A Cream

Ron Strider

Well-Known Member
Cannabis or Marijuana is a huge industry. In the US today, it is split between the legal and not so legal market for the sale and consumption of Cannabis. While the illegal Marijuana industry topped an estimated $46 billion in sales in the US during 2016 the legal sector generated just $6.7 billion. But this is all going to change, according to most industry participants, as a growing number of states are legalizing Cannabis for both medical and recreational purposes. Sure, the Feds may drag their feet in hopping aboard the Cannabis consumption bus but sooner or later the lure of taxing the multibillion dollar industry will just be too much.

With 29 states and the District of Columbia having legalized Cannabis consumption in some form or fashion, that $46 billion will be migrating over to the legal column. Creative companies with solid business plans and management horsepower that establish themselves now are well positioned to take advantage of this new era of legal Marijuana.

One of these companies that is certainly worth a look is RMR Laboratories, a company that promises "Injection-like delivery of cannabis through your skin with a cream."

No More Bongs & Brownies

Crowdfunding on Republic, RMR Labs claims a game changing technology for Cannabis delivery and everything is apparently patented. RMR explains that until now there were only two ways to get high: smoke it or eat. But these methods have some negative side effects and smoking a joint is not always convenient. There solution is described as follows:

"We developed the first and only line of cannabis topicals using a pharmaceutical technology that can deliver cannabis through the skin"

And it is not just about catching a buzz, it is about chronic pain and sports injuries using one of their products which is non-psychoactive treatment. For chronic pain sufferers such as back pain and arthritis, RMR may provide the perfect solution. But RMR Labs has a whole list of Cannabis based products, from pain to love, it intends on manufacturing and delivering.

RMR boasts a current sales pipeline of $2.2 million but they are just getting started and it is still quite early in this game. The company predicts the Cannabis business will generate $25 billion by 2020 and they want to be a big part of this.

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News Moderator: Ron Strider 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Topical Pot: RMR Labs Promises Injection-like Delivery of Cannabis Through Your Skin with a Cream | Crowdfund Insider
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Photo Credit: John Carl D'Annibale
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so, these inventors of the cream have a patent. where did they research for this patent? and then after they get the patent, they use it as a weapon to keep other out. why are you promoting this as a good thing rather than pointing out monopoly power of these agents who are getting patents while regular people get jail time? It will be interesting to see if anyone replies to this.
 
so, these inventors of the cream have a patent. where did they research for this patent? and then after they get the patent, they use it as a weapon to keep other out. why are you promoting this as a good thing rather than pointing out monopoly power of these agents who are getting patents while regular people get jail time? It will be interesting to see if anyone replies to this.

Hi BaMarley, I know some of what you mention here is a real concern, there's no doubt.

However, I don't think anything is being promoted here. It's a news story. 420mag are simply compiling Cannabis related news for us right here on the forum, which I appreciate as it saves me searching for it, and most of it is never come across in my own. When these stories are posted it's always just the story, no promoting, no editorialising (nobody posting the news stories is saying, 'this is good' or 'this is bad'...) just sharing the news. .

The article doesn't specify what the pending patents are on either - might just be on delivery mechanisms, not the weed itself. Without knowing it's hard to say whether there's anything 'dastardly' about it. Would require more research to know that.

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