How global warming research is like pot research

Reefer madness title screen
Reefer madness title screen (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

While pro-warming political pundits like to demonize climate skeptic research by comparing it to that of tobacco company research and marketing, it seems there is a parallel between the story of global warming and marijuana demonization. This story is about the parallels in research, and does not represent any position on drug use by WUWT – Anthony

Guest Essay by Dr. Robert G. Brown, Duke University (elevated from a comment)

Judith Curry’s remarks [Scientists and motivated reasoning], as usual, are dead on the money.

Here’s an almost perfectly analogous problem: CNN recently completely reversed its editorial policy and now calls for the legalization of Marijuana. Sanjay Gupta, its “resident physician editorialist”, who had previously somewhat vigorously led this opposition from the scientific point of view completely reversed his own position, and explained why in considerable detail both in text and in online video.

Historically, marijuana was both legal and considered to be a useful medicine all the way up through the beginning of the twentieth century. At that point, William Randolph Hearst had invested heavily in pine forests in Mexico, intending to sell them to his own newspapers to make newsprint. The Dupont family were discovering petrochemicals including plastic and oil-derived pharmaceuticals. A machine was invented that was the equivalent of a “cotton gin” for hemp — it mechanically stripped down the hemp plant and turned it into useful fiber, oil, and vegetable waste that could be used as an animal fodder (yes, we can imagine some very happy cows, can’t we?:-). One of many uses for the now inexpensive hemp fiber was to make equally inexpensive newsprint paper that was clearly superior in quality and cost to wood pulp paper. Another was that the oils and fiber could be used to synthesize various chemical products. Both Dupont and Hearst were suddenly hundreds of millions of dollars at risk.

They turned to Harry Anslinger, who happened to be Hearst’s brother in law. Anslinger was a suddenly idle ex-prohibitionist working for the FBI, and he created a propaganda campaign that portrayed hemp as literally maddening those that actually smoked it, leading them to commit acts of rape and robbery and moral turpitude. At the same time, political revolutions in Mexico (funded and fought by a private army belonging to Hearst) and a negative portrayal of blacks and Mexicans as common users of hemp for recreation purposes added a useful racist hook. Between these, congress outlawed hemp.

So matters remained until the Viet Nam war and the 1960s and early 70s. As part of the quiet “revolution” against what many perceived as a military-industrial complex with a life of its own that was fighting a series of expensive and pointless wars, pot had become “the” recreational drug of choice among young hippies and freaks as well as the military draftees who fought the war. Its use was so prevalent that Texas dropped the question about cannabis use from its entrance exam to police academy, because “asking a vet of they had ever smoked pot was like asking them if they smoked Camels”. Suddenly a large fraction of an entire generation of U.S. citizens had smoked pot and discovered that no, it does not turn you into a crazed rapist, and usually does not make you insane unless you are most of the way there on your own already. They also discovered that it is neither physically addictive nor dangerous in the sense that it is literally impossible to overdose on marijuana — it is literally one of the safest compounds we know of, with no meaningful fatal dose.

However, Ronald Reagan took office in the 80′s, an immediately declared a “War on Drugs”. Marijuana was reclassified as a schedule 1 narcotic by the federal government [in 1970], trumping communities that had already begun to experiment with decriminalization or even legalization. This once again gave law enforcement agencies lots of useful work (helpful if you are trying to build a police state), gave cops everywhere the ability to selectively enforce drug laws and thereby control the populace, and caused us to rather suddenly need to build enormous numbers of prisons because it rapidly turned out that by making marijuana trafficking a felony and putting even mere users in jail (just like heroin, cocaine, and actually dangerous drugs) somewhere between 1/3 and 1/2 of all prison sentences were being handed down for low grade drug offenses. Our expenditure on controlling pot went from next to nothing to tens of billions of dollars a year. Obviously, many profited from this, including (as usual) the money launderers and organized criminals that made fortunes providing marijuana on the black market, and the politicians and bankers that provided well-paid-for top cover.

And now to the interesting bit (although I think all of the above is interesting:-). One of the reasons given for making marijuana a schedule 1 felony class drug [in 1970] was that we didn’t know about the harm it might cause, and there was no known medical benefit. Yes, it had been used as a medicine for centuries, the founding fathers literally “mandated” the growing of hemp on American farms because it was so useful a plant both industrially and medicinally, but we had entered the era of double blind placebo controlled drug trials, and there were now enormous pharmaceutical companies whose billion-dollar products were at risk, dwarfing even the Duponts’ complaint back in the 30′s. Its risks were similarly unstudied.

A period of research then ensued. If you wanted to study pot, you had to both get funded and get the experimental marijuana from a single, small farm in Mississippi that grew “legal” pot for this purpose. The government itself was in complete control, in other words of what research got conducted, because even if you could find outside funding, you couldn’t get legal pot to do the research with without approval.

Gupta initially opposed marijuana legalization because a review of the medical literature showed him that 96% of all published articles found some sort of negative effect of marijuana, and almost no articles showed a benefit, especially compared to existing approved medications. However, a couple of anecdotal cases coming out of the states that had legalized medicinal marijuana in SPITE of the federal governments laws caused him to go back and reexamine the funding model. In retrospect it shouldn’t have been surprising, but he learned that 96% of all funded research was to look for negative effects of marijuana, and that to get funded and permission to get government grown pot was so difficult that there simply weren’t all that many papers in the first place. In well over thirty years of intensive examination, all of the examination was literally preselected to find problems, almost none to find benefits, and one had to walk on water and push much paper to do either one (and relatively few scientists had bothered).

That caused him to examine the body of emerging, still anecdotal, evidence from the states that had legalized medical marijuana. They showed that — again unsurprisingly — marijuana is a rich pharmacopeia with multiple legitimate medical uses that could survived double blind placebo controlled investigation, while at the same time having minimal side effects and no known lethal dose. Perhaps he came to realize that its negative effects might, conceivably, have been a bit exaggerated or might arise from confounding uncontrolled elements. Confirmation bias is, after all, the bete noir of science.

This situation almost perfectly matches the evolution of “climate science”. Nobody cared about it for decades, but suddenly a group of individuals emerged that all benefited from the demonization of carbon. This included environmental groups, that hated civilization itself and the burning of anything (as long, of course, as their own lifestyle was preserved), energy producers that saw in this the opportunity to triple or quadruple their profits by creating artificial scarcity of a plentiful resource, politicians that saw in this the opportunity to raise taxes, get elected on a world-saving “issue”, and perhaps line their own pockets along the way, and a United Nations that saw an opportunity to transform it into a way to tax the rich nations and transfer money to developing nations (while again lining various pockets along the way). The role of Anslinger was admirably met by one James Hansen, a True Believer who never stinted and does not stint today in exaggerating the data and claims of disaster (five meter sea level rise! temperatures like that on Venus!). And suddenly, quite literally all funded research was on how burning carbon was bad for the climate.

Even completely ethical scientists have to eat, and if the only way they can eat is to get funded, and the only way they can get funded is to submit proposals that seek to prove that CO_2 is bad, guess what they will propose to study? And if they want to get funded AGAIN, guess what they will find? Climate science has been effectively corrupted beyond any hope of objectivity.

On the good side of things, scientists are actually usually pretty ethical. Also, in the end data talks, bullshit walks. The hypothesis of CAGW or CACC could, in fact, be true (across a wide spectrum of the meaning of “true”, in fact). However, recent data is not in good correspondence with the theories that have predicted it, and many good scientists are in the process of reassessing their conclusions. As is the almost simultaneous case with regard to marijuana, the confounding evidence is starting to overwhelm to narrowly funded and directed arguments to date. We will see where the future takes us, in both cases.

======================================================

Addendum by Anthony:

1. I have added links to historical references into the essay along with some small edits [in brackets] for clarity.

2. This paragraph:

A period of research then ensued. If you wanted to study pot, you had to both get funded and get the experimental marijuana from a single, small farm in Mississippi that grew “legal” pot for this purpose.

Has a parallel with source data for global warming research. If you want to study the surface temperature record, there is one source: NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) who is not only the administrator, collator and keeper of the surface temperature record for the United States, but also the world via their Global Historical Climatological Network (GHCN). All other surface temperature datasets, HadCRUT, GISS, and even the supposedly independent BEST, are derivatives and/or custom interpretations of this source data, which as we know, is custom blended with NCDC’s own set of adjustments.

Like with pot research, the government is again the only source for data to study the surface record.

And people wonder why I spend so much time and effort to examine weather stations and adjustments.

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Luther Wu
August 22, 2013 2:27 pm

more soylent green! says:
August 22, 2013 at 10:57 am
They chicken littles are always looking for new catch phrases to describe global warming. The problem is, the globe just isn’t warming and the predictions haven’t come true.
Out – global warming
Out – climate change
In – climate disruption.
What comes next?
_____________________________
Where ya been, boy? Time to catch up!
Your list should look like this…
Out – global warming
Out – climate change
Out – climate disruption
Out- extreme weather events
In- carbon pollution
The moving finger writes and moves on…

Wu
August 22, 2013 2:28 pm

The thing about cannabis (marijuana was a term coined by the anti-mexican racist in the story above) is you need to smoke it to know what it’s all about. Unfortunatly in the eyes of many if you have smoked it, somehow you are incapable of being rationally unbiased on the subject…. or ‘tainted’ if you will.
P.S. There is no way you can overdose on cannabis. I remember the laughable experiments on monkeys to prove that smoking joints were lethal – they were made to smoke using an adapted gas mask of sorts and died of carbon dioxide poisoning. That didn’t stop the “scientists” proclaiming lethality of cannabis though.

Wu
August 22, 2013 2:32 pm

To those who are against lifting the prohibition Penn and Teller’s BS did a good episode on the subject. I recommend it to anyone who can find it online or something.

Wu
August 22, 2013 2:34 pm

Bloody hell, found it on youtube, sorry mod I’m not spamming, here it is;

Bill Taylor
August 22, 2013 2:41 pm

sigmund PLEASE try to grasp there is NO “cost” to society when people use marijuana, legal marijuana = million jobs, uncrowded prisons, LESS crime, huge revenue to government and LESS spending by government…..
the only negatives are for the big drug companies, big government, and busybodies butting into others lives.
how any person can deny a sick person the obvious comfort of that SAFE natural herb is beyond my comprehension.

Bill Taylor
August 22, 2013 2:42 pm

just read some more…….folks blaming marijuana for obama behaviors???? you cant possibly be serious?

Outrageous Ampersand
August 22, 2013 2:53 pm

While I can’t confirm or deny that I have used pot, the funds spent on fighting it are clearly an egregious waste of public money.

Outrageous Ampersand
August 22, 2013 3:03 pm

rgbatduke
You’re better off ingesting 10 grams of pure plutonium than 10 grams of pure caffeine. You’ll probably survive the plutonium, but that much caffeine will kill any human alive.

August 22, 2013 3:05 pm

Aaron asked: “Was the drug war Keynesian stimulus? Was it effective on the short and medium term?” I’m not aware of any Keynesian stimulus in any country ever being effective, in terms of superior economic outcomes to a non-stimulus option. One of the leaders in this field, Robert Barros, says that his “best guess” is that the stimulus multiplier effect is 0.6 – 0.7 – that is, there are $2 of net benefit from every $3 of “stimulus” spending. The latter is wealth-destroying.
Robert G Brown 11.57 am Good sub-post.
I know that the issue here is alleged CAGW rather than pot. However: I first smoked cannabis resin in Istanbul in 1967, when I was 25, and it changed my life. I have always been naïve and trusting, as I grew up, I accepted the view of the world I received from society. And yet, despite my efforts to be “good,” and my positive volition, I was always getting into trouble. When I first got stoned, I realised that there were many ways of looking at the world, and the one that I had been shown was wrong. Either the adults/powers-that-be were lying, or they were ignorant. Either way, I had to understand the world for myself, directly. This set me on, in effect, a spiritual quest, which has proved very beneficial for me and others. (And led me to move on from drugs in the ‘70s.) I can’t see any convincing evidence that emissions-reduction programs will prove beneficial to people at large rather than certain vested interests.
In passing, in my drug era, I provided economic policy analysis and advice to a body chaired by the British Prime Minister. One of my papers sold out a first print run of 28,000 copies. I don’t, of course, attribute that to drug use, but I was functional.

DirkH
August 22, 2013 3:09 pm

Bill Taylor says:
August 22, 2013 at 2:41 pm
“sigmund PLEASE try to grasp there is NO “cost” to society when people use marijuana, legal marijuana = million jobs, uncrowded prisons, LESS crime, huge revenue to government and LESS spending by government…..”
The government would tax it so much that the drug gangs would continue dominating the market.

John Whitman
August 22, 2013 3:10 pm

RGB,
Seems governments should not be the central planner/ funder of sciences other than very limited scope science for military defense. Just like it should not be the central planner of total economies. Government bureaucracy is not fundamentally capable of being a free (as in open) marketplace of scientific ideas and development; it will default to doing what is politically expedient based on the politically fashionable ideology of the moment.
RGB, as to the use of pot’s history in a comparison with the history of ‘motivated’ global warming science, it probably would have been significantly more effective to use the history of alcohol prohibition (and its subsequent repeal).
Environmentalism as a mandatory and exclusive worldview to determine all aspects of human activity (including its science) is a virulent form of totalitarianism. That cannot be confused with the many grassroots efforts to live in clean neighborhoods which commonly is thought to be environmental in nature.
John

DirkH
August 22, 2013 3:13 pm

Mr Green Genes says:
August 22, 2013 at 1:33 pm
” Your post is fatuous. Nobody is suggesting that “a supermarket [would] hand out free samples of Meth with a bar of candy”. Does any supermarket hand out free samples of vodka like that? Or aspirin?”
When kids want Vodka they pay an adult homeless.

Frank Kotler
August 22, 2013 3:19 pm

If you fund studies to find something wrong with pot, they’ll find something wrong with pot. If that’s where you get your information, you’ll think there’s something wrong with pot.
If you fund studies to find something wrong with CO2, they’ll find something wrong with CO2. If that’s where you get your information, you’ll think there’s something wrong with CO2.
I’m willing to defend pot all day – I’ve been a pot-head for 49 years – but I didn’t think that was Dr. Brown’s point.

John Whitman
August 22, 2013 3:25 pm

DirkH on August 22, 2013 at 3:09 pm

Bill Taylor says:
August 22, 2013 at 2:41 pm
“sigmund PLEASE try to grasp there is NO “cost” to society when people use marijuana, legal marijuana = million jobs, uncrowded prisons, LESS crime, huge revenue to government and LESS spending by government…..”

The government would tax it so much that the drug gangs would continue dominating the market.

– – – – – – –
DirkH,
I tend to agree with you on the zeal of gov’t to tax increasingly. However, in the case of alcohol in the USA after repeal of prohibition till now (more than 60 years) the significant taxation currently on alcohol does not yet cause a significant underground unlicensed production of alcohol.
But at some taxation level I would expect a significant alcohol underground to start and thrive.
John

John Whitman
August 22, 2013 3:54 pm

Here are two books that counter the fundamental basis for government prohibition of drugs. I found them to make good cases against prohibition.
‘ Ceremonial Chemistry’ by Thomas Szasz; published: January 1, 1974
‘Defending the Undefendable’ by Walter Block; current publisher:Ludwig von Mises Institute, May 1, 2008
I recommend them to those who find fundamental folly in prohibition.
John

policycritic
August 22, 2013 3:57 pm

Janice Moore says:
August 22, 2013 at 11:26 am
There are many harmful effects of chronic marijuana use, e.g., as was pointed out above, memory impairment (lol, Bob B.) and respiratory ailments, making it, IMO, a noxious substance I am happy to have banned from the public square.

Dr. Tashkin, the UCLA research scientist and subsequent DEA darling who discovered in 1970 that cigarettes were bad for you, lumped in marijuana with his findings back then; he had no proof. I know I certainly believed them.
It was his 2005/2006 repeat of his 1970 study that changed his mind. The participants were 35 years older. He had four groups:
1. People who didn’t smoke
2. People who smoked marijuana only
3. People who smoked cigarettes only
4. People who smoked cigarettes and marijuana
1. People who didn’t smoke
The natural aging of the lungs as expected.
2. People who smoked marijuana only
Some showed a reaction in the upper part of the lung
3. People who smoked cigarettes only
What you’d expect, big-time lung deterioration
4. People who smoked cigarettes and marijuana
This was the biggest shock. Their lungs were like No. 1. Their lungs looked like the people who didn’t smoke anything. Scroll up and read about it in my counterpunch link. I listened to him describe it in an hour long video too. Someone who smokes cigarettes only needs to have a joint one or twice a month to get the protection.
Tashkin–the DEA paid for his eponymous lab at UCLA–couldn’t get his results published in 2006-2008, but at least he had enough intellectual honesty to admit he’d been wrong. He did announce his findings to the doctors/nurses at a CA conference where research doctors and scientists tell the medical world about their latest findings (April, 2008). That’s where I first heard about it; took the top of my head off: you mean I’d been dead wrong for three decades, and virulently anti-marijuana for nothing, dismissing friends and disrupting our family?
I stopped banning my nieces and nephews from my house as a result of my six-month research into this, and once I read through Dr. Guzman’s work. The whole marijuana=respiratory ailments is bogus; marijuana protects the lungs. The 1974 NIH study called marijuana the best anti-tumor drug known to man in its natural form; I looked it up. One copy left at UofC Davis, and a copy in England from that. Remember President Ford had this research destroyed and removed from all medical databases; he banned the use of natural THC in all medical experiments. THC is the healing substance. In two human trials, Dr. Guzman had eradication of a glioma in 15 days. Not remission. Eradication. A glioma, the worse brain tumor you can get, and certain death within two months.

policycritic
August 22, 2013 4:05 pm

Janice Moore (more). They put THC oil on a pacifier for an eight-month old baby who had an inoperable brain tumor (glioma) in the middle of her brain. Gone within eight months. Scroll up and watch the video for the MRIs. The doctor who did this thought the whole thing was bogus until he saw it.

policycritic
August 22, 2013 4:15 pm

This is a little home-spun but it’s authentic. This is how you make the oil. My sister-in-law is European. Her brother’s wife was dying from some kind of cancer; age: mid-30s. I sent my sister-in-law this film, and she passed it along. They bought seeds from England, grew two plants on their farm, and did what this guy recommended and she’s in remission. Her doctors supported it 100% because she was a goner.
http://phoenixtears.ca/video-library/
Click on Run From The Cure – Full Version.
I don’t like the taste or smell of, or my reaction to, marijuana, but I sure as hell wish I’d known about this when other friends were dying. Shame on Ford and Reagan. Shame on them.

David Smith
August 22, 2013 4:15 pm

“Mr Green Genes says (about DirkH)
August 22, 2013 at 1:33 pm
” Your post is fatuous. Nobody is suggesting that “a supermarket [would] hand out free samples of Meth with a bar of candy”. Does any supermarket hand out free samples of vodka like that? Or aspirin?”
DirkH,
I was going to reply to your post, but Mr Green Genes beat me to it and answered you probably way better than I could. Legalizing drugs doen’t mean handing them to kids like sweets. It means allowing adults to make their own choices, without having to resort to paying gangsters.
You seem to be like the guy in the bar who told me we would all end up addicted zombies if all drugs were legalized. I know I wouldn’t, as I’d make a personal and informed choice not to take hard drugs. I’m sure you would do the same. In other words, society wouldn’t come crashing to the ground.
Having posted my initial comment I wasn’t sure if I would be answered with loads of commenters denigrating me for my views. However, I’ve been pleasantly surprised by how many people seem to support the idea of complete legalization. I guess there are more libertarian-minded people hanging out at WUWT than I realised 🙂

David Smith
August 22, 2013 4:41 pm

If alcohol appeared on the market today as a brand-new drug it would be denounced as the ultimate nightmare drug:
– it’s highly addictive
– many people become irrationally confrontational/violent after having ingested alcohol
– even relatively small amounts of alcohol (in it’s pure form) can kill you
– it affects peoples’ motor skills in a very severe way
– the come-down (hangover) is unbelievably horrid compared to many other drugs
However, as it has been legalized for so long, society has learned to cope with it:
– We don’t ingest it in its purest form, instead we make a very palatable Chianti.
– We legislate against operation of machinery/automobiles by people who have ingested alcohol
– Govt campaigns openly inform the populace of the health problems that accompany the excessive use of alcohol
– The (very) small minority who do become addicted are given many options for support.
– It isn’t sold on street corners by young men with guns
– Govts make a fortune by taxing the sale of alcohol
– The brewing and sale of alcohol has kept many people in employment.
– Some people make a personal choice not to drink alcohol
And so, I believe it would be the same if we legalized all other drugs.
Compared to alcohol, Mary-Jane is a wonder-drug. I would love to be able to sit in a bar and enjoy a relaxing spliff along with my pint of gorgeous craft beer.
However, instead of legalizing and successfully taxing all drugs and creating a new and thriving drugs economy, govts are instead trying to tax the air we breath whilst watermelon activists try to convince us all that we’re going to fry to death because we use fossil fuels. As the great Prof Hal Lewis said, “Global warming is the greatest and most successful pseudoscientific fraud I have seen in my long life”

MattS
August 22, 2013 4:50 pm

rgbatduke,
“and arguably even caffeine (although caffeine is also very safe)”
I had a dog die of caffeine overdose. He got a hold of an old bottle of caffeine tablets that I had forgotten I even had. I estimate he got the equivalent of 15-20 cups of coffee. It over stimulated his body to the point his heart gave out from the strain. The dog was around 60 lbs. and lethal dose for a human would be on the order of three or more times higher.
Now getting 120 or more cups of coffee into your system by drinking caffeinated beverages would be difficult, but overdosing on caffeine tablets is very doable and would likely be lethal at those levels.

Richard D
August 22, 2013 4:54 pm

rgbatduke said:
.”a symptom of an over controlling society is one where the legal consequences of performing any action are worse — often far worse — than the supposed or known consequences of performing the action. ”
Right on, Dr. Brown. Further, as you cogently explain, the collateral damage is that we are all less free. IMO, it boils down to power, money, the usual suspects.

Chad Wozniak
August 22, 2013 5:02 pm

There is substantial well-documented medical evidence that cannabis can impair the kinds of reasoning ability needed to do complex mathematics, can aggravate bipolarity and schizophrenia, can cause passivity and general indifference to one’s surroundings. These effects are the more pronounced the younger the person is when they begin to use it. Some tests reportedly show statistically significant reductions in IQ when children use cannabis. In addition, some physicians say that the effects of cannabis smoke on the lungs are as bad as, or worse than, tobacco smoke.
Of course excessive alcohol use can also contribute to mental deficiency and instability, and other “hard” drugs – opiates, methamphetamine – are worse still.
But even if cannabis isn’t as bad as the people saying these things claim, one has to wonder what need there should be for any intoxicants. A glass of wine or a mug of beer now and again, for the taste and not the buzz, is reasonable enough, but why do people feel the need to bend their minds around so totally? It’s hard enough to get by in this world without mentally (and physically) crippling oneself.
I personally take no position as to the legality of drugs. But I’m damned proud and glad I’ve never tried pot or any other illegal drug.
This all seems off topic anyway, but the research issues are pertinent to AGW.

MinB
August 22, 2013 5:30 pm

My friend who is a pulmonary radiologist advises her patients to stop SMOKING cannibis… ingest instead if you like weed. Seems like sound advice to me and plenty of good recipes out there. Even though I live in Colorado where weed is now legal, I’ve decided that an appetite stimulant is the last thing I need.

Carla
August 22, 2013 5:34 pm

Gerry says:
August 22, 2013 at 9:48 am
Ever look in the Oval Office?

Ahh Bill Clinton didn’t inhale, but that oval office thing with Monica.. well..
Willie Nelson, said once that he had smoke pot on the White House roof top..
But that is not what disturbs me..
Talking with an ER nurse recently. She was amazed at the increase in heroin overdoses in Fox Valley.
WPR recently talking about the recent epidemic increase in heroin use for the state.
We have middle eastern countries, largely controlled by a rather large and growing religious faction(s) where there primary industry is poppy.
Think hard about just how many countries with faction ties are poppy funded.
How many within the faction, industry and countries that grow poppy are hooked?
Are blacks just being used (as they have been in the past by this faction)?
They say Ottawa? is the heroin capital of North America. Close enough to the great lakes system for easy distribution.
Do terrorists come down the same pipe line? A war on terrorism should include a war on heroin and be stated as such. And did I also hear that North Korea has much of its farmland in poppy? Gee where are they getting their money from.
And then there is People smuggling, using amultiple marriages technique, India.. But probably not enough jobs over there to support the population base…..
So let’s scare the world with CO2? Or did they just want to wake us up and have look?
Reefer madness and global warming madness whoda thunk.
Domesticate the reefer to help as an assist to the war on heroin. Buy local please..know your farmer.

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