Woody Harrelson | How Cannabis Became Illegal | Growing Belushi



This documentary examines marijuana regulations and how these laws have influenced public perceptions of the drug.
It is narrated by known pot advocate “Woody Harrelson.”

💚GREAT DOCUMENTARY 💚

Thing is, the drug wasn’t always prohibited. Anglo-Americans and Europeans have known about marijuana’s medicinal benefits since at least the 1830s. Around that time, Sir William Brooke O’Shaughnessy, an Irish doctor studying in India, documented that cannabis extracts could ease cholera symptoms like stomach pain and vomiting. By the late 19th century, Americans and Europeans could buy cannabis extracts in pharmacies and doctors’ offices to help with stomach aches, migraines, inflammation, insomnia, and other ailments.

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Belushi’s Farm products are currently available in Oregon, Massachusetts, Maine, Pennsylvania, Nevada, Arizona, California, New York, Michigan. Coming Soon: Colorado, Mississippi, New Mexico, South Dakota, Missouri, Illinois.

JIM BELUSHI

Belushi appeared in films such as Thief (1981), Salvador (1986), About Last Night (1986), Red Heat (1988), K-9 (1989), Jingle All the Way (1996), Hoodwinked! (2005), The Wild (2006), Underdog (2007) and Sollers Point (2017).

Jim Belushi is a man of many talents – actor, singer, dancer, and now… legal cannabis farmer. Follow Jim, his family and their dedicated team at Belushi’s Farm as they make their mark in the industry and spread the benefits of legalized marijuana in Growing Belushi.

Now Streaming on Max !!!!!!

Growing Belushi

Actor Jim Belushi builds a cannabis business from scratch in Oregon.
Plans start at $9.99/month.

Growing Belushi

Genres

Reality, Pop Culture & Celebrity

Episodes

3 Seasons Available (12 Episodes)

Release Year

2020

Rating Information

TV-14

About This Series

Growing Belushi is an American television series on the Discovery Channel & Max, featuring Jim Belushi and his cannabis farm in southern Oregon.

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“What do you guys think?

  Recently, Belushi posted a promotional video featuring Dan Aykroyd. 

https://youtube.com/shorts/Q4XfLcYbIJs?si=A2Rx0QTA15HMu6mz 👈😎

Belushi has operated his 93-acre marijuana farm in Southern Oregon since 2015. Belushi’s Farm is featured in the Discovery series “Growing Belushi,” which chronicles Belushi’s life on site.
Jim Belushi said the cannabis business is “to break even — because the purpose, the power of this plant, serves the greater good.”

He hopes that “Growing Belushi” would change the perspective of how the public sees the cannabis businesses. “I’m trying to create a show that informs people about the safety of cannabis.” 

#cannabis #thc #cbd #cbn #cannabisheals #marijuana #ganja #marijuanagrower

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Just because people in the past used something for medicinal purposes doesn’t always mean it was a good idea. But modern research has backed up claims that marijuana has real medical benefits. For example, it can decrease seizures and alleviate pain without causing physical dependence.

Despite its medical usefulness, many Americans’ attitudes toward cannabis shifted at the turn of the century. This was at least partly motivated by Mexican immigration to the U.S. around the time of the 1910 Mexican Revolution, according to Eric Schlosser, author of Reefer Madness: Sex, Drugs, and Cheap Labor in the American Black Market.

“The prejudices and fears that greeted these peasant immigrants also extended to their traditional means of intoxication: smoking marijuana,” Schlosser wrote for The Atlantic in 1994. “Police officers in Texas claimed that marijuana incited violent crimes, aroused a ‘lust for blood,’ and gave its users ‘superhuman strength.’ Rumors spread that Mexicans were distributing this ‘killer weed’ to unsuspecting American schoolchildren.”
It’s worth noting that research has shown alcohol to be more dangerous than marijuana. In addition, cannabis doesn’t really cause superhuman strength, and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s fact sheet on the drug says that “No death from an overdose of marijuana has been reported.”

Even though there was no evidence to support claims that marijuana had a Jekyll-and-Hyde effect, 29 states outlawed marijuana between 1916 and 1931. The Marihuana Tax Act of 1937 essentially banned it nationwide despite objections from the American Medical Association related to medical usage. This act came just a year after the film Reefer Madness warned parents that drug dealers would invite their teenagers to jazz parties and get them hooked on “reefer.”

The federal government and states continued to increase punishments related to marijuana until the late 1960s when the laws began to touch white, upper-middle-class college students who were smoking the drug.

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