Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Amigula Incorporated -- The World's First Publicly Traded Medical Marijuana Company
Business Wire ^ | March 15, 2004

Posted on 03/15/2004 3:04:00 PM PST by Wolfie

Amigula Incorporated -- The World's First Publicly Traded Medical Marijuana Company

Beverly Hills, Calif. -- Amigula Incorporated (OTC:AMJL), the world's first publicly traded medical marijuana company, today announced that several Hollywood agents and management groups have been working with their clients at the bequest of Amigula Inc., negotiating contracts with "Super Stars" willing to endorse medical marijuana as a viable medicinal therapy for a variety of extreme illnesses, including multiple sclerosis, epilepsy, arthritis, glaucoma, AIDS, nausea - chemotherapy, anxiety and stress, as well as for several other dysfunctions.

"We approached several well-known talent agents and managers to request that they approach their talent and present our cause and opportunity to them. Some of the stars wished us well and declined at first, then called their agents back after thinking things over and said 'Let's talk,'" said Warren Eugene, president, Amigula Inc.

"We require a star who is well known and trusted by a geriatric and maturing population. We require someone to educate people with us. There is so much by way of misconception and myth surrounding marijuana; it needs a star to assist us in getting the message right. That message is a simple one -- that marijuana is an excellent alternative homeopic therapy for those truly suffering and requiring medications. We are an agricultural pharmaceutical company on a mission to do good for others.

"So that's when it hit me, what about stars who have excelled at fighting for others with illness. These stars are heroes to millions of people the world over.

"One star actually did a TV episode where she smoked marijuana. She is of the right age and high quality to endorse our company and products. We are pursuing her. There are several stars who would be naturals for us.

"Some have had to personally battle major illness; they had to go through treatment for illness and could empathize with millions of other people requiring therapeutic relief.

"There will be many stars, before too long, who will come to our side and join us in this important quest, of that I'm certain. It's still early; we just got started a few months ago. I'm confident that things will work out well for us. This is history in the making," said Eugene.

About Amigula Inc.

Amigula Inc. -- has recently completed the purchase of 51% of Medical Cannabis Inc. and has announced their plans to file as a reporting issuer. The company plans to list on a major exchange beginning with an application for a listing on the American Stock Exchange (AMEX) or Nasdaq, as well as several European exchanges. The company views the current prohibition of marijuana as similar to that of alcohol, beer and tobacco. Canada's marijuana crop alone is estimated at $4 billion to $7 billion. If a single company controlled it, it would be larger than Canada's oil and gas business and agricultural industries.

On October 7, 2003, the Ontario Superior Court ruled that business and individuals be allowed to grow and supply medical marijuana, effectively relieving the Canadian government of its often criticized and fairly unsuccessful attempts. Health Canada "permitted persons" (exemptees) can now pay Amigula to grow marijuana for them. The ruling makes it easier for sick people to get marijuana by allowing them easier access -- more choice and fair prices. The company has a mandate to develop and improve the medical marijuana business worldwide and is on the acquisition and consolidation trail of other legal licensed marijuana operations with notable international brands.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: drugwar; medicalmarijuana; ondcpagentpaulsen; rpsuckswaltersweiner; sheeples; sodoescindy; wodlist
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 121-140141-160161-180181-185 next last
To: onmyfeet
... of this one issue, yes. What of it? Should I stop wearing shoes because Kerry and Soros wear shoes? Your guilt-by-association dodge has worn thin.

Bush wears shoes but is not on the side of you, Kerry and Soros.

141 posted on 03/18/2004 9:35:25 AM PST by cinFLA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 140 | View Replies]

To: onmyfeet
'A nationwide Zogby International poll of 1,204 likely voters commissioned by the Drug Policy Alliance revealed that 41 percent of those responding agreed that "the government should treat marijuana more or less the same way it treats alcohol: it should regulate marijuana, control it, tax it, and only make it illegal for children."

Interesting that you ignore who paid for this poll. Hmmmm.

Drug Policy Alliance

The Alliance is the nation's leading organization working to end the war on drugs. We envision new drug policies based on science, compassion, health and human rights and a just society in which the fears, prejudices and punitive prohibitions of today are no more. Full mission

142 posted on 03/18/2004 9:42:12 AM PST by cinFLA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 136 | View Replies]

Comment #143 Removed by Moderator

Comment #144 Removed by Moderator

To: cinFLA
It seems that Kerry, Soros and onmyfeet are all on the same side.

It seems that the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Brady Campaign, and cinFLA are on the same side.

145 posted on 03/18/2004 9:46:17 AM PST by jmc813 (Help save a life - www.marrow.org)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 138 | View Replies]

To: Wolfie
at the bequest of Amigula Inc.,

I hope they meant, behest.

146 posted on 03/18/2004 9:48:57 AM PST by Old Professer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: onmyfeet
Since we know the exact wording of the question, there is no opportunity for spin and the sponsorship is irrelevant.

Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha

147 posted on 03/18/2004 9:51:51 AM PST by cinFLA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 144 | View Replies]

To: jmc813; onmyfeet

The Wall Street Journal Europe
2 August 2001,
©2001, Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
State of the Union: The Case Against Legalizing Drugs
(re-edited version)
By Wayne J. Roques

The quest to liberalize drug laws in Europe is gaining steam. Inspired by the movie "Traffic" -- which portrays America's war on drugs as a Sisyphean struggle at best -- such prominent voices as the Economist magazine have now taken up the cause. According to the magazine's editors, the case for legalization rests, first, on John Stuart Mill's principle that the individual is sovereign "over his own body and mind" and so ought to be able to do with himself as he pleases. The editors also argue the practical benefits that would allegedly accrue from eliminating the black market in drugs and establishing a culture of "sensible drug-taking."
These ideas are nothing new; in fact, many of them have long ago been put into practice. Portugal has effectively decriminalized everything from marijuana to crack cocaine. Switzerland and the Netherlands have pioneered. radical approaches to the drug problem, from drug parks to marijuana decriminalization to needle exchanges to various other kinds of "harm reduction" schemes. If the results of these programs are anything to go by, the editors of the Economist have things badly wrong.
Consider Switzerland, which provides heroin to "intractable" addicts under the guise of a "scientific experiment." The program's boosters have claimed that the drug giveaway resulted in a reduction in crime, as well as in the misery and disease associated with hard-core drug addiction.
An evaluation of the Swiss experiment by doctors Sally L. Satel and Ernst Aeschbach gives the lie to this claim. The original intent of the experiment was to get addicts off drugs. Instead, within a year the experiment had to be abandoned and the subjects were simply "maintained on heroin." why? Says one recovering junkie: "Addicts want more than just to feel normal. They want to get high."
In fact, the Swiss trials seem to have accomplished little more than the feeding, sheltering, drugging and the keeping out of sight of addicts. Meanwhile, in the period during which the Swiss began distributing heroin, crime rates soared. According to the Interpol country reports, the Swiss crime rate per 100,000 inhabitants in 1993 was 5,402.12, the year before the experiment began. In 1999, the number was 7,029.68. Little wonder that in 1998 the Swiss voted by a 74% to 26% margin against the legalization of hard drugs.
Then there's the Netherlands. The Dutch began their journey toward becoming Europe's capital of drug production and distribution when they began to turn a blind eye to a so-called soft drug, cannabis, distributed in Amsterdam coffee houses. This policy, which daily attracts thousands of "drug tourists," combined with the long-standing Dutch mercantile tradition to make the Netherlands Europe's leading drug-distribution country.
According to law-enforcement sources, the Netherlands is one of Europe's primary sources for amphetamines, which are then destined for the United Kingdom, Germany or Scandinavia, and LSD, usually exported in blotter acid form to the U.S., Canada, the U.K., Italy and Germany. Holland serves as a principal redistribution point for Southwest Asian heroin, as a key European entry point for South American cocaine, as well as cannabis and hashish imported from Morocco, South Africa, Colombia, Jamaica, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Further, the Netherlands is the world's primary source of the drug ecstasy.
As in Switzerland, marijuana decriminalization has been accompanied by a large upswing in crime. The last Interpol report from the Netherlands for 1998 reported 7,807.66 crimes per 100,000 inhabitants. By contrast, the U.S. figure was 4,619.3 per 100,000. Then too, drug use among adolescents in Holland has increased by as much as 250% since decriminalization.
Betraying a discomfort with the results of its own policies, city officials in the Dutch town of Venlo are now planning to open two drive-through cannabis and hashish shops in Venlo to make it easier for German drug tourists to obtain their drugs. When such tourists linger, they draw dealers selling harder drugs, which creates an unsafe environment. Indeed, polls have found. that between two-thirds and three-quarters of the Dutch oppose their government's liberal drug policy and want authorities to tighten up laws for users and traffickers.
Despite all of this negative data, Dutch officials stay the course on their controversial drug policy. Why? Perhaps the answer lies in the results of a poll taken at a drug policy conference in Rotterdam in 1995. The conferees, including commissioners of police and policy makers, were polled as smoking cannabis and sniffing drugs remarkably more often than the average Dutchman.
Proponents of drug legalization argue that if all European countries frilly liberalized their drug laws (perhaps with an EU directive?) the Netherlands would no longer be an epicenter for drug distribution and the high concentration of crime might therefore be more evenly distributed. They also argue that in a legalized regime drugs could be regulated like alcohol and cigarettes to keep them out of the hands of minors.
These are canards. Drug crimes are not merely the result of addicts stealing in order to get their fix. About four times as often, it is under the intoxication of drugs that people commit criminal and violent acts. The regulation argument is even sillier: Do liquor laws prevent minors from obtaining beer? Have cigarette regulations prevented the huge smuggling rackets we see now in Britain and Spain? Even the Economist concedes that legalization would lead to a rise in drug use. Currently, "it is much harder and riskier to pickup a dose of cocaine than it is to buy a bottle of whiskey. Remove such constraints, make drugs accessible and very much cheaper, and more people will experiment with them."
Which brings us back to the first argument in favor of legalization, the argument that a sovereign individual is entitled to do with himself as he pleases. Taking account of this view, it was Mill himself who noted that "No person is an entirely isolated human being...It for example, a man, through intemperance or extravagance, becomes unable to pay his debts, or, having undertaken the moral responsibility of family, becomes from the same cause incapable of supporting or educating them, he is deservedly reprobated and might be justly punished.
Advocates of drug legalization had better find some other champion.
148 posted on 03/18/2004 10:05:01 AM PST by cinFLA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 145 | View Replies]

Comment #149 Removed by Moderator

To: cinFLA
Europe is also home to the very strict gun control that you Johnsonites are into.
150 posted on 03/18/2004 10:14:43 AM PST by jmc813 (Help save a life - www.marrow.org)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 148 | View Replies]

Comment #151 Removed by Moderator

To: jmc813
Europe is also home to the very strict gun control that you Johnsonites are into.

And you and Soros are trying to make the US more like Europe all the time! I hope you enjoy trying to get Kerry elected.

152 posted on 03/18/2004 10:22:11 AM PST by cinFLA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 150 | View Replies]

To: cinFLA
And you and Soros are trying to make the US more like Europe all the time!

You and I are working together cin. I'll take care of making sure the 13 year olds can buy ecstacy behind the local Pizza Hut, and you take care of the gun grabbing.

153 posted on 03/18/2004 10:30:15 AM PST by jmc813 (Help save a life - www.marrow.org)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 152 | View Replies]

To: onmyfeet
Since we know the exact wording of the question, there is no opportunity for spin and the sponsorship is irrelevant.

Even you should know that the questions asked previous to any particular question influence the result of that question. Your spin is incredible.

154 posted on 03/18/2004 10:33:05 AM PST by cinFLA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 149 | View Replies]

To: cinFLA
Even you should know that the questions asked previous to any particular question influence the result of that question.

Only liberals and druggie hippies use the word "question" three times in one sentence. What gives?

155 posted on 03/18/2004 10:36:55 AM PST by jmc813 (Help save a life - www.marrow.org)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 154 | View Replies]

Comment #156 Removed by Moderator

To: onmyfeet
"A Time magazine/CNN poll

So far you have quoted a poll commissioned by a pro-drug group and a poll sponsored by the liberal elite. We all know how one can get a poll to reflect the numbers you want. Bias the lead in questions, bias your data base, oh it is so easy.

157 posted on 03/18/2004 11:24:55 AM PST by cinFLA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 156 | View Replies]

Comment #158 Removed by Moderator

To: onmyfeet
Our players are scattered across the field, and we are losing ground fast here in the last quarter of the game. To falter now in the face of this last minute defensive effort of the enemy would be to fumble the ball on the ten yard line a stinging ten year setback for the legalization of marijuana.

Shay Addams
159 posted on 03/18/2004 11:50:25 AM PST by cinFLA
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 158 | View Replies]

Comment #160 Removed by Moderator


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 121-140141-160161-180181-185 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson