Showing posts with label booze. Show all posts
Showing posts with label booze. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

Marijuana Breathalyzer Technology.

Sates legalize, sell and tax pot. Then states get more revenue from arresting you for driving under the influence. See how it works?


A federal agency this spring will convene government officials, forensics experts, academics, industry representatives, law enforcement and standards organizations for what it describes as “an open and candid discussion” about “the path forward to realize meaningful cannabis breathalyzer technology and implementation.”

The two-day event, hosted by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), which is part of the U.S. Department of Commerce, is scheduled to be held in Boulder, Colorado, on April 16 and 17.
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Unlike with alcohol, there’s currently no widely accepted field test to determine whether someone is under the influence of marijuana.

In 2023, a federally funded report by researchers at NIST and the University of Colorado Boulder concluded that evidence does “not support the idea that detecting THC in breath as a single measurement could reliably indicate recent cannabis use.”

“A lot more research is needed to show that a cannabis breathalyzer can produce useful results,” Kavita Jeerage, a NIST materials research engineer and co-author of the report, said at the time. “A breathalyzer test can have a huge impact on a person’s life, so people should have confidence that the results are accurate.”

More recently, a U.S. Department of Justice researcher cast doubt on whether a person’s THC levels are even a reliable indicator of impairment.

States may need to “get away from that idea,” Frances Scott, a physical scientist at the National Institute of Justice (NIJ) Office of Investigative and Forensic Sciences under DOJ, said on a podcast early last year.

Scott questioned the efficacy of setting “per se” THC limits for driving that some states have enacted, making it so a person can be charged with driving while impaired based on the concentration of cannabis components in their system. Ultimately, there may not be a way to assess impairment from THC like we do for alcohol, she said.

One complication is that “if you have chronic users versus infrequent users, they have very different concentrations correlated to different effects,” Scott said. “So the same effect level, if you will, will be correlated with a very different concentration of THC in the blood of a chronic user versus an infrequent user.”

That issue was also examined in a federally funded study last year that identified two different methods of more accurately testing for recent THC use that accounts for the fact that metabolites of the cannabinoid can stay present in a person’s system for weeks or months after consumption.

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“The consensus is that there is no linear relationship of blood THC to driving,” [a study preprint posted on The Lancet by an eight-author team representing Canada’s Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Health Canada and Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia identified and assessed a dozen peer-reviewed studies concluded]. “This is surprising given that blood THC is used to detect cannabis-impaired driving.”

Most states where cannabis is legal measure THC intoxication by whether or not someone’s blood THC levels are below a certain cutoff. The study’s findings suggest that relying on blood levels alone may not accurately reflect whether someone’s driving is impaired.

Of the 12 papers included in the present review,” authors wrote, “ten found no correlation between blood THC and any measure of driving, including [standard deviation of lateral position (SDLP)], speed, car following, reaction time, or overall driving performance.
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Evan [sic] as far back as 2015, a U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) concluded that it’s “difficult to establish a relationship between a person’s THC blood or plasma concentration and performance impairing effects,” adding that “it is inadvisable to try and predict effects based on blood THC concentrations alone.”

In a separate report last year, NHTSA said there’s “relatively little research” backing the idea that THC concentration in the blood can be used to determine impairment, again calling into question laws in several states that set “per se” limits for cannabinoid metabolites.

Saturday, April 27, 2024

Saturday Night Memes.

A mix. No "Sensitive Content." Nothing edgy, I don't think so. But to CMA, Viewer Discretion Advised.

Some images best viewed as-is in the page layout, some are better, and larger, when you click on the image.

Please share. Hopefully this man can connect with his group.


MORE AFTER THE PAGE BREAK ⏬ 

Monday, February 6, 2023

Friday, May 20, 2022

Boozing Biden SS Agents sent home from South Korea after drunken "incident."

ABC News: 2 Secret Service employees being sent home from South Korea ahead of Biden's arrival after alleged incident.

Two Secret Service employees -- an agent and an armed physical security specialist -- in South Korea to prepare for President Joe Biden's impending arrival are being sent home after an alleged alcohol-fueled incident that ended with a report being filed with local police, according to two sources briefed on the situation.

The personnel were assigned to help prepare for the presidential visit when they went out for dinner and then stopped at several bars, the sources told ABC News. As the evening progressed, the two Secret Service staffers became apparently intoxicated and the agent wound up in a heated argument with a cab driver, according to the sources.
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The latest episode in the Far East carries echoes of the 2012 scandal in which Secret Service employees were investigated for drinking heavily and hiring prostitutes while preparing for a trip by then-President Barack Obama to Cartagena, Colombia.

Well...there's nothing like a booze-fueled incident by Secret Service Agents to make a good impression with a hosting country.

It's good to know that the "Adults are in charge."

Story Archived

Friday, May 8, 2020

San Francisco delivers alcohol, tobacco and teh pot to quarantined addicts.


San Francisco is using private donations to deliver alcohol, tobacco and medical marijuana to a few dozen people dealing with addiction as they isolate or quarantine in city-leased hotel rooms during the pandemic, officials confirmed Wednesday.

There are about 270 people, mostly homeless, staying in hotel rooms to recover from COVID-19 or to wait out possible exposure to the virus. Nearly a dozen people have received alcohol and more than two dozen have received tobacco, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

City officials said that private donations pay for the items, and that helping manage nicotine, opioid and alcohol cravings ensures that recovering people don't go out and possibly infect others.

Dr. Grant Colfax, San Francisco's public health director, said the harm-reduction approach is widespread and based on decades of sound public health policy.
"...decades of sound public health policy." Okay, then.

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Omaha.com Archived

Thursday, April 23, 2020

April 23 is Take Our Daughters and Sons To Work Day. Oh...Teh Irony.

Time and Date: April 23, 2020 is Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day.

Daughters and Sons To Work.org: Choose your own day for 2020.
April 16, 2020 UPDATE

Many people are seeking at-home activities to do on Thursday, April 23, 2020.
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Introducing “Choose Your Own Date” for 2020

We at Take Our Daughters And Sons To Work Foundation understand the impact of COVID 19 will have upon the traditional fixed date of the fourth Thursday in April for the annual event. In recognition of these unprecedented times, we invite our partners and participants to choose your own date this year to do an in-person or virtual event as your circumstances warrant.
Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day is scheduled for April 22, 2021. Plan accordingly...starting now - maybe?

Saturday, April 18, 2020

Bad Spaniels 1; Jack Daniels 0

One is a dog chew toy. The other is a glass bottle of liquor. If you can't tell the difference,
 you should not buy either product, or always buy both.

We've seen roughly a zillion trademark disputes and cases in the alcohol industries, but perhaps nothing quite like this. Jack Daniels, the famous liquor company, found itself in a prolonged court battle with VIP Products LLC. At issue? Well, VIP makes a doggy chew toy that is a parody of Jack Daniels' famous whiskey bottle and trade dress.

...while the toy isn't exactly similar to the Jack Daniels bottle, it's a clear homage or parody of it. Parody, of course, has space carved out for it by the First Amendment. While trademark law might lead one to see a problem here, it's the fact that even this commercial product is expressive parody that keeps it from being trademark infringement.

The Jack Daniels folks didn't agree.
So Jack sued.

Back to Tech Dirt:
...the court held that, as a threshold matter, the Rogers test needed to be applied. Under that test, a trademark infringement plaintiff must show that the defendant’s use of the mark either (1) is “not artistically relevant to the underlying work” or (2) “explicitly misleads consumers as to the source or content of the work.”  Id. at 9 (quoting Gordon, 909 F.3d at 265). The Ninth Circuit vacated the district court’s finding of infringement and remanded for a determination, in the first instance, of whether Jack Daniel’s can satisfy either element of the Rogers test.
It seems damn near impossible to imagine any scenario in which Jack Daniels manages to satisfy the Rogers test. And the real question is why it felt any of this expensive litigious adventurism was necessary in the first place.
The short story: Jack lost. Good!

Why the corporate brain trust at Jack decided to move forward with this case is nothing short of mind-boggling. Can the PR/Ad/Legal Team at JD be so unimaginative, humorless and petty?

Could it have been that hard for JD to partner, in some way, with Bad Spaniels for a co-branding promotion - maybe buy a bottle of JD and get a Bad Spaniels chew toy? This is PR and Advertising, not brain surgery.

A Toast and Cheers to Bad Spaniels! Who's a good dog? Who's a good dog?
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Tech Dirt Archived

Thursday, April 16, 2020

Need another reason to hate the World Health Organization? No booze!

U.S. News and World Report: WHO: Governments Should Restrict Alcohol During Coronavirus Lockdowns.
...the World Health Organization this week suggested that governments should restrict access to alcohol during lockdowns.

Drinking alcohol can compromise peoples' immune systems and make them more vulnerable to the adverse health effects of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, according to WHO. Alcohol use is also associated with diseases and mental health disorders that can make a person more likely to contract COVID-19.

"At times of lockdown during the COVID-19 pandemic, alcohol consumption can exacerbate health vulnerability, risk-taking behaviours, mental health issues and violence," WHO noted in a press release.
Gee, just think if the WHO had been this concerned about the initial outbreak of the CHINA VIRUS instead of being an accomplice to the cover-up.


Above image: The Lost Weekend
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U.S. News Archived