.....Di high grade dat man a look fah, Mi stock it by di poun', yeah
420 Day: A physician's take on pot -- yes to cannabis, go slow on weed
By Dr. Sreedhar Potarazu
Published April 20, 2015FoxNews.com
April 18, 2015: Partygoers listen to music and smoke marijuana on one of several days of the annual 4/20 marijuana festival, in Denver's downtown Civic Center Park. The annual event is the second 4/20 marijuana celebration since retail marijuana stores began selling in January 2014. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)
There will be neither a presidential proclamation nor a pause for reflection in Congress – but just the same, people are literally dancing in the street today.
It’s April 20, aka National Weed Day.
Its origin is the stuff of folklore. Back in 1971, a group of high school kids in San Rafael, Calif., would meet daily at 4:20 p.m. and head out in search of a marijuana crop they’d heard about. They never found it, but over the next few decades the time of day, 4:20, became the day of the month, 4/20. Today, countless thousands of Americans, comfortable that their sheer numbers will prompt authorities to look the other way, will gather in public and light up a joint.
420 Day: A physician's take on pot -- yes to cannabis, go slow on weed
By Dr. Sreedhar Potarazu
Published April 20, 2015FoxNews.com
April 18, 2015: Partygoers listen to music and smoke marijuana on one of several days of the annual 4/20 marijuana festival, in Denver's downtown Civic Center Park. The annual event is the second 4/20 marijuana celebration since retail marijuana stores began selling in January 2014. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)
There will be neither a presidential proclamation nor a pause for reflection in Congress – but just the same, people are literally dancing in the street today.
It’s April 20, aka National Weed Day.
Its origin is the stuff of folklore. Back in 1971, a group of high school kids in San Rafael, Calif., would meet daily at 4:20 p.m. and head out in search of a marijuana crop they’d heard about. They never found it, but over the next few decades the time of day, 4:20, became the day of the month, 4/20. Today, countless thousands of Americans, comfortable that their sheer numbers will prompt authorities to look the other way, will gather in public and light up a joint.