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Aurora Cannabis Inc T.ACB

Alternate Symbol(s):  ACB | T.ACB.WS.U

Aurora Cannabis Inc. is a Canada-based medical cannabis company. The Company's principal business lines are focused on the production, distribution, and sale of cannabis related products in Canada and internationally. The Company’s segments include Canadian Cannabis, European Cannabis and Plant Propagation. The Company's adult-use brand portfolio includes Aurora Drift, San Rafael '71, Daily Special, Whistler, Being and Greybeard, as well as CBD brands, Reliva and KG7. Its medical cannabis brands include MedReleaf, CanniMed, Aurora and Whistler Medical Marijuana Co, as well as international brands, Pedanios, Bidiol and CraftPlant. Its cannabis products are primarily cultivated and manufactured in the facilities in Edmonton, Alberta; Bradford Ontario; Pemberton, British Columbia, and Odense, Denmark. The Company is focused on offering its cannabis products to global medical cannabis market, recreational cannabis market and global hemp-derived cannabidiol (CBD) markets.


TSX:ACB - Post by User

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Comment by Raguu17on May 02, 2018 10:45am
57 Views
Post# 27969908

RE:Warned you yesterday morning

RE:Warned you yesterday morningI will summarize

Natives want money. They believe they should get a cut of a business they have nothing to do with. They think that their .05% pop should dictate the actions of the 99.95%.

This is a typical native shake down. Why would their .05% require more consultation than the other 99.95%. The irony is that IF they actually addressed the natives individually about this they would have been offended and asked why they were getting treated differently. There is no win. Only options are to ignore or pay off. I vote ignore.

The committees job is to listen to all concerns. Just because one very small squeaky part that offers very little benefit to the rest of the mahine squeaks doesn't mean the entire machine comes to a halt or even slow down. 





oceaneleven wrote: The legalization of marijuana in Canada may not happen as expected now that the Senate has recommended delaying for up to a year the legislation that would legalize the drug. 

Members of the Senate's Aboriginal Peoples Committee are recommending that the Liberal Government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hold back on legalizing marijuana for a year so that time can be taken to address the drug’s potential harmful effects in Indigenous communities across Canada. 

The committee, chaired by Liberal Saskatchewan Senator Lillian Dyck, said in its report on Bill C-45 that the government simply did not consult enough with First Nations, Inuit and Mtis communities before pushing ahead with its plan to legalize the drug. 

"Many communities are really worried about the potential adverse effects on their members, and especially on their youth, and it may be even worse because of the trauma in their communities," said Senator Dyck, adding that existing social issues in Indigenous communities could be made worse by increased drug use. 

If passed, the amendment would delay the bill's full implementation for up to a year. Prime Minister Trudeau had originally wanted marijuana legalized for July 1 (Canada Day) this year. That plan was scuttled by the House of Commons, which said it needed more time to study the impacts of marijuana legalization and the date for legalization was subsequently pushed back to late summer or early fall. 

As currently written, the marijuana legalization bill stipulates that the law does not come into force until a date is fixed by an order of the governor-in-council — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's cabinet. A final vote on the bill is scheduled to occur in the Senate on or before June 7, with legalization expected to follow 12 weeks later.

The Senate committee also said that the federal government should take that time to negotiate a revenue-sharing agreement with First Nations communities. The committee has heeded a request from Manny Jules, the Chief Commissioner of the First Nations Tax Commission, who recommended that the federal government and the provinces hand marijuana taxing authority over to First Nations governments so they can impose their own levy on marijuana grown and sold on reserves. 

"The way the bill has been crafted shows there was very little consultation," Conservative Alberta Senator Scott Tannas told reporters Tuesday.


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