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Canopy Growth Corp T.WEED

Alternate Symbol(s):  T.WEED.DB | CGC

Canopy Growth Corporation is a cannabis company. It delivers innovative products with a focus on premium and mainstream cannabis brands, including Doja, 7ACRES, Tweed, and Deep Space, in addition to category-defining vaporizer technology made in Germany by Storz & Bickel. The principal activities of the Company are the production, distribution and sale of a diverse range of cannabis and cannabinoid-based products for both adult-use and medical purposes under a portfolio of distinct brands in Canada. Its Canada cannabis segment includes the production, distribution, and sale of a range of cannabis, hemp, and cannabis related products in Canada. International markets cannabis segment includes the production, distribution, and sale of a range of cannabis and hemp products internationally. Storz & Bickel segment includes the production, distribution, and sale of vaporizers. This Works segment includes the production, distribution and sale of beauty, skincare, wellness and sleep products.


TSX:WEED - Post by User

Comment by OptGreenon Jun 29, 2021 8:50pm
179 Views
Post# 33470982

RE:RE:WEED in Mexico

RE:RE:WEED in MexicoIt won't make much difference quin, with most all states with legal med and many with legal rec now and more coming by the day, whether they legalize or decriminalize federally...Supreme Ct Justice Thomas, a republican, figures it is pretty well there now as it is, an interesting read.

The expansion by CGC, in the billions when all said and done, isn't  just hatched  on a wing and a prayer....Constellation has to be on the inside track with the Dems to make the moves and secure/ invest the kind of green they are throwing around, this is not just pure gamble especially with the economy still riding the strength from Trump/team.

The states along the Mexican border are or will be legalized so the feds will have to do some legal verbiage to cover the situation for sure...unless the insanity of late just gets rid of the borders, along with the middle class all together? Cartels are getting wealthier by the day with the US wide open and will have to be dealt with..maybe they just leave them the fentanyl and human trafficing? If the economy resembles anything close to normal going forward, WEED is going to be huge. JMHO...Opt
 
Clarence Thomas says federal marijuana laws 'may no longer be necessary' (msn.com)

quinlash wrote: Once Mexico is legalized (officially or otherwise) it's going to put more pressure on the US to Federally legalize as well considering it will have a country on both borders with legal cannabis

JMHO

Q


OptGreen wrote:

Mexico president floats referendum option on recreational marijuana after court says to legalize

2 hours ago by Thomson Reuters
Companies Mentioned: WEEDTGODKHRNMJNA
 

By Raul Cortes

MEXICO CITY, June 29 (Reuters) - Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said on Tuesday he will respect a court ruling telling the government and lawmakers to legalize recreational marijuana use for now, but opened the door to convening a public referendum on the issue.

The Supreme Court ruling on Monday brings Mexico closer to creating one of the world's largest legal cannabis markets and pressures the Mexican Senate to approve the sweeping legalization bill that has been stalled there since the Lower House of Congress approved it in March.

"Of course we're going to respect what the court has decided and we're going to evaluate. We're going to see what effects it has," Lopez Obrador said at a regular news conference in response to a question about the Supreme Court's decision.

However, Lopez Obrador acknowledged "there are two views" on the legal weed issue, including in his cabinet, and said his government was evaluating the best path forward.

"If we see ... that it's not working to address the serious problem of drug addiction, that it's not working to stop violence, then we would act," the president said, suggesting he could send a new bill to Congress or push for a public referendum.

Lopez Obrador has in the past used referendums to decide thorny policy issues. On Tuesday he again laid out the argument for such "participative democracy" in the context of the cannabis debate.

His comments were not decisive however, and he did not explicitly say he was leaning toward such a solution.

Colombian-Canadian Khiron Life Sciences, Canada's Canopy Growth and The Green Organic Dutchman , as well as Medical Marijuana, Inc. from California, are among the firms eyeing opportunities in Mexico.

The court ruling removes a legal obstacle for the health ministry to authorize activities related to consuming cannabis for recreational purposes, and was the final step in a drawn-out legal battle to declare unconstitutional a prohibition on non-medical or scientific use of marijuana and its main active ingredient THC.

Lopez Obrador said he will instruct health regulator Cofepris to comply with the ruling to authorize activities related to the cultivation, transformation, sale, research and export or import of marijuana. (Reporting by Raul Cortes Fernandez; Writing by Anthony Esposito; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

Mexico president floats referendum option on recreational marijuana after court says to legalize

2 hours ago by Thomson Reuters
Companies Mentioned: WEEDTGODKHRNMJNA
 

By Raul Cortes

MEXICO CITY, June 29 (Reuters) - Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said on Tuesday he will respect a court ruling telling the government and lawmakers to legalize recreational marijuana use for now, but opened the door to convening a public referendum on the issue.

The Supreme Court ruling on Monday brings Mexico closer to creating one of the world's largest legal cannabis markets and pressures the Mexican Senate to approve the sweeping legalization bill that has been stalled there since the Lower House of Congress approved it in March.

"Of course we're going to respect what the court has decided and we're going to evaluate. We're going to see what effects it has," Lopez Obrador said at a regular news conference in response to a question about the Supreme Court's decision.

However, Lopez Obrador acknowledged "there are two views" on the legal weed issue, including in his cabinet, and said his government was evaluating the best path forward.

"If we see ... that it's not working to address the serious problem of drug addiction, that it's not working to stop violence, then we would act," the president said, suggesting he could send a new bill to Congress or push for a public referendum.

Lopez Obrador has in the past used referendums to decide thorny policy issues. On Tuesday he again laid out the argument for such "participative democracy" in the context of the cannabis debate.

His comments were not decisive however, and he did not explicitly say he was leaning toward such a solution.

Colombian-Canadian Khiron Life Sciences, Canada's Canopy Growth and The Green Organic Dutchman , as well as Medical Marijuana, Inc. from California, are among the firms eyeing opportunities in Mexico.

The court ruling removes a legal obstacle for the health ministry to authorize activities related to consuming cannabis for recreational purposes, and was the final step in a drawn-out legal battle to declare unconstitutional a prohibition on non-medical or scientific use of marijuana and its main active ingredient THC.

Lopez Obrador said he will instruct health regulator Cofepris to comply with the ruling to authorize activities related to the cultivation, transformation, sale, research and export or import of marijuana. (Reporting by Raul Cortes Fernandez; Writing by Anthony Esposito; Editing by Bill Berkrot)





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