It has come to my attention that several individuals have been posting defamatory information about me. This information is untrue and my legal team is dealing with the posters. Please review the lawsuit filed by the city of Muskegon against Derek Antol (link is in legal rulings in the lower right corner of this page), and compare that to my call for standards, ethical practices, and unambiguous compliance with the MMMA.
I'll leave it to the readers to decide what the basis for the defamation is. Note the multible felony convictions, the removal from NORML, the profit factor, the lack of honesty. This type of operation is being shut down by the new standards from the medical board and house bills, standards I support, and that is a strong motivation to strike out at your competition now that I am active in Muskegon and taking patients from him.
Dr. Bob
05/19/2013 10:00am - 03:00pm
05/19/2013 05:30pm - 08:30pm
05/20/2013 03:00pm - 06:00pm
05/21/2013 10:00am - 03:00pm
05/22/2013 11:00am - 04:00pm
Mt. Pleasant Medical Marijuana Clinic
05/22/2013 07:00pm - 09:00pm
Grayling Financial Hardship Clinic
05/23/2013 10:00am - 03:00pm
Saginaw Medical Marijuana Clinic
05/23/2013 10:00am - 02:00pm
05/23/2013 10:00am - 04:00pm
05/23/2013 12:00pm - 04:00pm
The Senate today approved legislation that would allow doctors to prescribe medical marijuana to patients with serious illnesses, sending the measure to Gov. Pat Quinn. The issue pitted supporters arguing for compassion for those suffering from pain they say only cannabis can ease against opponents who contend the legislation would undermine public safety.
Sponsoring Sen. Bill Haine, D-Alton, argued the measure is one of the toughest in the nation. Haine said his bill does not reflect other states that have “sloppily” instituted medical marijuana laws.
“This bill is filled with walls to keep this limited,” said Haine, a former Madison County state’s attorney.
Sen. Kyle McCarter, R-Lebanon, raised concerns about lawmakers endorsing a product that classified as a controlled substance[…]
Like many of her peers, Zoe Helene, 48, smoked marijuana in her early 20s but gave it up as her career in the digital world took off in the 1990s. Today the multidisciplinary artist and environmental activist lives in Amherst, Mass., and is building a global network of trailblazers called Cosmic Sister. Since she married an ethnobotanist in 2007, she has returned to using cannabis occasionally — “as a tool for evolving and expanding my psyche.”
Helene is among a group of women that Marie Claire magazine has dubbed “Stiletto Stoners — card-carrying, type-A workaholics who just happen to prefer kicking back with a blunt instead of a bottle.” She’s also one of a growing legion of boomers who are[…]
If those behind the idea of turning the arena in MacTier into a legal marijuana grow-op thought they had a fight on their hands before, No. 4 has just jumped over the boards.
Bobby Orr was famous for scoring big goals and, if necessary, dropping the gloves, too.
This time he’s prepared to do both.
In his more than half century of celebrity, Orr rarely speaks out or steps into controversy.
However, when it comes to closing down an arena and community centre on his home turf to rent out to a company so they can grow medicinal marijuana, it brings out the anger in the Hockey Hall of Famer.
When he first heard of it, the two-time Stanley Cup[…]
My 9-year-old daughter has Aicardi syndrome, a rare genetic disorder that causes extremely hard-to-control seizures, debilitation, disability and early mortality. She began having seizures at three months of age, and since that time has had multiple seizures every day, with rare exception — probably to the tune of nearly 200,000 seizures in her lifetime.
For most families, even one such day would be an emergency. For ours, it is the norm.
My daughter is a beautiful, loving girl who goes to school, enjoys music and parks, loves to be read to and adores looking at big, modern art in museums. She cannot walk independently, cannot talk and wears diapers. Every day she is at risk of Sudden Unexpected Death in[…]
Vermont’s legislature on Monday approved a bill that would decriminalize the possession of small amounts of marijuana, a measure the state’s governor expects to sign into law in the coming weeks.
The move sets up the New England state to be the 17th in the United States to remove criminal penalties for having small amounts of pot. It does not go as far as Colorado and Washington, which in November became the first states to legalize possession, cultivation and use of marijuana by adults for recreational use.
Vermont’s House of Representatives on Monday gave final approval to a proposal to remove criminal penalties for adult possession of up to one ounce (28.3 grams) of marijuana and instead penalize with a[…]