Posts Tagged ‘green flag pot dealer school’

REMEMBER, green flag compliance is NOT advocacy

but remember
green flag compliance training is not legal marijuana advocacy
green flag compliance guidelines are strict
green flag rules MUST be followed to obtain legal privilege

if you decide to accept the privilege
you must accept the responsibility

Advocacy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Advocacy is the pursuit of influencing outcomes — including public-policy and resource allocation decisions within political, economic, and social systems and institutions — that directly affect people’s current lives. (Cohen, 2001)

Therefore, advocacy can be seen as a deliberate process of speaking out on issues of concern in order to exert some influence on behalf of ideas or persons. Based on this definition, Cohen (2001) states that “ideologues of all persuasions advocate” to bring a change in people’s lives. However, advocacy has many interpretations depending on the issue at stake, which can be different from this initial value-neutral definition.

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Forms of advocacy

There are several forms of advocacy, which each represent a different approach in the way change is brought into society. One of the most popular forms is social justice advocacy.

Although it is true, the initial definition does not encompass the notions of power relations, people’s participation and a vision of a just society as promoted by social justice advocates. For them, advocacy represents the series of actions taken and issues highlighted to change the “what is” into a “what should be”, considering that this “what should be” is a more decent and a more just society (ib., 2001.) Those actions, which vary with the political, economical and social environment in which they are conducted, have several points in common (ib., 2001.) They:

  • question the way policy is administered
  • participate in the agenda setting as they raise significant issues
  • target political systems “because those systems are not responding to people’s needs”
  • are inclusive and engaging
  • propose policy solutions
  • open up space for public argumentation.

Some of the other forms of advocacy include:

  • Ideological advocacy: in this approach, groups fight, sometimes during protests, to advance their ideas in the decision-making circles.
  • Mass advocacy: is any type of action taken by large groups (petitions, demonstrations, etc.)
  • Interest-group advocacy: lobbying is the main tool used by interests groups doing mass advocacy. It is a form of action that does not always succeed at influencing political decision-makers as it requires resources and organisation to be effective.
  • Bureaucratic advocacy: people considered “experts” have more chance to succeed at presenting their issues to decision-makers. They use bureaucratic advocacy to influence the agenda, however at a slower pace.
  • Legislative advocacy: legislative advocacy is the “reliance on the state or federal legislative process” as part of a strategy to create change.(Loue, Lloyd and O’Shea, 2003)
  • Media advocacy: is “the strategic use of the mass media as a resource to advance a social or public policy initiative” (Jernigan and Wright, 1996.) In Canada for example, the Manitoba Public Insurance campaigns illustrate how media advocacy was used to fight alcohol and tobacco-related health issues. We can also consider the role of health advocacy and the media in “the enactment of municipal smoking bylaws in Canada between 1970 and 1995.” (Asbridge, 2004)
  • Budget advocacy: Budget advocacy is another aspect of advocacy that ensures proactive engagement of Civil Society Organizations with the government budget to make the government more accountable to the people and promote transparency. Budget advocacy also enables citizens and social action groups to compel the government to be more alert to the needs and aspirations of people in general and the deprived sections of the community.

Different contexts in which advocacy is used:

  • In a legal/law context: An ‘advocate’ is the title of a specific person who is authorized/appointed (in some way) to speak on behalf of a person in a legal process. See advocate.
  • In a political context: An ‘advocacy group’ is an organized collection of people who seek to influence political decisions and policy, without seeking election to public office. See interest group.
  • In a social care context: Both terms (and more specific ones such as ‘independent advocacy’) are used in the UK in the context of a network of interconnected organisations and projects which seek to benefit people who are in difficulty (primarily in the context of disability and mental health).
  • In the context of inclusion: Citizen Advocacy organisations (citizen advocacy programmes) seek to cause benefit by reconnecting people who have become isolated. Their practice was defined in two key documents: CAPE, and Learning from Citizen Advocacy Programs. See Citizen Advocacy organisations.

Advocacy groups

Advocacy is led by advocates or, when they are organized in groups as is the case most of the time, advocacy groups. Advocacy groups as defined by Young and Everritt (2004, 5) are different from political parties which “seek to influence government policy by governing.” They are “any organization that seeks to influence government policy, but not to govern.” This definition includes social movements, sometimes network of organizations which are also focused on encouraging social change. Social movements try to either influence governments or, like the environmental movement, to influence people’s ideas or actions.

Today, advocacy groups contribute to democracy in many ways (ib., 2004.) They have five key functions:

  • Give a voice to (misrepresented) citizen interests
  • Mobilize citizens to participate in the democratic process
  • Support the development of a culture of democracy
  • Assist in the development of better public policy
  • Ensure governments’ accountability to citizens.

In comparison to other countries and other the last thirty years, an increasing number (40 percent) of the Canadian population is member of an organization which has had an advocacy role and has tried to achieve political change. Such a level of participation is a positive indicator of the health of the democracy in Canada (ib., 2004.)

Transnational advocacy

Advocates and advocacy groups represent a wide range of categories and support several issues as listed on World Advocacy. The Advocacy Institute, a US-based global organization, is dedicated to strengthening the capacity of political, social, and economic justice advocates to influence and change public policy (Cohen, de la Vega & Watson, 2001.)

The phenomenon of globalization draws a special attention to advocacy beyond countries’ borders. The core existence of networks such as World Advocacy or the Advocacy Institute demonstrates the increasing importance of transnational advocacy and international advocacy. Transnational advocacy networks are more likely to emerge around issues where external influence is necessary to ease the communication between internal groups and their own 1 government. Groups of advocates willing to further their mission also tend to promote networks and to meet with their internal counterparts to exchange ideas (Keck and Sikkink, 1998.)

See also

References

  • Asbridge, M. 2004. Public place restrictions on smoking in Canada: assessing the role of the state, media, science and public health advocacy. Social science & medicine 58(1):13-24.
  • Cohen, D., R. de la Vega, G. Watson. 2001. Advocacy for social justice. Bloomfield, CT: Kumarian Press Inc.
  • Jerningan, D.H. and P. Wright. 1996. Media advocacy: lessons from community experiences. Journal of Public Health Policy Vol.17, No.3: 306-330.
  • Keck, M.E. and K. Sikkink. 1998. Activists beyond borders: advocacy networks in international politics. Baltimore, MD: Cornell University Press.
  • Loue, S., L.S. Lloyd, D. J. O’shea. 2003. Community health advocacy. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers.
  • Young, L. And J. Everitt. 2004. Advocacy groups. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press

External links

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Regulatory compliance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Regulatory compliance describes the goal that corporations or public agencies aspire to in their efforts to ensure that personnel are aware of and take steps to comply with relevant laws and regulations.

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International Compliance

The International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO) produces international standards such as ISO17799. The International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) produces international standards in the electrotechnology area.

Compliance in the USA

In general, compliance means conforming to a specification or policy, standard or law that has been clearly defined.

Corporate scandals and breakdowns such as the Enron case in 2001 have highlighted the need for stronger compliance regulations for publicly listed companies. The most significant regulation in this context is the Sarbanes-Oxley Act developed by two U.S. congressmen, Senator Paul Sarbanes and Representative Michael Oxley in 2002 which defined significant tighter personal responsibility of corporate top management for the accuracy of reported financial statements.

Compliance in the USA generally means compliance with laws and regulations. These laws can have criminal or civil penalties or can be regulations. The definition of what constitutes an effective compliance plan has been elusive. Most authors, however, continue to cite the guidance provided by the United States Sentencing Commission in Chapter 8 of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines.

On October 12 2006, the U.S. Small Business Administration re-launched Business.gov which provides a single point of access to government services and information that help businesses comply with government regulations.

There are a number of other regulations such as GLBA, FISMA, and HIPAA. In some cases other compliance frameworks (such as COBIT) or standards (NIST) inform on how to comply with the regulations.

Compliance in Australia

Standards Australia revised the standard titled "AS 3806 - Compliance Programs". While many aspects of the original standard produced in 1998 standard appear in the 2006 version there are additional principles covered. The regulators in Australia continue to endorse and encourage (by regulation) the use of the standard when establishing a compliance framework.

The regulators are the Australian Securities and Investment Commission and the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA).

Compliance demands in the superannuation industry continue to increase due to the new licensing regime implemented by APRA. The new licensing regime requires trustees of superannuation funds to demonstrate to APRA that they have adequate resources (human, technology and financial), risk management systems and appropriate skills and expertise to manage the superannuation fund. The licensing regime has lifted the bar for superannuation trustees with a significant number of small to medium size superannuation funds exiting the Industry due to the increasing risk and compliance demands.

Compliance in the UK

There is considerable regulation in the UK, some of which is from EU legislation. Various areas are policed by different bodies, such as the FSA (Financial Services Authority), Environment Agency and Scottish Environment Protection Agency, Information Commissioner's Office and others.

Important compliance issues for all organisations large and small include the Data Protection Act 1998 and, for the public sector, Freedom of Information Act 2000.

Combined Code issued by the London Stock Exchange (LSE) is the Sarbanes-Oxley equivalent in the UK.

Definitions Related to Compliance

Compliance data is defined as all data belonging or pertaining to enterprise or included in the law, which can be used for the purpose of implementing or validating compliance. It is the set of all data that is relevant to a governance officer or to a court of law for the purposes of validating consistency, completeness, or compliance

See also

External links

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compliance brings privilege

gina our automated mom reminds you all: green flag rules will bring green flag compliance

Bob Egelko:

Feds vs. state pot war down the road?

Now that the Obama administration says it won’t arrest medical marijuana patients and suppliers who are following their own state laws, a Northern California congressman wants the same leeway for those who are already being prosecuted.

Currently, someone who’s charged in federal court with growing or selling marijuana can’t argue that he or she was just doing what’s allowed by the law of California or one of the 13 other states that recognize the medical use of cannabis. A bill introduced Tuesday by Rep. Sam Farr, D-Monterey, would change that.

Farr’s H.R. 3939 wouldn’t legalize medical marijuana under federal law. But it would require a not-guilty verdict if the defendant was complying with state law, even if a future presidential administration repealed the guidelines announced by Attorney General Eric Holder earlier this month.

“This bipartisan bill is about compassion and states’ rights,” said Farr.

Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Huntington Beach, a co-sponsor, said, “The federal government should never have overridden state law on this issue to begin with, and this legislation will prevent them from doing it again.”

It’s yet another attempt to get Congress to soften the federal law that prohibits all possession, cultivation and transfer of marijuana and has been used by successive administrations to go after medical pot suppliers in California.

A group of Democrats and libertarian Republicans has been trying for years to get the feds to lay off marijuana dispensaries and growers in states where they operate legally. They’ve been beaten back by law enforcement interests and presidential drug czars who argue that medical pot is a myth and a smokescreen for legalization.

Whether the Obama administration follows the same course remains to be seen.

In Sacramento, meanwhile, Assemblyman Tom Ammiano’s bill to legalize marijuana for personal use in California in being heard this morning before the Assembly Public Safety Committee. If the San Francisco Democrat’s AB390 becomes law, or voters approve any of the circulating legalization initiatives next November, get ready for another state-federal drug war.

Bob Egelko covers legal issues for The Chronicle. E-mail him at begelko@sfchronicle.com.

Posted By: Michael Collier (Email) | October 28 2009 at 11:33 AM

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compliance brings privilege

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Click here

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for the

United States government

August 18, 8:31 AMCannabis Revolution ExaminerDev Meyers

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The federal government “is soliciting organizations that can grow marijuana on a large scale, with the capability to prepare marijuana cigarettes and related products, distribute marijuana, marijuana cigarettes and cannabinoids, and other related products not only for research, but also for other government programs.” – reports Rachel Ehrenfeld of Forbes.com.

If you are interested in becoming the official marijuana dealer for the United States Government click here.

Does ObamaCare mean Pot Cigarettes for all of us?

Medical Marijuana Bibliography

My grandson the doctor….. is majoring in medical cannabis management – and he’s handsome too!

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the weatherman can tell you which way this wind will blow

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&
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caregivers, patients, doctors, dispencaries, growers
cooperative organizations, non-profits, compassionate care LLC’s

we provide a comprehensive
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unlike anything currently available
for medical marijuana compliance

we will make it simple for you

given the current state of green flag rules affairs
the growth of opportunity following the
obama states rights decision
the uncertainty of which
rules and guidelines to follow
the need for a certified pot dealer school
is more critical than ever

is $ 420. tuition too high
if it helps you get it right??

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green flags rules will bring green flag compliance

 

online compliance training + dealer education = green flag rules compliance made simple

we provide a comprehensive
online compassionate care tutorial
unlike anything currently available
for medical marijuana compliance

we will make it simple for you

given the current state of green flag rules affairs
the growth of opportunity following the
obama states rights decision
the uncertainty of which
rules and guidelines to follow
the need for a certified pot dealer school
is more critical than ever

is $ 420. tuition too high
if it helps you get it right??

green flag rules + we make it simple for you

compliance brings privilege

good dealer education + up to date information = green flag compliance

our green flag pot dealer school is about understanding
the green flag compliance obligations as they evolve and develop

howtobecomeapotdealer.com
&
gotweed.org

will get you answers, vendors, resources,
and continual access to updates

our how to become a pot dealer school
certified version
will cost
$ 420 per person,
available to:

law enforcement, city county & state officials
caregivers, patients, doctors, dispencaries, growers
cooperative organizations, non-profits, compassionate care LLC’s

we provide a comprehensive
online compassionate care tutorial
unlike anything currently available
for medical marijuana compliance

we will make it simple for you

green flag dealer education + we make it simple for you

certified dealer education

 

what is privilege ???

privilege & responsibility

the rule of law and the world of regulation
depends on education, sometimes mandatory,
to gain code compliance and maintain
the delicate balance of
privilege & responsibility

Privilege

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A privilege—etymologically “private law” or law relating to a specific individual—is a special entitlement or immunity granted by a government or other authority to a restricted group, either by birth or on a conditional basis. A privilege can be revoked in some cases. In modern democracies, a privilege is conditional and granted only after birth. By contrast, a right is an inherent, irrevocable entitlement held by all citizens or all human beings from birth. Miscellaneous privileges, e.g. the old common law privilege to title deeds, may still exist, though of little relevance today.[1]

In a broader sense, ‘privilege’ can refer to special powers or ‘de facto’ immunities held as a consequence of political power or wealth. Privilege of this sort may be transmitted by birth into a privileged class or achieved through individual actions. Compare elite.

One of the objectives of the French Revolution was the abolition of privilege. This meant the removal of separate laws for different social classes (nobility, clergy and ordinary people), instead subjecting everyone to the same common law. Privileges were abolished by the National Constituent Assembly on August 4, 1789.

Notes

  1. ^ Suzanna McNichol, The Law of Privilege (1st ed, 1992)

responsibility

Main Entry: re·spon·si·bil·i·ty
Pronunciation: \ri-ˌspän(t)-sə-ˈbi-lə-tē\
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural re·spon·si·bil·i·ties
Date: 1737

1 : the quality or state of being responsible: as a : moral, legal, or mental accountability b : reliability, trustworthiness
2 : something for which one is responsible : burden <has neglected his responsibilities>

we make it simple for you + green flag compliance

green flags rules will bring green flag compliance

privilege & responsibility

privilege & responsibility

the rule of law and the world of regulation
depends on education, sometimes mandatory,
to gain code compliance and maintain
the delicate balance of
privilege & responsibility

our green flag rules will help enable
legal access to medical marijuana

but remember
green flag compliance training is not legal marijuana advocacy
green flag compliance guidelines are strict
green flag rules MUST be followed to obtain legal privilege

if you decide to accept the privilege
you must accept the responsibility

our green flag pot dealer school is about understanding
the green flag compliance obligations as they evolve and develop

howtobecomeapotdealer.com
&
gotweed.org

will get you answers, vendors, resources,
and continual access to updates

our how to become a pot dealer school
certified version
will cost
$ 420 per person,
available to:

law enforcement, city county & state officials
caregivers, patients, doctors, dispencaries, growers
cooperative organizations, non-profits, compassionate care LLC’s

we provide a comprehensive
online compassionate care tutorial
unlike anything currently available
for medical marijuana compliance

we will make it simple for you

given the current state of green flag rules affairs
the growth of opportunity following the
obama states rights decision
the uncertainty of which
rules and guidelines to follow
the need for a certified pot dealer school
is more critical than ever

is $ 420. tuition too high
if it helps you get it right??

should each state REQUIRE mandatory green flag compliance??
and each state then set their applicable green flag rules ??

or do we need federal green flag rules??

federal u s attorney general guidelines for medical marijuana
for green flag compliance standards seems a logical step

perhaps kamala can build a model
green flag rules compliance program
in california
as the next
california attorney general

until then

our how to become a pot dealer
online tutorial green flag compliance class
with help you bridge the green flag compliance information gap

we offer clear, concise, complete information

a place to ask questions

a list of green flag vendors & resources

we will make it simple for you

green flag pot dealer school

good luck

gina
automated mom for green flag compliance

ginaautomatedmom.com

+++

• Location: national green flag compliance training

gina our automated mom for green flag compliance reminds you about the green flag rules

gina our automated mom for green flag compliance reminds you about the green flag rules

gina our automated mom for green flag compliance reminds you about the green flag rules

gina our automated mom for green flag compliance reminds you about the green flag rules

gina our automated mom for green flag compliance reminds you of the balance between privilege & responsibility +++ dealer education will bring green flag compliance

gotweed.org +++ we make it simple for you to obtain green flag compliance

gotweed.org +++ we make it simple for you to obtain green flag compliance

privilege & responsibility

the law and the world of regulation

green flags rules will bring green flag compliance

green flags rules will bring green flag compliance

depends on education to gain compliance

green flag rules enable legal access to medical marijuana

if you decide to accept the privilege

you must accept the responsibility

our pot dealer school is about understanding

the green flag compliance obligations

howtobecomeapotdealer.com

&

gotweed.org

our blog to get answers and updates

is $ 420. tuition too high

if it helps you get it right??

invest in your green flag future

should each state REQUIRE mandatory green flag compliance??

or do we need the green flag rules??

federal u s attorney general guidelines for medical marijuana

until then

our how to become a pot dealer online tutorial class

with help you bridge the green flag information gap

clear, concise complete information

and a place to ask questions

and a list of green flag vendors & resources

will make it simple for you

green flag pot dealer school

good luck

gina

got420school@gmail.com