These little updates of yours have done all of us a huge favor, they've helped me realize what a dull fucking weed bore I'd become
( , Fri 4 Oct 2024, 15:12, archived)
( , Fri 4 Oct 2024, 15:12, archived)
rat piss and sulphur on the nose, vomit on the exhale, tons of bag appeal
( , Fri 4 Oct 2024, 15:20, archived)
( , Fri 4 Oct 2024, 15:20, archived)
I've said it before and I'll say it again,
but if they're pretending to assay a group of the ingredients of a naturally-derived product to two decimal places of a percentage, they're bullshit merchants.
( , Fri 4 Oct 2024, 18:10, archived)
but if they're pretending to assay a group of the ingredients of a naturally-derived product to two decimal places of a percentage, they're bullshit merchants.
( , Fri 4 Oct 2024, 18:10, archived)
my scales measure my weight to two decimal places and i swear the fucking things are about 25kg off
( , Fri 4 Oct 2024, 20:43, archived)
( , Fri 4 Oct 2024, 20:43, archived)
there's also almost zero oversight, i've only ever heard of one supplier getting in trouble for (blatantly) cheating the numbers
I think the numbers from the specific medical dispensary we use are credible and consistent, but as they point out themselves, those are generalized numbers derived from a variable product. One bud will not be the same as another.
The two decimal places thing is a legal requirement of the state, as you say it's clearly bullshit, but it's state mandated bullshit. I reckon a range analysis would be more useful: highest and lowest levels found in product, average percentage of high versus low found in retail samples.
Or something.
( , Fri 4 Oct 2024, 21:37, archived)
I think the numbers from the specific medical dispensary we use are credible and consistent, but as they point out themselves, those are generalized numbers derived from a variable product. One bud will not be the same as another.
The two decimal places thing is a legal requirement of the state, as you say it's clearly bullshit, but it's state mandated bullshit. I reckon a range analysis would be more useful: highest and lowest levels found in product, average percentage of high versus low found in retail samples.
Or something.
( , Fri 4 Oct 2024, 21:37, archived)