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Kush Hour TV x When fam asks me what my bag like??? The Best!!!

🎈🖖🏾😊 Hey Kush Fam🎈🎈🎈#JAH LOVE & PRAISES TO THE MOST HIGH!!!...Happy

Day after 420!!! Thanks for ALL of the well wishes yesterday!!! You know what time it is...We're higher than these red balloons right now...!!! 🎈🖖🏾😊 🎈 Puffing that ooh la la...Reaching the highest levels of consciousness....and .....Did you know that in 2015, The First Church of Cannabis Inc. was approved by Indiana’s secretary of state after the state’s religious freedom legislation was signed into law earlier that year. Cannabis is listed as the church’s sacrament in its doctrine. The church’s founder Bill Levin said he filed paperwork in direct response to Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), which was signed into law by Gov. Mike Pence in 2015. Secretary of State Connie Lawson approved the church as a religious corporation with the stated intent “to start a church based on love and understanding with compassion for all.”

The Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) is a federal law that was passed almost unanimously by the U.S. Congress in 1993 and signed into law by President Bill Clinton. The law mandates that religious liberty of individuals can only be limited by the "least restrictive means of furthering a compelling government interest". Originally, the federal law was intended to apply to federal, state, and local governments. In 1997, the U.S. Supreme Court in City of Boerne v. Flores held that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act only applies to the federal government but not states and other local municipalities within them. As a result, 21 states have passed their own RFRAs that apply to their individual state and local governments.

Marijuana is currently considered "illegal" by the State of Indiana for both medical and recreational use. However, RFRA prevents Indiana’s government from substantially burdening a person’s exercise of religion if it can demonstrate that it is the least restrictive means of furthering a compelling governmental interest. Levin said, he will set up a church hierarchy. The church will plan to grow hemp, he said, though it will not buy or sell marijuana. “If someone is smoking in our church, God bless them,” Levin said. “This is a church to show a proper way of life, a loving way to live life. We are called ‘cannataerians.'” He hopes to build the first church or temple built of hempcrete, a building material similar to concrete that includes hemp. “We are progressing to get a building property to be our holy ground,” he said. “We’re going to set up counseling for heroin since we have a huge epidemic in this country.

Indiana attorney and political commentator Abdul-Hakim Shabazz wrote that Indiana legislators may have put the state in a position to acknowledge those who profess to smoke pot as a religious sacrament. “You see, if I would argue that under RFRA, as long as you can show that reefer is part of your religious practices, you got a pretty good shot of getting off scott-free,” he wrote. “Remember, under RFRA, the state has to articulate a compelling interest in preventing you from smoking pot. I argue they can’t.” Once the church is established, members will be asked for individual donations of $4.20 a month, Levin said.

#1love ...keep puffing that LOUD!🎈🎈🎈Thanks for watching, liking and sharing!🎈🖖🏾😊 Hey Kush Fam🎈🎈🎈For the best of Kush Hour TV head over to our site! http://kushhourtvcom.wixsite.com/jahlove #jahlove #weed #stayhigh #legalize #marijuana #weedstagram #weedstagram420 #weedporn #weedsociety #kush #thc #wakenbake #420life #420 #ganja #pothead #bong #joint #blunt #religiousfreedom #cannabis #wakeandbake #dabstagram #maryjane #iwillmarrymary #indica #sativa #cookies

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