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" ... Coco: I was extremely under-educated about cannabis when Marcy (co-founder) and I reconnected to ideate in summer of 2018 after selling our respective tech companies. A francophile from Alabama, white burgundy and bourbon pretty much had me covered on the recreational side of things. Marcy was the first data-driven, engineering mind to emphatically share her personal CBD success story with me, opening up my mind to the idea of cannabis as medicine, versus recreation. Upon hearing Marcy’s authentic stories of nerve pain management and mental health relief, as well as the countless (anonymized) stories of the women she had counseled on dosage and delivery techniques, I began taking a high quality, full-spectrum CBD daily. After a few days, I felt more rested and generally more balanced. After a few weeks, I described my overall temperament as decidedly more “even.” I had a longer fuse with my young children and was less fixated on elements beyond my control at work. After a month or so, I realized I could take my biologic injectable drug for an autoimmune disease less and less, eventually leveling off at ⅓ the frequency. CBD has brought me balance, and I knew women everywhere deserved similar access. ... "
" ... Not just a few early American lawyers encouraged the broad importation of Civil Law into the State statutes, the most notable being the francophile, and sometimes virulently anti-English, lawyer Thomas Jefferson, who, among other such things, first suggested that the Civil Law concept of the security lien be adopted as a mechanism to fund the building of the District of Columbia, which suggestion was made and then adopted by the Maryland legislature in 1791 -- after which, American law widely adopted the concept of the security lien in stark contrast to English law. Though rarely mentioned in legal texts, this opened the floodgates for what would become the wholesale adoption of the substantive Civil Law into the American legal system, though of course still identified (quite wrongly) as a Common Law system, mostly because the English court procedures and feudal concepts of property were to survive in American courts even if arguably little else did. ... "