Dispensaries In California City Offer Free Marijuana For Those Who Vote

Voters who cast a ballot in San Jose’s municipal election on Tuesday could receive free marijuana from the city’s medical marijuana dispensaries, NBC reported.

In addition to choosing a new mayor, residents of the California city will elect half of the ten seats on the City Council. A proposal the council is still debating would effectively zone dispensaries out of business, supporters say, so owners are offering discounted and in some cases free marijuana to residents with medical cannabis cards on Tuesday. All they have to do is present their “I Voted” sticker or a ballot stub to participating dispensaries.

“We have a huge opportunity to make a large impact in who runs San Jose,” said John Lee, Director of the Silicon Valley Cannabis Coalition, in a statement. “Although we may not have regulations on the June ballot, insuring the right politicians are elected is even more important.”

The giveaway could violate U.S. election code, however, which prohibits giving something away in exchange for voting if there is a federal race or issue on the ballot. While there are no marijuana-specific items on the ballot, voters will choose between Rep. Mike Honda (D-Calif.) and Ro Khanna, a former U.S. Commerce Department official.

“There may be federal issues, but there’s also federal issues providing cannabis,” said Dave Hodges, founder of the All American Cannabis Club and member of the SVCC, told NBC. “It’s one of those gray areas.”

Teen 'Billie Jean' Dancer Got An Amazing Gift From The King Of Pop's Estate

The Internet was left aghast last week by a viral video of a high school student’s amazing dance to Michael Jackson’s “Billie Jean.” The performer behind the buzzworthy clip, Brett Nichols, joined HuffPost Live on Friday to discuss all the fanfare, and the fantastic gift he got from the estate of Michael Jackson himself.

After his video was shared millions of times online, Nichols received a package containing two copies of Jackson’s new posthumous album “Xscape” and an invitation to attend the Michael Jackson Cirque du Soleil show in Las Vegas on the King of Pop’s birthday.

Nichols, a junior at Pitman High School in Turlock, Calif., has been dancing for nine years, but video of this one performance racked up 15 million views on YouTube in about a week. Nichols shared with HuffPost Live’s Josh Zepps how exactly he first realized he was becoming an online sensation.

“I had gone to first period, and a resource teacher of mine showed me a comment on the official video where someone told me I’m big in the Netherlands. I was like, ‘Oh, that’s really cool.’ I was thinking a little big of myself,” he said with a grin. “But it wasn’t until the next class where all these teachers came in … and they were like, ‘Look, you’re on MTV News.'”

See the full HuffPost Live conversation in the video above.

What Happens When You Build A Playground For A Bunch Of Rescued Elephants?

These elephants have had hard lives — they’ve been separated from their natural herds, injured by Burmese landmines, rescued from performing in the streets of Bangkok and in almost all cases saved from abuse and injury.

John McCain: Tom Coburn Is The 'Best Possible Replacement' For VA Secretary

Hours after Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki resigned on Friday, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) floated a possible Republican candidate for the slot in President Barack Obama’s cabinet.

McCain held a town hall in Arizona, where he suggested retiring Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) as “the best possible replacement” for Shinseki. Obama announced earlier in the day that Deputy Veterans Affairs Secretary Sloan Gibson will serve as acting secretary.

“He (Coburn) is very familiar with the Veteran Affairs issue (and) he is the greatest reformer in the United States Senate,” McCain said, according to KTAR-TV.

Obama and Coburn have a good relationship stemming back to their time together in the Senate. Upon news of Coburn’s retirement in January, Obama released a statement, marking a rare recognition by the commander-in-chief of a Republican’s retirement from Congress.

“Tom and I entered the Senate at the same time, becoming friends after our wives struck up a conversation at an orientation dinner,” Obama said. “And even though we haven’t always agreed politically, we’ve found ways to work together – to make government more transparent, cut down on earmarks, and fight to reduce wasteful spending and make our tax system fairer.”

Obama already has one former Republican in his cabinet. Before being nominated in January 2013, Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel also served as a GOP senator for Nebraska from 1996 to 2009.

These 11 Outdoor Kitchens Are What Summer Entertaining Dreams Are Made Of (PHOTOS)

As the weather gets warmer, it slowly becomes time to move the party outside. But that doesn’t mean you have to settle for an overpriced (and probably crowded) rooftop bar or an all-too-familiar family picnic with mediocre burgers made on an ancient grill. Thanks to our friends at Porch.com, we can all rest easy knowing that outdoor entertaining can be as easy as opening your home’s backdoor to the patio or stepping through the entryway to your balcony. Besides, you can never go wrong with a second kitchen. (One can only dream.)

Where could you see yourself — and your guests — spending some time this season?

Have something to say? Check out HuffPost Home on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram.

**

Are you an architect, designer or blogger and would like to get your work seen on HuffPost Home? Reach out to us at homesubmissions@huffingtonpost.com with the subject line “Project submission.” (All PR pitches sent to this address will be ignored.)

Under Thailand's Military Rule, Protesters Pick Up Books To Defy Coup

BANGKOK (AP) — In junta-ruled Thailand, the simple act of reading in public has become an act of resistance.

On Saturday evening in Bangkok, a week and a half after the army seized power in a coup, about a dozen people gathered in the middle of a busy, elevated walkway connecting several of the capital’s most luxurious shopping malls. As pedestrians trundled past, the protesters sat down, pulled out book titles such as George Orwell’s “Nineteen Eighty-Four,” a dystopian novel about life in a totalitarian surveillance state — and began to read.

In a country where the army has vowed to crack down on anti-coup protesters demanding elections and a return to civilian rule, in a place where you can be detained for simply holding something that says “Peace Please” in the wrong part of town, the small protest was a major act of defiance — a quiet demonstration against the army’s May 22 seizure of power and the repression that has accompanied it.

“People are angry about this coup, but they can’t express it,” said a human rights activist who asked to be identified only by her nickname, Mook, for fear of being detained.

“So we were looking for an alternative way to resist, a way that is not confrontational,” she said. “And one of those ways is reading.”

Their defiance, if you can call it that, is found in the titles they chose. Among them: “Unarmed Insurrection,” ”The Politics of Despotic Paternalism,” ”The Power of Non-Violent Means.”

The coup, Thailand’s second in eight years, deposed an elected government that had insisted for months that the nation’s fragile democracy was under attack from protesters, the courts and, finally, the army. The junta’s leader says the military had to intervene to restore order after half a year of debilitating protests that had crippled the government and triggered sporadic violence that killed 28 people and injured more than 800.

In their bid to maintain peace, the army also has made clear that it will tolerate no dissent. The junta has censored the media and issued warnings to citizens to avoid inciting conflict and antagonizing the divided country’s political rivals. The list of targets so far has been long.

At least 14 partisan TV networks have been shut down along with nearly 3,000 unlicensed community radio stations. Independent international TV channels such as CNN and BBC have been blocked along with more than 300 Web pages, including New York-based Human Rights Watch’s Thailand page. Journalists and academics have been summoned by the army. Activists have fled the country.

On Wednesday, a sudden interruption of access to Facebook fueled widespread speculation that the nation’s new rulers were testing their censorship power; the junta, though, insisted it was merely a technical glitch.

Kasama Na Nagara, who works in the financial sector and joined the small book reading protests because she wanted her voice to be heard, said about 20 people were participating. Saturday marked the third day that the group had organized such a protest. They have been careful to avoid soldiers.

On Friday, the group was supposed to gather on another walkway where they had conducted a reading a day earlier. But when troops showed up, they called it off.

Other groups of protesters, mostly numbering in the hundreds, have marched through Bangkok and scuffled with troops several times over the last week, though no injuries have been reported. They have carried signs with messages clearly directed at the junta, including “No dictatorship” and “Free Thailand. Pro-Democracy. Anti-Coup.” Some have shown up with masks and black tape across their mouths.

Both groups are breaking a junta order banning political gatherings of five people or more.

Human Rights organizations are deeply concerned over how far the clampdown will go.

Some people have begun using encrypted chat apps on their smartphones, for fear of being monitored. And at least one major bookstore in Bangkok, Kinokuniya, has pulled from its shelves political titles that could be deemed controversial.

So far, Orwell’s “Nineteen Eighty-Four,” in which authorities operating under the aegis of “Big Brother” fit homes with cameras to monitor the intimate details of people’s personal lives, is not among them.

“But we have Big Brother watching us now,” Kasama said. “It has become too risky to speak out. It’s sad. But it’s safer to be silent in Thailand right now.”

___

Associated Press writer Thanyarat Doksone contributed to this report.

Self-assembling Moon House Could be the First Structure on the Moon’s surface

If Humans are ever to spend more than a few days on the surface of the moon or other planet, they will need some sort of shelter. An entrepreneur from Sweden has created a crowdfunding initiative to build what he says could be the first structure on the moon’s surface. The house is 75% engineered to spec right now and is made from a thin specially developed space cloth.

mh 1magnify

That special space cloth will be stretched over a carbon frame and then the house will be filled up with gas. The structure is painted to look like a little red cottage with white windows. The goal is to send the self-assembling structure into space on the Falcon 9 mission in October 2015.

mh 2magnify

The funding project claims that every $1 donated will get the shelter 25 meters closer to the moon. The artist designed the structure in hopes of making it a symbol accessible to all people interested in space and technology.

[via ArchitectureandDesign]

San Francisco's Sights Reflected Upside-Down In Perfectly Clear Puddles

San Francisco's Sights Reflected Upside-Down In Perfectly Clear Puddles

San Francisco’s got a beautiful skyline, but Angela May Chen prefers looking towards the pavement for a crystal clear view. The designer and photographer captured some of the city’s iconic (and lovably hyper-local) sights reflected perfectly in puddles after good hard rains then flipped the pics, resulting in a series that is a delightfully funky mind-fuck.

Read more…


Meet NASA's commercial space capsule contenders

Sure, the Dragon V2 is the latest (and greatest) spacecraft from SpaceX, but it’s not the only capsule that may one day schlep astronauts to the International Space Station. In fact, Elon Musk’s firm is just one of three private outfits currently…

Acer Liquid Leap wearable device debuts

acer-liquid-leapThe world of wearable technology has become even smaller now, considering how Taiwanese company Acer has jumped into the fray this time around. We are talking about the Acer Liquid Leap wearable device, which is the first from the company, where this particular device would come with its very own touchscreen display, in addition to featuring fitness tracking capability, integrated phone/SMS notification as well as music control playback.

The Acer Liquid Leap would play nice also with the recently introduced Acer Liquid Jade smartphone in selected markets, where the latter comes with beautiful aesthetics, smooth touch and a curved design. We shall concentrate on the Acer Liquid Leap however, as it was announced over at Computex that also happens to carry the distinction of being the smallest touch device by Acer. The Liquid Leap is said to emit an understated elegance thanks to its modern linear design, featuring a slim 1-inch touch screen that is encased within a durable rubber wristband to deliver comfortable everyday usage.

This is the ideal smart wearable device that will target active digital users who want to maximize their level of efficiency, as well as for folks who feel that to remain connected is 100% essential. The Liquid Leap works this way – it tracks users’ fitness including steps, running distance, calories burned, and sleeping cycle. Since it is on round the clock, it will also sport incoming call and SMS notification to make sure that you no longer miss a call, ever again. Apart from that, there is also a music control function which would allow you to access the music library on your smartphone, and play, pause, switch to previous or next songs.

Those who are interested in this light weight and stylish wearable device can choose from Moonstone White, Mineral Black, Aquamarine, Fragrant Pink, and Vivid Orange, where it sports up to 7 days of battery life, Bluetooth 4.0 connectivity, and has waterproof IPX7 standard certification. No idea on pricing, but expect it to ship sometime in the third quarter of this year.

Press Release
[ Acer Liquid Leap wearable device debuts copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]