Cheese reviews
Read people’s experiences with the cannabis strain Cheese.
October 4, 2017
Its nice n unique the taste strong enough aswell grew up smoking this blues n big bud primarily and this is easily the best out of the 3
Very pungent, unique scent and flavor. Sublime effects. A definite fave!
March 3, 2018
decent very strong odor. 4/5
Honestly, I cant think of a better way to come home and unwind after work. After long, grueling hours at a private boat club, with all the stresses that show itself, the euphoria, and pain reliving affects of this takes all of your worries away. Only thing that’s a negative is the definite dry mouth, but easily able to be forgotten about.
Great ant anxiety and nausea control. Great for chemo and other cancer woes. Excellent uplifting buzz to boot :)
Feels like a Sativa at first but the indica buzz wasn’t for behind. Racing thoughts and a little bit of anxiety but that wore off. Good in small doses!
November 18, 2016
Much of the Areopagitica is a celebration of toleration in matters of expression, for reasons that have now become more familiar to us: the more information the better able are we to choose wisely; the more information the better are we able to exercise our intellects so that they become more refined and perceptive. Another part of Milton's argument is that when something is suppressed it does not go away. It just takes on a romantic underground life and flourishes rather than being brought to the light of day where it might be refuted. All of these are today familiar arguments and components of free speech rhetoric.
There is one part, however, of Milton's Areopagitica that is rarely noticed in such discussions and when noticed is noticed with some embarrassment. About three quarters of the way through the tract Milton says, "Now you understand of course", and the tone in his prose suggests that he assumes that most of his readers have always understood this, "that when I speak of toleration and free expression I don't mean Catholics. Them we extirpate"
Milton's admirers, especially those who have linked him to John Stuart Mill as one of the cornerstones of the free speech tradition, have difficulty with this passage and attempt to explain it away by saying that Milton, because of the limitation of his own historical period, was not able to see what we are able to see. The idea is that our conception of free speech is more capacious, more truly free, than this because we do not have an exclusion up our sleeves, ready to be sprung.
Very relaxing, chilling at its best