Cannabis Update

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u_cant_c_me

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Lawmakers: Don't fight legalized pot



http://thehill.com/regulation/224055-lawmakers-feds-shouldnt-fight-legalized-pot#disqus_thread
By Lydia Wheeler - 11/13/14 02:26 PM EST

A bipartisan group of House members urged Congress on Thursday to stay out of the way of building momentum toward marijuana legalization in states around the country.

Joining Democratic representatives from Alaska, Oregon and the District of Columbia, which all passed ballot initiatives last week legalizing the use of recreational marijuana by adults, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.) called upon GOP lawmakers to honor the will of voters.

“The fundamental principles are individual liberties, which Republicans have always talked about; limited government, which Republicans have always talked about; doctor-patient relationships, which of course we’ve been stressing a lot about lately; and of course, states’ rights and the 10th Amendment,” he said.

The House has already passed measures to cut funding for Drug Enforcement Agency raids on medical marijuana operations and prohibit the Treasury Department from penalizing banks that service dispensaries.

“I’m confident in the new Congress with new members, we’ll have an even stronger working majority when we have test votes on these subjects.” Rep. Jared Polis (D-Colo.) said.

To date, 23 states have approved medical marijuana, 18 states have decriminalized it and four states and the District of Columbia have legalized adult recreational use.

But Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) said members of the House are already looking for ways to overturn D.C.’s legalization.

“A Department of Justice official testified that the District of Columbia law would be treated like the laws of the states, however, the city has already faced an attempt by the House of Representatives to overturn our marijuana decriminalization, and now we’ve had a threat to try overturn over legalization initiative."

With limited resources for the criminal justice department, Rohrabacher said it’s counterproductive to prosecute people for smoking pot in their backyards.

“Let’s have a common sense approach to this,” he said. “Let’s not waste tax dollars and oppress people with big government. Let’s leave these issues up to the states and strike a blow for liberty.”

Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) said the ultimate way to stop the federal government from interfering with state laws would be to changing how marijuana is classified under the Controlled Substances Act.

Currently marijuana is considered a Schedule 1 drug, putting it on par with heroin and LSD.

“Marijuana should not be a Schedule 1 [drug]. It’s not more dangerous than methamphetamines or cocaine,” Blumenauer said.

“Or tequila,” Rohrabacher added.

Though Congress could move to reschedule the drug, Blumenauer said, he thinks that would have long odds of passing.
 

u_cant_c_me

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A U.S. marijuana advocacy group took steps Wednesday to begin raising money for a campaign to legalize recreational pot use in California in 2016, a move with potential to add a dose of extra excitement to the presidential election year.

The Marijuana Policy Project filed paperwork with the California secretary of state's office registering a campaign committee to start accepting and spending contributions for a pot legalization initiative on the November 2016 state ballot, the group said.

The measure would be similar to those passed in 2012 by voters in Colorado and Washington, the first U.S. states to legalize commercial sales of marijuana to all adults over 21.

California, long the national leader in illegal marijuana production and home to a thriving, largely unregulated medical marijuana industry, is one of the 21 other states that currently allow marijuana use only for medical reasons. The drug remains illegal under federal law.

"Marijuana prohibition has had an enormously detrimental impact on California communities. It's been ineffective, wasteful and counterproductive. It's time for a more responsible approach," Marijuana Policy Project Executive Director Rob Kampia said. "Regulating and taxing marijuana similarly to alcohol just makes sense."

The Washington, D.C.-based group also has established campaign committees to back legalization measures in Arizona, Massachusetts and Nevada in 2016.

Voters in Oregon, Alaska and the District of Columbia will weigh in on marijuana legalization in November.

In 2010, California voters rejected a ballot initiative seeking to legalize recreational pot. The measure, just like the medical marijuana law the state approved in 1996, was the first of its kind. But along with opposition from law enforcement and elected officials, Proposition 19 faced unexpected resistance from medical marijuana users and outlaw growers in the state's so-called Emerald Triangle who worried legalization would lead to plummeting marijuana prices.

Marijuana Policy Project spokesman Mason Tvert predicted no such divisions would surface this time around.
Citing his group's experience in Colorado and the advantage of aiming for a presidential election year when voter turnout is higher, Tvert said legalization supporters would use the next two years to build a broad-based coalition and craft ballot language that addresses concerns of particular constituencies.

"Obviously, it's a whole different landscape in California, where it will cost probably as much or more to just get on the ballot as it did to run a winning campaign after getting on the ballot in Colorado," he said.

League of California Cities lobbyist Tim Cromartie, whose group opposed the state's 2010 pot legalization initiative and until this year fought legislative efforts to give the state greater oversight of medical marijuana, said Wednesday that it was too soon to say what kind of opposition, if any, would greet a 2016 campaign.

Lynne Lyman, California director of the Drug Policy Alliance, said her group expects to play a major role in the legalization effort and already has started raising money. Lyman said the goal is to have an initiative written by next summer. She estimated that a pro-legalization campaign would cost $8 million to $12 million.

Even though California would be following in the steps of other states if a 2016 initiative passes, legalizing recreational marijuana use there would have far-reaching implications, Lyman said.

"When an issue is taken up in California, it becomes a national issue," she said. "What we really hope is that with a state this large taking that step, the federal government will be forced to address the ongoing issue of marijuana prohibition."
 

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Whilst I have no issues with legalising weed. Would rather see MDMA legalised imo.
 

u_cant_c_me

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READ THIS:

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) — It’s not every day that a TV station’s general manager has to sign an expense report for $600 in pot, but this is California, and this is 2014, and this is a serious consumer story.

KPIX 5 reporter Mike Sugerman, who has a medicinal marijuana card, was concerned that the explodingindustry is under-regulated, and wanted to test the potency of the medicines that can be purchased, especially the medicinal marijuana that is meant to be ingested, including candy.

“There’s no regulation because the Feds consider it illegal,” Sugerman explained. “The FDA can’t get involved.”

He purchased different kinds of items at random at 12 locations in San Francisco and Oakland.

Sugerman said in testing for the upcoming story, a laboratory found that, “…labels on packages had nothing to do with what was in them. One candy was 1 percent of what it claimed!” And other products contained other chemicals that were not supposed to be there.

Station management encouraged the consumer report, even if it raises eyebrows when the finance department reviews the newsroom expenses.

Sugerman said, “They [the bosses] actually were cool with it. It turned out to be a great story and I think one that will really resonate in the community. We’re flying blind here. And it’s medicine.”

The big question several of Sugerman’s colleagues asked was what happened to the $600 in marijuana after the testing. Sugerman confirms, “The laboratory kept everything.”

To see what the tests revealed about the unregulated medicine, watch at 11 p.m. Pacific on KPIX 5 Monday, November 17th, on television, or streaming online athttp://kpix.com/live

I saw this a few day's ago and been wanting to post this for this thread
 
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ShaRpY HaRdY

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Portland will be the home to the 2015 Cannabis Cup, Oregon is one of the states this year that has passed recreational use of marijuana.
 
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Danielson

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It's decriminilized in Ohio. Just don't deal and it's a fine. Basically best of both worlds. Drug dealers keep their jobs and the jurisdiction gets it's money
 

ShaRpY HaRdY

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It's decriminilized in Ohio. Just don't deal and it's a fine. Basically best of both worlds. Drug dealers keep their jobs and the jurisdiction gets it's money

It's something you don't want to have on your record though when jobs or rental offices for apartments/housing and such do background checks though.. it's much more beneficial to go into court and try and get it changed to a disorderly conduct, most of the times they will comply if it's a 1st or 2nd offense and just toss you 8 hrs of community service + the fine, which IMO looks significantly better than a possession charge.
 

Trip in the Head

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Kind of off topic, but has anyone else seen these Moon Rock buds by Kurupt yet? :mog: Google it.
 

ShaRpY HaRdY

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Kind of off topic, but has anyone else seen these Moon Rock buds by Kurupt yet? :mog: Google it.

Looks like a hard hash ball coated with a ass load of keef on it but I don't know, I'll have to look more into it rather than google images