Cannabis prohibition dying

The Dude

Banned
MOMENTUM: Post Election, Marijuana Law Reform Bills to be Introduced at Both State and Federal Level
November 20, 2012
By Erik Altieri, NORML Communications Director
The message from our big wins on Election Day has already begun to reverberate around the nation. Right on the heels of the votes in Washington and Colorado, several other states (and countries!) are already beginning to consider similar measures in their legislature.

Last week, representatives from Maine and Rhode Island announced their intentions to introduce legislation that would tax and regulate marijuana in their respective states. Rep. Diane Russell of Maine and Rep. Edit Ajello from Rhode Island will be submitting these bills soon. Reports from Marijuana Policy Project indicated that Vermont and Massachusetts intend to follow suit.

Reform is spreading as far as Iowa. Today, Rep. Bruce Hunter announced his intentions of not only reintroducing his medical marijuana measure, but also a bill that would decriminalize the possession of cannabis.

The push for sensible reforms does not end at the state level, this week 18 members of the House of Representatives cosigned a letter sent to Attorney General Eric Holder and Drug Enforcement Administrator Michele Leonhart urging them to respect states that chose to experiment with new approaches to marijuana. You can read the full text of the letter here.

Rep. Diana DeGette (D-CO) also declared that she will soon introduce legislation, entitled the “Respect States’ and Citizens’ Rights Act,” which would exempt states where voters have legalized cannabis from the federal Controlled Substances Act provisions related to the substance.

Leaders outside of the United States have also been following these recent reform efforts closely. Uruguay has just introduced legislation into their congress that would legalize the possession, cultivation, and state-controlled production of marijuana. In Mexico, lawmaker Fernando Belaunzaran of Party of the Democratic Revolution has introduced legislation that also aims to legalize the production, sale and use of marijuana.

Now that two states have legalized marijuana, the floodgates of reform have opened and each day more Americans, and people around the globe, are waking up to the reality that the prohibition of marijuana has been an utter failure. The statement delivered by the voters of Colorado and Washington is that we must regulate marijuana and do away with the societal ills caused by prohibition. Further, it showed that if the government isn’t willing to take the first step, the people will do it for them. We can only hope this recent wave of reform measures is just the beginning and we must work diligently to spread these rational policies nationwide. If history is any indication, like the end of alcohol prohibition before it, the one on marijuana will crumble at an accelerated rate as more Americans continue to stand up, in growing numbers, and demand sensible marijuana policy.

Ruminating on the ‘domino effect’ of change, President Eisenhower once stated, “You have a row of dominoes set up, you knock over the first one, and what will happen to the last one is the certainty that it will go over very quickly.”

May it be so with marijuana legalization.
 
The latin Americans actions is a big part of what I expected and predicted. They have quietly gone along with our failed experiment with prohibition because they did not have the power to resist us. Now they see that we have registered our dissent they will put up a stronger fight and those empowered by us to repress their people will lose influence.

This a human rights issue that goes much farther than cynical desires to get high or the drug warriors care to acknowledge.
 
Wow cynical desires, that almost harsher my mellow!

My point is that it's not just about some selfish desire to get high. Our government is supporting regimes based on their playing along with our drug war and ignoring their other abuses of power and corruption.
 
So when are Obama and Holder going to get on board and stop harassing medical marijuana clinics and fighting states who legalize it?

When more people tell them to stop. You should write your Congress person and demand to know why they did not co sign the letter mentioned in the op and or tell them to support the other legislative acts.

But you are probably just another partisan dumbfuck looking for some reason to criticize Obama. Obama is our servant and it is up to us to make our demands clear.
 
When more people tell them to stop. You should write your Congress person and demand to know why they did not co sign the letter mentioned in the op and or tell them to support the other legislative acts.

But you are probably just another partisan dumbfuck looking for some reason to criticize Obama. Obama is our servant and it is up to us to make our demands clear.

You call me a "dumbfuck" and then you tell me Obama is our "servant". LOL. Idiot. Obama could crap in your favorite chair and you'd sit in it and brag about how comfy it is. Bootlicker.
 
You call me a "dumbfuck" and then you tell me Obama is our "servant". LOL. Idiot. Obama could crap in your favorite chair and you'd sit in it and brag about how comfy it is. Bootlicker.

Did I call you a dumbfuck? That's up to you, but apparently you are quite determined to embrace it.

Obama sucks. I did not vote for him and I don't support him. Your knee jerk reaction is just the whining of another partisan dumbfuck. I would love to see Republicans differentiate from Obama's policies on this issue. Until then it really has little to do with your partisan bullshit and you are the supporter of Obama's policies not me.
 
Did I call you a dumbfuck? That's up to you, but apparently you are quite determined to embrace it.

Obama sucks. I did not vote for him and I don't support him. Your knee jerk reaction is just the whining of another partisan dumbfuck. I would love to see Republicans differentiate from Obama's policies on this issue. Until then it really has little to do with your partisan bullshit and you are the supporter of Obama's policies not me.

Go play your games with some naive college kid, loser.
 
You call me a "dumbfuck" and then you tell me Obama is our "servant". LOL. Idiot. Obama could crap in your favorite chair and you'd sit in it and brag about how comfy it is. Bootlicker.

I would hardly say that support for legalization has been that strong for very long. It just started to move into the majority and a lot of the support is likely still soft. Again, if it is something you reallycare about then I would encourage you to push on your elected officials.

You failed to influence Romney to take a position different from Obama and the election is over. There is no point in hoping to influence policy without connection to actual alternatives.
 
You'll find much more support for legalization of marijuana among conservatives. We see it as a State's rights issue. The left hates anything that weakens their statist desires.

Nonsense. There is support among the libertarian west. In the conservative south it's very hard to sell. It does not always appeal to the elitist and technocratic left but many liberals are civil libertarians and are already on board or easy to sway.
I know quite well who supports it and conservatives, in both parties,are the group most strongly opposed.
 
I would hardly say that support for legalization has been that strong for very long. It just started to move into the majority and a lot of the support is likely still soft. Again, if it is something you reallycare about then I would encourage you to push on your elected officials.

You failed to influence Romney to take a position different from Obama and the election is over. There is no point in hoping to influence policy without connection to actual alternatives.

I didn't fail anything and Romney doesn't have anything to do with this. You don't have the guts to admit Obama is a fraud and doing exactly what he said he would not do. Obama has been harassing medical marijuana patients. Get honest.
 
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