I cant beleive it realy says that,but it does LOL
Check this out
Medical marijuana hearing nods to "Drugs are Bad, M'Kay" South Park ep? (VIDEO, PHOTOS) - Denver News - The Latest Word
That wil save the kids from the devil weed:wtf:
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I cant beleive it realy says that,but it does LOL
Check this out
Medical marijuana hearing nods to "Drugs are Bad, M'Kay" South Park ep? (VIDEO, PHOTOS) - Denver News - The Latest Word
That wil save the kids from the devil weed:wtf:
That is truly telling of how frivolous this bill is.Quote:
Originally Posted by porone
Isn't quoting a popular cartoon on your labeling akin to advertising to kids???
I know kids would have a really hard time tearing through that paper.
Commonsense people.
Keep sharp objects, and medicated treats out of sight and reach. No problem.
HEE HEE I thought it was funny before you pointed out marketing to kids M KayQuote:
Originally Posted by DenverRelief
south park is a kick Our law makers not so mutch
what a bunch of buffoons we have in our legislature.
the New Hampshire house just voted in favor of mmj 421-96 - something our legislature had to be forced into with a popular vote. And they are STILL trying to override the voters!
NH House tries again to legalize medical marijuana - Boston.com
there hasn't been ONE progressive piece of legislation about MMJ in Colorado. It's all been about bigotry and misunderstanding, and catering to the bigots and misunderstanders.
Hmmm.... I think Colorado has some of the most progressive marijuana laws in the country. Even among states with MMJ programs, Colorado and Cali are the two progressive standouts.
only as a response to voter initiative. I think we are the only one that has it as part of the state constitution. (?) everything since has been limiting those rights, and centered on commerce.
Really? You don't think it's progressive for cities and counties to allow retail medical marijuana sales? Community after community has integrated large-scale legal marijuana sale into the social and economic fabric. City councils have voted, city planners have plotted, county attorneys have been consulted and thousands of legal marijuana businesses are serving hundreds of thousands of patients. You say nothing has happened since A20, but would you really want to turn back the clock to 2003 when only a tiny fraction of today's patients were accommodated? There has been HUGE, MONUMENTAL, UNDENIABLE progress since then, not only w/r/t MMJ but also many local "last priority" initiatives and of course the narrowly-defeated legalization measure. Colorado is a hotbed for progressive marijuana legislation and I expect it will remain so.
I know you love all this regulation, but its been excessive. We are crushing small, quality commercial enterprises. We are crushing patients and non-profit caregivers. We're forcing them to do worse. It was a new industry that just needed to figure itself out, and now, as long as the sell out isn't so bad, it's okay. systematically taking everything away.
here. is. your. crumb.
all of the changes in Colorado are directly related to voter initiative, and not progressive thought on mmj by our legislature. 'the genie is out of the bottle' was their progressive mentality.
and progressive regulators like Josh Stanley are trying to lock out competition for another year.
people like Josh are what regulation is all about.
Sure, I guess that's one way to frame the narrative. Another one is to say that Obama's policy change started a green rush, and our legislators embraced it. The easy thing would have been to pass laws to restrict the program to what it had been 2001-2009: a small, sad, little program where very few caregivers served very few patients. No other state did what we did: provide legislative guidance for communities statewide to incorporate the tide of new businesses and patients into civil society. Instead of seeing bigotry, I see state and local officials, however misguided, staggering, stumbling, lurching toward a better approach to marijuana than prohibition, honestly grappling with issues like buffer zones between centers and schools, plant counts and license fees, health inspectors and labeling standards. They won't get all of it right the first time, or the second.