Results 11 to 20 of 22
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11-07-2008, 06:37 PM #11Senior Member
Leagilization/Decriminalization
Put the safer substance on the same playing feild as the already legal drugs: alcohol and tobacco.
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11-07-2008, 06:52 PM #12Senior Member
Leagilization/Decriminalization
Decriminilization is a lousy idea because it in no way solves the problem of organized crime that has become inextricably linked with the sale of weed. Full legalization is all that makes any sense.
To attach ANY punishment to weed is an injustice, I think. It shouldn't be treated like alcohol or tobacco because that would place it in the same category as dangerous and deadly poisons that it is somehow socially acceptable to consume. Rather, the legal age for cannabis should be lower (16, I think), and if you sell to someone who's under that age, you should get a moderate to low fine, with multiple offences resulting in a possible loss of licence. Any talk of a jail sentence is just ridiculous.
But if it was up to me, this would be important: corporatism would have to be kept out of weed. If it were up to me, laws would be enacted so if you have any sort of weed business, you can only employ a maximum of 10 people. Keep it a strictly Mom and Pop type thing, you know? As it stands, every toke we take is a fat gob of spit in the face of the DEA, the government, and the world of Big Business that would rather have us on cigarettes and pharmaceuticals. If pot were corporatized, we'd just be deepthroating the established order like any other consumers, so I'd want to see it restricted to small business.
If the corporations get their hands on weed, its purity will be lost!\"All murderers are punished unless they kill in large numbers and to the sound of trumpets.\"-Voltaire
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11-07-2008, 07:35 PM #13Senior Member
Leagilization/Decriminalization
Originally Posted by overgrowthegovt
I have no problem with underage medicinal use - with a doctor's prescription. It would be entirely irrational to allow 16 year olds to purchase for recreational use, however.
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As for keeping the corporations out: there is nothing special about Marijuana that makes it uniquely worth protecting from corporate interests. A solid case could be made for providing an advantage to smaller businesses in general to help counteract the general trend of wealth concentration and consolidation - this could be achieved through a wide variety of means: For instance distance from origin taxes on physical goods such that a local sales tax is exempted on goods produced within the same county, a low in-state tax rate is payed on goods from outside of the county but within the same state, and a higher out-of-state tax is payed on goods produced in another state, and finally an imported goods tax is payed on anything produced overseas. This is a pretty crude example, but it is a means of helping keep markets from concentrating to a handful of large companies whose efficiency of scale prevent competition from upstarts and who tend to push smaller established firms out of the market.
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Hypothetical Hobbies I Like To Think About:
Grow Log #1: The Story Of A Plant. http://boards.cannabis.com/grow-log/...ory-plant.html
*** Coming Soon: #2 Dirty Afghoo Adventure. ***
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11-07-2008, 08:47 PM #14Senior Member
Leagilization/Decriminalization
Originally Posted by IAmKowalski
I agree there's no rational reason weed should be protected from corporations, other than the obvious (which is that ALL goods should be free from such a cesspool), I was just stating what I'd prefer. If Weed Corporations sold joints by the pack, they'd never get my money...I'd grow my own or buy from a small business.\"All murderers are punished unless they kill in large numbers and to the sound of trumpets.\"-Voltaire
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11-07-2008, 08:52 PM #15Senior Member
Leagilization/Decriminalization
Decriminalization is not a goal, it is a stepping stone TO our goal; legalization.
Decriminalizing cannabis will not be of particular interest to the government because you cannot tax and regulate something that is still technically illegal. The black-market will still remain, and we will still have the slight paranoia at the thought of having to pay a fine should someone come knock on your door. This thought, however, is alot better than current reality, whereas if someone were to knock on your door and smells your grow op, and that person be representing the authority, you will get jail time. I'd take the fine, wouldn't you?
Legalization is the next step after that. This way, it's possible for the government to put in place some type of regulation and taxes. However, it won't be that effective because not everyone is going to get a license, particularly people who already grow now. Legalization would mainly benefit businesses who would be able to sell marijuana over the counter, such as convenience stores, liquor stores, grocery centers, and even restaurants and bars. (How would you like to sit down to dinner and order a side OG Kush to come with your appetizer?) Such businesses would require a license, licenses are purchased from government. That is instant cash for our government, which is actually a good thing in this way.
Also, said establishment should be required to list their source of cannabis, file how much is purchased by the establishment, to allow for taxing the transaction.
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11-07-2008, 09:00 PM #16Senior Member
Leagilization/Decriminalization
I think the plant itself should have never been illegal...its a plant.. a weed... something that has been here forever..and will be here after we are all long gone.
The government paid farmers to grow Hemp back in WW2......
I still say its a plant...... let it grow
Hemp can put a nice dent in the logging industry ....weyerhaeuser wouldnt like that
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11-07-2008, 09:21 PM #17Senior Member
Leagilization/Decriminalization
If President-elect Obama does what he says he will, and cuts programs that are wasteful, he'll definitely be cutting the miserably-failing "War on Drugs".
He'll keep his word, Joe. The guy's got a spine of steel.
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11-07-2008, 11:56 PM #18OPSenior Member
Leagilization/Decriminalization
Originally Posted by beachguy in thongs
they need to take the drug tzar and his office and fire him and his staff as the first thing he does. How many lives has that office destroyed?
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11-08-2008, 12:34 AM #19Senior Member
Leagilization/Decriminalization
Originally Posted by Gatekeeper777
\"All murderers are punished unless they kill in large numbers and to the sound of trumpets.\"-Voltaire
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11-08-2008, 12:59 AM #20Senior Member
Leagilization/Decriminalization
Originally Posted by overgrowthegovt
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Hypothetical Hobbies I Like To Think About:
Grow Log #1: The Story Of A Plant. http://boards.cannabis.com/grow-log/...ory-plant.html
*** Coming Soon: #2 Dirty Afghoo Adventure. ***
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