we are closer than ever. im an lod stoner first toke was in the mid seventys, and the attitude of the people has gone almost 180. and the bud is much better.

but the money generated from prohibition is goin to be our biggest hurdle. when we look at who and why it was made illegal in the first place and then look at who making the money off of prohibition you will see a very stong enemy to decrimalization. the biggest part off making it illegal in the first place came frome dupont and dow chemicals. by pressuring the govt to tax to the point of it being unprofitable to grow hemp it remove a source of natural material that could be use to provide everything from oil paper. wich they wanted to produce synteticaly. thats just the chemical industry. dont forget the logging and oil industrys.

now a days we also have one other industry wich is quite sad but its the prison industry. im mean the privatly owned prisons that receive millions of dollars a year of our tax money to house crimanals.

so you see with that much money behind them they have the means to buy our politicians to see that they get their way. legalization is not an impossible task but the hardest part is yet to come i fear.
yokinazu Reviewed by yokinazu on . Closer Than Ever to Legalization? Ten years ago, the thought of marijuana becoming legal across the United States was absurd. These days, however, it seems as though politicians, lawmakers, government officials, the media, and even your average citizens are entertaining the idea of making Marijuana legal for both medical and recreational use. Yes, I know only a handful of states have even legalized medical marijuana. Yes, I know President Obama isn't for the legalization of marijuana, or so he says to the public. But am I the Rating: 5