Quote Originally Posted by boaz
okay just one more point and I'm out here :rastasmoke:

The California Supreme Court ruled that nothing can limit the size of a medical garden except the patients medical need. All those laws passed at the county level that put limits were all thrown out, made null and void.

I'm just not seeing how Prop 19 could possibly affect medical users. Maybe someone could explain that. Prop 215 is very well established law and will remain so irrespective of Prop 19's outcome. right?


More along the lines of you now have a 5x5 area per household...how many you guuna fit in a 5x5? ...that what #19 states.... I think this includes all people med and rec ...it doesnt specify a difference

About medical marijuana exemptions:
B: Purposes, 7: Ensure that if a city decides not to tax and regulate the sale of cannabis, that buying and selling cannabis within that city??s limits remain illegal, but that the city??s citizens still have the right to possess and consume small amounts except as permitted under Health and Safety Sections 11362.5 and 11362.7 through 11362.9.

(Note: The word ??cultivate? is conspicuously absent here as well as in the exempted Health and Safety Sections that pertain to medical marijuana laws.)
VapedG13 Reviewed by VapedG13 on . 10 reasons to vote NO on prop #19 Ten Reasons to Vote No 1. Proposition 19 isn??t really legalization. It only allows possession of up to one ounce of cannabis. Under current California law, an ounce or less of pot isn??t an arrestable offense. And soon this amount will be a simple civil infraction. Prop 19 doesn??t make any improvements to decriminalization or prop 215. 2. Prop 19 creates several new cannabis related crimes with extremely severe penalties. Don??t pass a joint to a 17 year old, you will be looking at a Rating: 5