Given the failure of the drug war and awareness of people that they should be able to control their own lives, maybe this New Mexico State Medical Marijuana Program is designed to do bad things. Look at the "rules" (old and new improved) and you may notice that this State medical marijuana program is designed to:

ensure "proper enforcement of any criminal laws for behavior that has been deemed illicit by the state?"

Since growing, smoking, and otherwise using marijuana is generally defined in the rules as "behavior that has been deemed illicit (and illegal) by the state" (and, of course, the federal government), we in New Mexico now have a medical marijuana program dedicated to "ensuring proper enforcement" and presumably prosecution of non-medical marijuana users and growers. This "ensuring proper enforcement" of the laws against marijuana is done at the same time and as part of the same State Program that is producing elaborate rules and restrictions but not much of the marijuana supply that it is supposed to produce.

The fact that there is entirely inadequate production of "legal" medical marijuana, is forcing registered patients in the program to do just what the program is expressly dedicated to preventing, i.e., buying and using marijuana that "has been deemed illicit by the state." State control of marijuana, in a mostly secret program, enabling law enforcement?

That doesn't sound like a very good thing to me.
cannarex Reviewed by cannarex on . Medical MJ "Enabling Law Enforcement" Given the failure of the drug war and awareness of people that they should be able to control their own lives, maybe this New Mexico State Medical Marijuana Program is designed to do bad things. Look at the "rules" (old and new improved) and you may notice that this State medical marijuana program is designed to: ensure "proper enforcement of any criminal laws for behavior that has been deemed illicit by the state?" Since growing, smoking, and otherwise using marijuana is generally Rating: 5