Results 101 to 110 of 120
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12-14-2010, 09:50 PM #101
Senior Member
what happened at the meeting today?
So the government should protect us, but it can't because of money and power?
Originally Posted by Zedleppelin
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12-15-2010, 03:00 AM #102
OPSenior Member
what happened at the meeting today?
we certainly don't need to be regulating marijuana any more than we do fruits and vegetables in this regard.
Originally Posted by TheReleafCenter
marijuana isn't especially harmful, requiring special regulation for health and safety. in fact, it's especially un-harmful. We just don't need to be pretending we are doing the right thing, regulating it like it's cocaine, when it's just cannabis.
cannabis is as safe as mothers milk.
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12-15-2010, 03:44 AM #103
Member
what happened at the meeting today?
:thumbsup:
Originally Posted by copobo
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12-15-2010, 05:47 AM #104
Senior Member
what happened at the meeting today?
I don't subscribe to most of the conspiracy theories you will read about on these forums and others. To be effective would require of the conspirators an efficiency and competency that government rarely if ever displays. I do however believe that government employees eventually seek to preserve and expand their own power base, at the expense of their original remit.
I also am a firm believer in the law of unintended consequences, by which the actions of government tend to have consequences that were unforeseen, and often make the "cure" worse than the "disease." In this case, clearly (to me at least) unadulterated marijuana is not dangerous enough to justify any regulation whatsoever. With respect to possible adulterants, without the rewards inherent in trafficking in a black market substance (which marijuana still is under the current regulatory scheme because of the "medical" sham) there would be no reason to use any such adulterants to stimulate growth or kill pests. Once again, an example of the law of unintended consequences.
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12-15-2010, 04:17 PM #105
Senior Member
what happened at the meeting today?
But if this is truly medical marijuana, shouldn't it be tracked like any other medication? We don't allow people to make pharmaceuticals in their homes and distribute them, regardless of how safe they are.
Originally Posted by copobo
If you're talking about legalization, I think you make a fair point. I just feel like at this point we're muddling the two.
I disagree with you on stimulating growth, but let's turn the law of unintended consequences on it's head. If you remove marijuana from the black market, do we see a rise in illicit, highly addictive drugs? An increase in border violence as cartels struggle to retain power? I certainly wouldn't use either of these as arguments against legalization, anymore than say... a repeal of DADT may make some people uncomfortable, because it's the right thing to do. Unintended consequences are funny like that, though.I don't subscribe to most of the conspiracy theories you will read about on these forums and others. To be effective would require of the conspirators an efficiency and competency that government rarely if ever displays. I do however believe that government employees eventually seek to preserve and expand their own power base, at the expense of their original remit.
I also am a firm believer in the law of unintended consequences, by which the actions of government tend to have consequences that were unforeseen, and often make the "cure" worse than the "disease." In this case, clearly (to me at least) unadulterated marijuana is not dangerous enough to justify any regulation whatsoever. With respect to possible adulterants, without the rewards inherent in trafficking in a black market substance (which marijuana still is under the current regulatory scheme because of the "medical" sham) there would be no reason to use any such adulterants to stimulate growth or kill pests. Once again, an example of the law of unintended consequences.
Should the government allow use of other relatively harmless substances, like LSD or mushrooms? MDMA? Do they have the right to tell you to wear your seatbelt? That you can't yell fire in a movie theater?
Just trying to get some bearings on where you're coming from.
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12-15-2010, 04:45 PM #106
OPSenior Member
what happened at the meeting today?
just because it's 'medical' marijuana doesn't change the nature of it being cannabis. the regulation is all about the money, not safety.
Originally Posted by TheReleafCenter
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12-15-2010, 08:08 PM #107
Junior Member
what happened at the meeting today?
If you want to make fish oil or vitamin c, im sure there is no problem. Mj is more natural than both of those.
Originally Posted by TheReleafCenter
YES, prohibition does not work. You got it. On anything. It only causes a black market which in turn causes violence. It creates and enables al capone and the mexican drug cartels. It does not decrease the supply, and actually if you look at the past 30-40 years, supply under prohibition has increased. Yes, this applies to all drugs. So making them legal isnt going to increase availability. If anything it will make it harder to buy these drugs, since youll need a license to purchase. (like how liquor is harder for a minor to buy than heroin) You can never eliminate drug use, as there has never been a 100% sober society in the history of mankind. What they need is to take all this money they spend on the drug war and use it on drug education and rehabilitation. Free needle exchange. Free hard drugs but the addict has to stay at the facility for a month out of the year and sober up. Cartels/Black market dies immediately, violence goes down, etc. Border violence is about control and debts, both of which are gone if the profits are eliminated. Its not about the drug, its about the money/profits. Society would not crumble from people getting too high, as drugs would be less available and less profitable under legalization. They would become boring.
Originally Posted by TheReleafCenter
Yelling fire in a theatre infringes upon other peoples peace, and therefore should get you kicked out. But its just speech, and should not be illegal.
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12-15-2010, 08:20 PM #108
Senior Member
what happened at the meeting today?
I'm of the 'fruits and vegetables' mindset as well. Cannabis should be regulated as other products made for human consumption are: testing and inspection at every stage of production, strict controls on chemicals and additives, honesty-in-labeling requirements, unannounced inspections at retail sales locations. Like restaurants and other businesses there should be local and state licensing. Like restaurants, MMCs that sell contaminated cannabis should be warned, fined, and eventually permanently closed. Like produce, only commercial products should be regulated. (No regulation for non-commercial growers.)
However, I realize that MMJ is following a different regulatory pathway, closer to that of pharmaceutical regulation than food. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, but I think we'll see a shift when it is re-legalized.
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12-15-2010, 08:47 PM #109
Senior Member
what happened at the meeting today?
But observation isn't how we approve any other form of state recognized medicine. It seems like a few of you are compartmentalizing cannabis and how it should be treated, and I suppose that's understandable. It's a plant we love and it's unfairly demonized.
Originally Posted by copobo
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12-16-2010, 01:24 AM #110
Senior Member
what happened at the meeting today?
Again this is all part of the plan (To shut down 90% of the shops that were open back then, 2009) and this is just some more sweeping up for them, they let you think they over looked this or that. But as you see as soon as they noticed another way to make it more difficult and just not worth the cost and hassle to do business for centers they pull something out of their hats to make it so.
Originally Posted by Colodonmed
This is the worst infringement yet on the State Constitution and amendment 20 as written in 2000. almost 3/4 of that amendment talks about the registry and the need for it's confidentiality and how to enact this and ensure that it was and to talk about penalties for violating that confidentiality.
This is the oppositions "Holy Grail" (folks like Suthers, Romer and such) if they are able to pull this off the program (MMJ caregiver/patient program through the Health Dept.) is effectively destroyed, you constitutional right that was fought so hard for back in the 90's.
It most definitely takes out most of the Centers! remember folks we are competing over customers that are registered which right now makes up 2% of the States Population, for the centers to survive this percentage must increase. Even something as little as a .5 % drop in registry patients would take out many more shops. again seems to all be part of their plan.
(I'll take off my tin foil hat now and sign off)
:wtf::wtf:
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