Originally posted by: Tab
I just read this as well, I wonder if if the DEA/FDA will chance their stance on Medical Marijuana. Right now their site states it has no medicinal value.
Originally posted by: Tab
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Drug laws will change if the Republican party dies as it should.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6fXpwp1bwQ
Only one person up there wanted to "decriminalize" marijuana. On the Republican stage, there was only one, and he would even go further than the one Democrat, wanting to end all Federal drug laws. And going further back, Clinton was a strong supporter of the drug war as well.
My point? This isn't a Rep vs Dem fight. This is a gov't vs people fight.
Clinton was a supporter? He may have not changed laws but he certainly wasn't as supporter.
Originally posted by: shira
Forget medicinal use. Forget ANY justification other than that a person wants to feel good, and MJ helps them achieve that state.
If we can punish people - including firing them from their jobs (or failing to hire them in the first place when they fail a drug-screening) - for personal use of marijuana in the privacy of their homes, why can't we punish people for eating French fries?
Originally posted by: shira
Forget medicinal use. Forget ANY justification other than that a person wants to feel good, and MJ helps them achieve that state.
If we can punish people - including firing them from their jobs (or failing to hire them in the first place when they fail a drug-screening) - for personal use of marijuana in the privacy of their homes, why can't we punish people for eating French fries?
I really need someone out there who is anti-MJ to explain to me what is so God-damned different about MJ that we can severely screw over someone's life for MJ use - presumably in the name of "protecting" them - yet we blithely allow without penalty orders-of-magnitude more self-abuse with French fries.
Please. SOMEONE make the case.
Originally posted by: piasabird
Just send in the feds and repossess every house where they find Marijuana growing and give the maximum federal fine for every plant found.
Sound Scary? This could happen at any moment. All it takes is a change in policy.
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
Originally posted by: Tab
Originally posted by: shira
I agree. But dealing with resistance to constructive change is what good leadership should be about. Not that anything will change in our lifetimes.
You think so? I'd disagreed. There are many young people whom have used the drug and while they may not be consist users, they know the existing laws need to go. In a couple decades there are going to be quite a few old rich men whom probably want to donate their wealth in to causes they support.
weed has been common for 40 years now, there should be these people now.
Originally posted by: ayabe
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
weed has been common for 40 years now, there should be these people now.
I agree with this.
I mean the baby boomers have complete control of the system from top to bottom and they smoked more pot than anyone.
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: piasabird
Just send in the feds and repossess every house where they find Marijuana growing and give the maximum federal fine for every plant found.
Sound Scary? This could happen at any moment. All it takes is a change in policy.
Exactly
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Tab
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Drug laws will change if the Republican party dies as it should.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6fXpwp1bwQ
Only one person up there wanted to "decriminalize" marijuana. On the Republican stage, there was only one, and he would even go further than the one Democrat, wanting to end all Federal drug laws. And going further back, Clinton was a strong supporter of the drug war as well.
My point? This isn't a Rep vs Dem fight. This is a gov't vs people fight.
Clinton was a supporter? He may have not changed laws but he certainly wasn't as supporter.
How was he not a strong supporter of the drug war?![]()
What Stearns is communicating in the bolded part, above, is BS. Virtually all crime associated with dealing illicit drugs exists BECAUSE drugs are illegal. The best way to eliminate drug dealers and the associated crime is to eliminate the black market - Prohibition and repeal offer clear proof of that. Thus, Stearns's bolded point is absurd. He's pretending that we've outlawed certain drugs BECAUSE they are associated with criminal activity, when in fact it's just the opposite: We've created crime by outlawing drugs.Originally posted by: ayabe
Originally posted by: shira
Forget medicinal use. Forget ANY justification other than that a person wants to feel good, and MJ helps them achieve that state.
If we can punish people - including firing them from their jobs (or failing to hire them in the first place when they fail a drug-screening) - for personal use of marijuana in the privacy of their homes, why can't we punish people for eating French fries?
I really need someone out there who is anti-MJ to explain to me what is so God-damned different about MJ that we can severely screw over someone's life for MJ use - presumably in the name of "protecting" them - yet we blithely allow without penalty orders-of-magnitude more self-abuse with French fries.
Please. SOMEONE make the case.
Well, here's an excerpt of an email exchange I had with my congressman Cliff Stearns a few months back when I asked him to carefully consider the merits of decriminalization:
"You raise some important points about limited resources and appropriate
reach of federal government. Our nation has been battling drug dealers for
the futures of our children for over thirty years now. The many hazards
related to illegal drug use have been documented and shown to have a severe
negative impact on society, from crime to decreased productivity. It is
imperative that we act decisively now to save future generations. Recently,
the National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA) released the results of its
study entitled, "Monitoring the Future." The study found that teenagers
begin using marijuana between grades 7 to 9, and by the time they enter
their senior year, 76% of these students are still using marijuana. NIDA
estimates the numbers may actually be higher than this, due to the exclusion
of high school dropouts from the sample, and the chance that teenagers may
not have been willing to disclose their drug use. Additionally, studies by
Drug Watch International and the Journal of the American Medical Association
have found that the benefits of smoking marijuana are severely outweighed by
the numerous medical risks associated with the psychoactive ingredient, or
simply the tar in the cigarettes. These are some of the reasons I find
efforts to legalize drugs counterproductive."
Originally posted by: jonks
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: piasabird
Just send in the feds and repossess every house where they find Marijuana growing and give the maximum federal fine for every plant found.
Sound Scary? This could happen at any moment. All it takes is a change in policy.
Exactly
Exactly? sounds like you've both had too much bad weed, paranoid much?
Originally posted by: Tab
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Tab
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Drug laws will change if the Republican party dies as it should.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6fXpwp1bwQ
Only one person up there wanted to "decriminalize" marijuana. On the Republican stage, there was only one, and he would even go further than the one Democrat, wanting to end all Federal drug laws. And going further back, Clinton was a strong supporter of the drug war as well.
My point? This isn't a Rep vs Dem fight. This is a gov't vs people fight.
Clinton was a supporter? He may have not changed laws but he certainly wasn't as supporter.
How was he not a strong supporter of the drug war?![]()
Well, he didn't extend the drug war. After all, he's rather liberal.
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Tab
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Tab
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Drug laws will change if the Republican party dies as it should.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6fXpwp1bwQ
Only one person up there wanted to "decriminalize" marijuana. On the Republican stage, there was only one, and he would even go further than the one Democrat, wanting to end all Federal drug laws. And going further back, Clinton was a strong supporter of the drug war as well.
My point? This isn't a Rep vs Dem fight. This is a gov't vs people fight.
Clinton was a supporter? He may have not changed laws but he certainly wasn't as supporter.
How was he not a strong supporter of the drug war?![]()
Well, he didn't extend the drug war. After all, he's rather liberal.
I disagree. Compared to someone like myself, Clinton was quite socially conservative.
Originally posted by: Tab
Are you going to back up any of your claims? As him being socially conservative, uh so?
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Drug laws will change if the Republican party dies as it should. Drug laws are designed to create a criminal community the right can point their God finger at and feel holy as they tremble in terror, on the advise of party leaders, that drug users are out to destroy their fundy religion and pervert their children.
By creating this terror they also create the desire to take drugs just so they can feel a bit of novelty and thrill in being evil.
Repression creates desire to engage in what is repressed. Objectivity allows for a rational assessment of any real dangers that drugs of various kinds impose. Without some hidden itching to rebel against a sick repressive upbringing, there will be little need for healthy minds to use drugs. For the healthy minded, life is the trip, generally speaking, I think.
Originally posted by: bfdd
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Drug laws will change if the Republican party dies as it should. Drug laws are designed to create a criminal community the right can point their God finger at and feel holy as they tremble in terror, on the advise of party leaders, that drug users are out to destroy their fundy religion and pervert their children.
By creating this terror they also create the desire to take drugs just so they can feel a bit of novelty and thrill in being evil.
Repression creates desire to engage in what is repressed. Objectivity allows for a rational assessment of any real dangers that drugs of various kinds impose. Without some hidden itching to rebel against a sick repressive upbringing, there will be little need for healthy minds to use drugs. For the healthy minded, life is the trip, generally speaking, I think.
lol that's good because you're a troll account.
oh and obviously they should get rid of Marijuana prohibition, it's stupid.
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Tab
Are you going to back up any of your claims? As him being socially conservative, uh so?
His stance on the drug war. That's enough. I didn't say he was a social conservative, I said compared to someone like me, he's socially conservative. Obviously compared to many Republicans, he's less socially conservative.
