Has the whole world sold out?
I need some drugs. Badly.

Moderators: Freakzilla, ᴶᵛᵀᴬ, Omphalos
She's at least go little ones.Robspierre wrote:Keep Keira oot of this!!!!!!!!!Freakzilla wrote: It was really just to get the topic going, a Dune forum without a Drug Topic is like a chick with no tits.![]()
Rob
Probably. However I think it would be worth it just to stop locking up non-violent people.Omphalos wrote:Huh. I don't think so.
$14 billion, huh? Does that figure come from adding up all the busts that the DEA makes that have those wildly-inflated, astronomical "street values" attached to them? I'll bet it does.
It'll probably have to happen up here first and work out okay for a while before it'll get passed in the US, sadly. I think the whole war on drugs is pretty deeply rooted in your country isn't it?Freakzilla wrote:I think you underestimate the greed of polititians. There's a lot of money to be made here.GamePlayer wrote:It makes perfect sense, which is why it won't happen.
In Denver, adults 21 and older may possess up to an ounce of marijuana without penalty in the city. However, it is still illegal under state law.Omphalos wrote:Legally this is an issue under the Constitution's Supremacy Clause. The federal law trumps state laws, but only to the extent that the federal law appliles. In this case its pretty clear that federal law outlaws what Ca may try to legalize. I believe that it is an issue for which the Supreme Court has something called "Original Jurisdiction," which means that the case does not necessarially have to percolate up through the District Courts and Appellate levels first: IOW, it could be filed in the USSC first, and, would go through the process much more quickly than usual.
At least I think there is original jurisdiction for disputes between the feds and the states. I know that there is for disputes among the states, at any rate.
CA would have to legalize it to tax it though.Freakzilla wrote:In Denver, adults 21 and older may possess up to an ounce of marijuana without penalty in the city. However, it is still illegal under state law.Omphalos wrote:Legally this is an issue under the Constitution's Supremacy Clause. The federal law trumps state laws, but only to the extent that the federal law appliles. In this case its pretty clear that federal law outlaws what Ca may try to legalize. I believe that it is an issue for which the Supreme Court has something called "Original Jurisdiction," which means that the case does not necessarially have to percolate up through the District Courts and Appellate levels first: IOW, it could be filed in the USSC first, and, would go through the process much more quickly than usual.
At least I think there is original jurisdiction for disputes between the feds and the states. I know that there is for disputes among the states, at any rate.
I'd like to emphasize again, there is a difference between the concepts of "legalization" and "decriminalization".
A state could take away the penalties without actually legalizing it.
From what I've heard, medicinal marijuana is very potent. I understand that they engineer it so that you can never get shitty weed, as is sometimes the case when buying from dealers.SandRider wrote:Lewis Black had my answer on The Daily Show sometime this week -
he said pot is now strong, cheap and easily obtained.
the government will make it weaker, more expensive and you'll have to
get it from a grumpy old doctor. fuck that.
Minors will still want to get it from street dealers, so they would never be totally pushed out of the market. However, their profits would go way down since it would be a lot safer going to a doctor.Drunken Idaho wrote:From what I've heard, medicinal marijuana is very potent. I understand that they engineer it so that you can never get shitty weed, as is sometimes the case when buying from dealers.SandRider wrote:Lewis Black had my answer on The Daily Show sometime this week -
he said pot is now strong, cheap and easily obtained.
the government will make it weaker, more expensive and you'll have to
get it from a grumpy old doctor. fuck that.
And I'm pretty sure that once pot is legal, it will be as available as cigarettes. It would be ridiculous not to retail it thusly.
The retail price would certainly be ridiculously high, but the good news is that the dealers can probably continue to sell at street-price, and the customers wouldn't have to be concerned about possession laws. Plus, the dealers would probably suffer a relatively mild penalty for the sale of Marijuana without a license if they were ever caught.
Mid-grade would be fine with me, I don't ever buy the "kind" anyway. I like the act of smoking nearly as much as the effects so if I have the good stuff I smoke too much, get the munchies and pass out. That's all that's going to happen to anyone, no matter how strong the pot is, unless they're unstable anyway.DuneFishUK wrote:The main health concern atm seems to be the new GM super strains - the effect they have could be much worse/different to the stuff they had back in the day.
Given this unknown it seems fair enough that the high strength stuff is illegal (for at least as long as it takes to do some research... volunteers?). But at the same time they should legalise the stuff they had in the 60s. That stuff is tried and tested.
A legal source of low/mid grade would go a long way to keeping the majority of casual smokers off the really potent stuff.