As far as Pharma, if the state starts taxing green meds, what's going to stop them from taxing opiates or other meds? I think they (Pharma) may end up on our side. Politics makes for strange bedfellows.
So true.
As far as Pharma, if the state starts taxing green meds, what's going to stop them from taxing opiates or other meds? I think they (Pharma) may end up on our side. Politics makes for strange bedfellows.
thanks! amazing how drasticaly things can change in a week or so.welcome back!
i've got a name and am hesitant to just post a name without knowing much more about her. i can tell you 2 things....she is supposedly opening a 'high-end' dispensary in cherry creek, and she was high up (perhaps in charge) of fundraising for barak obama in CO...CONNECTED!! hope this doesn't cross any lines, but that's what i know about this person, and i can't find anything else yet.
I can't help but believe that this is only a small step back in the continued journey forward. Even if the Coory petition does no good, the movement and support for compassionate mmj laws is too strong here. Reps and CDPHE officials won't be able to keep watering down the laws without political consequences.
We need to support efforts to clarify the laws for all parties because vague definitions won't help us either. I have high hopes that we can get something like the Colorado Medical Cannabis Patient and Caregiver Protection Act passed into law. Yeah the recent actions suck, but let's keep movin forward! Sorry for the optimism
This isn't a bill, it is a draft they gave to Romer at a meeting, so the representatives probably won't have any idea about it.I would encourage everyone to call there state House/Senate Representative and ask them to support this bill. REPEATEDLY.
This isn't a bill, it is a draft they gave to Romer at a meeting, so the representatives probably won't have any idea about it.
The bill would give the state a monopoly on growing and distributing marijuana in an effort to keep black market marijuana out of the supply chain. It also would attempt to crack down on the illegal distribution of the drug by requiring a prescription to be filled by a licensed pharmacist
Now we get to the crux of the matter, 'nuff said. Other shining examples of state monopolies: public education, and the ever efficient DMV.
Agreed!MY apoligies ill go make the necessary corrections, we need to ask them to support this draft of a bill.. But what im really trying to say is we need to call them in support of Medical Marijuana as most of the calls they are probably getting are complaints.
You may not like that result on an ideological basis - but the "post office and DMV" arguments you knee-twitch with are complete and total bullshit, ok? Recognize your response is an ideological one, not a response that it logical on an economic basis.