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Wednesday's marijuana legalization vote was truly historic — here's why

Wednesday's marijuana legalization vote was truly historic — here's why


  • Total voters
    28
  • Poll closed .

trichrider

Kiss My Ring
Veteran
<article class="node-471521 node node-article view-mode-full clearfix"> <header> </header> Wednesday's marijuana legalization vote was truly historic — here's why:

On Wednesday, members of Congress did something that they had never done before. For the first time ever, a body of the U.S. Congress voted to end cannabis’s nearly century-long status as a federally prohibited substance.
</article>
By a vote of more than two to one, members of the United States House Judiciary Committee passed legislation, House Bill 3884: The Marijuana Opportunity, Reinvestment, and Expungement (MORE) Act.

The MORE Act removes the marijuana plant from the federal Controlled Substances Act, thereby enabling states to enact their own cannabis regulations free from undue federal interference. The vote marks the first time that members of Congress have ever voted to federally deschedule cannabis.

According to a 2018 Quinnipiac University poll, 70 percent of U.S. voters support this policy change. To date, 33 states have enacted laws regulating patients’ access to medical cannabis and nearly one in four Americans reside in a state where the adult use of marijuana is permitted.

It is inappropriate for the federal government to continue to either interfere with or stand in the way of these voter-initiated policies.
Members' decision to move forward with the MORE Act is significant. This act is the most comprehensive marijuana reform bill ever introduced in Congress, and it’s backed by a broad coalition of civil rights, criminal justice, drug policy, and immigration groups.

This legislation seeks to address the millions of Americans who suffer from the stigma and lost opportunities associated with a low-level marijuana possession conviction. It provides funding and inducements to states to enact policies that expunge these criminal convictions from citizens’ records so that they can more successfully move on with their lives.

And it also seeks to assist America’s military veterans by, for the first time, permitting physicians associated with the Veterans Administration the authority to recommend medical cannabis therapy to patients who reside in legal marijuana states.

It also permits those players in the existing state-legal marijuana industry access to banking and other necessary financial services.
Currently, federal law mandates that this multibillion dollar industry operate on a cash-only basis — an environment that makes businesses more susceptible to theft and more difficult to audit. Growing a successful business is hard enough. Doing so without access to banking and credit is even tougher. The MORE Act ensures that these state-compliant businesses, and those millions of Americans who patronize them, are no longer subject to policies that needlessly place them in harm’s way.

Commenting on the bill just prior to the vote, Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) acknowledged that more than two in three Americans believe that the adult use of cannabis ought to be legal, according to the most recent national polling. He added: “States have led the way and continue to lead the way, but our federal laws have not kept pace with the obvious need for change. We need to catch up because of public support [in favor of legalizing marijuana] and because it is the right thing to do.”
It is for these reasons that members of the full House should now take up this issue on the House floor. Not only does this bill reverse the failed prohibition of cannabis, but it also provides pathways for opportunity and ownership in the emerging industry for those who have suffered the most under federal criminalization.

It is time for Congress to right the past wrongs of the federal war on marijuana and for every member to show their constituents which side of history they stand on.


:greenstars:
 

EsterEssence

Well-known member
Veteran
John Boehner ex speaker of the house is heavily invested in cannibas, I don’t think he would invest in something without knowing what is going to happen with it...
 

aridbud

automeister
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Hoping it does pass! My representative have sent me email updates. Time to get Cannabis DESCHEDULED as a Schedule I 'drug' with no medical merit. Yeah, right......
Fingers crossed!
 

trichrider

Kiss My Ring
Veteran
ironic that i got a flyer from the National Business Institute yesterday regarding a symposium on recreational marijuana business law in Washington state.


there are more than a few like Boehner invested in cannabis.

George Soros And Big Agriculture Move The Marijuana Movement

https://katehon.com/837-george-soros-and-big-agriculture-move-the-marijuana-movement.html
Billionaire activists like Sean Parker and George Soros are fueling the campaign to legalize pot

https://www.latimes.com/politics/la-pol-ca-proposition64-cash-snap-20161102-story.html
The $Billion Dollar Marijuana Secret Revealed

https://financial-news-now.com/the-billion-dollar-marijuana-secret-revealed/
Are Billionaire Investors Buffett and Soros Interested in Marijuana Stocks?

https://www.profitconfidential.com/...ire-investors-buffett-soros-marijuana-stocks/


it will be big business and huge profits. the tax take on these billions is what the push for legalization is about imo.
big government needs big income and they get it through taxes. they may have the pull to do it too.


it would be the right thing to allow each and every person a small(or large) garden of earthly delights, unfortunately here in Washington state the push for recreational has destroyed the right of medical patients to produce their own. they obviously wanted the tax from rec that medical didn't require.


i'm personally doubtful, but i do believe it is a states right to set law and that it should be de-scheduled federally, even though the state where i reside has F'd over medical.


we'll see.
 

aridbud

automeister
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Profits for the rich, taxes for the poor, yet accessibility for all who want it!
 

GOT_BUD?

Weed is a gateway to gardening
ICMag Donor
Veteran
It will likely pass the House but will be surprised if it passes the Senate.

Without passing the Senate it's a nice gesture and that's about it.

If it does pass the senate, 45 will probably sign it because I doubt he reads anything that comes across his desk.
 

Gry

Well-known member
Veteran
Should I be mimicking the sound of lowing cattle and bleating sheep ?
 

flylowgethigh

Non-growing Lurker
ICMag Donor
I hope it doesn't get signed by Trump

I hope it doesn't get signed by Trump

We would be much better served if instead of signing the bill which gets the feds VERY involved in the business, if he just put all of the plant there on schedule 5 along with "hemp". Keep the feds out of the way. It is the same plant anyways.

And commute / pardon anyone for cannacrimes.

It would help his re-election and make more jobs.
 

Douglas.Curtis

Autistic Diplomat in Training
It's a trash bill, and I hope it still passes. Wow. At least all the bs excludes personal growing and use.

Once people are free to grow/use for themselves, we'll see this bill tossed out on it's ear.

- creates a cannabis department
- treats cannabis like tobacco
- adds a 5% sales/import tax
- requires the creation of (yet another) database

and on, and on, and on.

Pass it!!

All the significant changes, for cannabis legislation, start happening after people have the freedom to use it personally. Pass this, get people edumacated the next 10 years. It'll be significantly easier to change things when people are more sane.

During that time, we can all get ourselves, our relatives and our neighbors healthy and happy. :tiphat:
 

dddaver

Active member
Veteran
I clicked on that link, "House Bill 3884", in the article. It took me to that same NORML article. So I googled House Bill 3884. It's about a missing kid act. What's happening? I'd kinda like to see the bill before I commented on it.
 

dddaver

Active member
Veteran
Hope it passes. Total de-scheduling works for me. But big money, big pharma don't want that. And given how money talks, more-so now than ever in the grand old USA, I have serious doubts.
 

trichrider

Kiss My Ring
Veteran
update:
As Americans Distracted By Impeachment, Congress Silently Killed Cannabis Reform – Despite Support
Matt Agorist /

<time itemprop="datePublished" datetime="2019-12-26T17:05:27-05:00">December 26, 2019</time>

In case you have been under a rock, Donald Trump is getting impeached. He is not getting impeached for invading countries on false pretenses, engineering coups to overthrow democratically elected governments in foreign countries, sending weapons to the largest state sponsor of terror in the world, or massively increasing the surveillance state—all of which is provable. He is getting impeached over an alleged quid pro quo scheme to help him get reelected. As Americans sit back and watch the political theater unfold in front of them, the tyrannical and freedom diminishing gears continue turning with bipartisan support. Case in point: on Christmas Eve, Congress summarily shut down cannabis reform that would have massively shifted the paradigm toward freedom.


Over the Christmas break, Congress voted to pass spending legislation for fiscal year 2020. Attached to the 2020 spending legislation was a list of riders intended on making the United States a less tyrannical and more freer nation in regards to cannabis. As Newsweek reported:
The riders would have prevented the federal government from interfering with legal cannabis companies and eased their access to U.S. banking services, among other things the industry has said it needs to function properly.
Instead, cannabis businesses––which are fully legal in 11 states to date––will continue to face onerous levels of red tape and uncertainty well into 2020, despite their rapidly growing size and popularity among U.S. consumers.
One of the most significant riders to the spending package would have prevented the U.S. Justice Department from using taxpayer dollars to stop states and territories from implementing their own laws authorizing possession, distribution or cultivation of marijuana. That rider was tossed in favor of a long-standing one that protects only medical marijuana.
But it didn’t stop there. In addition to stripping out all the riders that would have saved taxpayers money by defunding the police state that enforces cannabis laws, the Senate also added anti-cannabis legislation to the bill. According to Newsweek, the Senate added an anti-cannabis rule that prevents Washington, D.C., which relies on Congress for funding, from legalizing marijuana or even reducing the criminal penalties associated with its possession, use or distribution, according to the Congressional Record.

All of these tyrannical moves against cannabis are in spite of the overwhelming support for legalization. In 2017, a survey found that most Americans favor legal weed. This number is likely far larger now. This move by lawmakers is not only Anti-American and anti-freedom, it is in direct contrast with the will of the American people. Seems legit.


Despite the tyrants in DC attempting to keep this plant in the darkest alleys, all they are doing is prolonging the inevitable and exposing themselves as tyrants.

Starting with Colorado and Washington in 2012, the government’s immoral, violent, and destructive war on marijuana began to come to a grinding halt. Although measures for medical marijuana were enacted long before this, complete legalization paved the way for a revolution.


Aside from the economic benefits and increase in freedom from legal cannabis, legalizing marijuana would have a massive potential to curb the opioid crisis currently gripping the nation.
As TFTP previously reported, in a study published in a peer-reviewed journal, Melvin D. Livingston, Tracey E. Barnett, Chris Delcher, and Alexander C. Wagenaar, set out to see if any association existed between Colorado’s legalization of marijuana and opioid-related deaths in the state.


The researchers looked at all of the available data from the year 2000 to the year 2015. What they discovered may come as a shock to many. While the rest of the nation struggles with a burgeoning fatal opioid and heroin overdose crisis, the State of Colorado saw opioid deaths reduced while its population exploded.
It has long been stated that cannabis is a “gateway” drug, which leads users to experiment with other drugs, leading up to the most deadly, such as heroin. But the researchers in the study published in the American Journal of Public Health found that the availability of safe and legal cannabis actually reduced opiate deaths:
“Colorado’s legalization of recreational cannabis sales and use resulted in a 0.7 deaths per month…reduction in opioid-related deaths. This reduction represents a reversal of the upward trend in opioid-related deaths in Colorado.”
The researchers concluded, “Legalization of cannabis in Colorado was associated with short-term reductions in opioid-related deaths.”
It’s not just that study either. There were other studies showing that deaths from opioids plummet in states with legal cannabis, and that 80 percent of cannabis users give up prescription pills. A Feb. 2017 study confirmed that opioid dependence and overdoses dropped significantly in medical cannabis states.

In January 2017, the National Academies of Science published an exhaustive review of the scientific literature and found that one of the most promising areas in medical cannabis is for the treatment of chronic pain.


As TFTP reported in 2017, a new experimental study showed exactly how cannabis works to treat actual opioid addiction – by actually blocking the opioid reward in the brain.
“This study sought to determine whether the cannabis constituent cannabidiol attenuates the development of morphine reward in the conditioned place preference paradigm. Separate groups of mice received either saline or morphine in combination with one of four doses of cannabidiol using three sets of drug/no-drug conditioning trials. After drug-place conditioning, morphine mice displayed robust place preference that was attenuated by 10 mg/kg cannabidiol. Further, when administered alone, this dose of cannabidiol was void of rewarding and aversive properties. The finding that cannabidiol blocks opioid reward suggests that this compound may be useful in addiction treatment settings.
Those who continue denying the evidence, while continuing to lock people in cages for a plant, will ultimately be judged by history. They will not be the heroes they claim to be now. They will be remembered as the ones responsible for mass incarceration, fostering the police state, and dealing a near-death blow to freedom. Shame on you Congress.


https://thewashingtonstandard.com/a...ently-killed-cannabis-reform-despite-support/
 

flylowgethigh

Non-growing Lurker
ICMag Donor
Sucks to be a person living and working in DC. They have license plates that read "taxation without representation". Didn't they vote to legalize pot?
 
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