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Who Wants Marijuana To Remain Illegal?

Tudo

Troublemaker
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ICMag Donor
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Who Wants Marijuana To Remain Illegal?
Michael Roseff 9/26/2013
Police unions, private prison corporations, alcohol and beer companies, pharmaceutical companies, and prison guard unions are said to be in the top five in terms of lobbying and paying lawmakers to keep marijuana illegal. Hey, this is DEMOCRACY at work. This is the best system on earth, right? This is the system the U.S. government tells us it wants for Libya, Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, etc.
If some foreign government through its politics forbids women from walking around without burkas on, that is a sign of its tyranny, U.S. officials tell us. The U.S. Department of State wrote in this respect about “the Taliban war on Afghanistan’s women…” and its “oppressive regime”. But if the existing U.S. system forbids someone from using marijuana or some other drug, this is not infringing rights and it’s not oppressive.
These contradictions, these poses, these false rationales, these hypocrisies arise again and again, permeating the entire society, for a simple reason. The government is not based on any consistent basis of justice and rights. These two-faced statements are proof that government has no foundation in rights, never has had such a foundation, and wasn’t established with such a foundation. The Bill of Rights was a compromise and an afterthought grafted onto a document (the Constitution) whose purpose was entirely that of setting up a control and command structure that did not, would not and could not tolerate a basic right like that of secession, because that would shatter the government whose aim that document was to establish.
There are no moral-sounding statements made by the current occupant of the White House that can be assumed to be or are correlated with the actual moral sentiments of that occupant, simply because he leads an institution that has no consistent basis or relation to justice and rights. When he orders a drone strike that kills civilians, he demonstrates this fact. You or I could not do this without being brought up for murder. But in this hallowed democracy, our vote makes this legal. This simple fact shows that democracy has no basis in justice and rights. It is typically used for the purpose of suppressing the rights of any minority on the losing side of any issue that is voted upon.
This includes users of those drugs that have been made illegal.

http://www.lewrockwell.com/lrc-blog/who-wants-marijuana-to-remain-illegal/
 

trichrider

Kiss My Ring
Veteran
why do they continue to refer to the US as a democracy?

to impose oppression till we all wring our hands in despair while covertly destroying freedoms outlined in the constitution and bill of rights.

freedom lies within the framework of the REPUBLIC wrested from the king.

laws create classes, elevating one person above another when in reality we are equals.

UN is a government for governments, not 'of the people'.
 

HidingInTheHaze

Active member
Veteran
Marijuna should remain tax free, if you have to pay taxes that item is neither free or legal.

We should be pushing for total decriminalization.
 

hush

Señor Member
Veteran
Hey this article forgot the 6th group: cash croppers who have gotten used to the exhorbitantly steep prices that they can command for the harvest, and who don't want to have to rethink their business plan.
 

Hydrosun

I love my life
Veteran
... never has had such a foundation, and wasn’t established with such a foundation. The Bill of Rights was a compromise and an afterthought grafted onto a document (the Constitution) whose purpose was entirely that of setting up a control and command structure that did not, would not and could not tolerate a basic right like that of secession, because that would shatter the government whose aim that document was to establish.

This guy is completely devoid of historical accuracy here. The Bill of Rights was well more than an after thought. The fear of some founding fathers such as George Mason was that enumerating a select list of rights would lead some to conclude that those were the only rights. The spirit of the US Constitution, even with its glaring flaw of slavery, is still the most powerful recognition of individual rights in the human history.

:joint:
 

wantaknow

ruger 500
Veteran
if our founding fathers were here right now they would lead the revolution ,then they would say how the hell did you let this happen?!,we all went into debt ,from the co store ,
 

BOMBAYCAT

Well-known member
Veteran
Just think of all the jobs gone away if weed was legalized. LEO, construction jobs on new prisions, wardens and prison guards, judges, lawyers and jail jobs. I think CO and Washington state are moving in the right direction.
 

Hydrosun

I love my life
Veteran
Hey this article forgot the 6th group: cash croppers who have gotten used to the exhorbitantly steep prices that they can command for the harvest, and who don't want to have to rethink their business plan.

Hush, you must know people I don't. As for giving to government coffers to keep weed illegal, I'd say TESTING companies and REHAB facilities are next inline. The guys who risk their freedom to supply cannabis to the black market, don't seem to hire lobbyists but they do hire defense attorneys. I wonder how that union is voting (crim defense lawyers)?

:joint:
 

hush

Señor Member
Veteran
Hush, you must know people I don't.

No, fortunately I don't actually *know* any of the people who fall in this category, but they have made themselves known here (and other cannabis forums too) in the recent past on several threads that have to do with cannabis laws. Most of those threads have been locked and/or deleted since then, but the sad truth is, there are people who proudly admit that they are against legalizing it because it will cause them to lose money.

You can't make this shit up.
 

Hydrosun

I love my life
Veteran
Someone saying "I don't ever want legalized and don't give a shit what you think." may have already reached the point of knowing that plants can't be legal or illegal, just as your life can't be legal or illegal.

Those who would seek to legislate / regulate their neighbors will wake to find a jailer staring them in the mirror.

:joint:
 

HidingInTheHaze

Active member
Veteran
Hush must be one of those hypocrites that wants to pay to have permission to do something he is already doing.

Legalization is just paying a tax for permission from the man to do something, you notice their is no talk of legalization without taxation. So really this just takes the penalty off of MJ but puts the penalty onto MJ related tax evasion. If you don't pay the tax you aren't allowed to participate.

I don't see why people are in such a race to the bottom, this is not about cash croppers needing to pay for a porche it's about joe average grower that that feels his time is worth more than minimum wage. Why is a it such a crime, you don't see people harassing the cattle farmer about deriving a modest wage from his work.

There should be no jail time for MJ, but set limits, fine it if you find it, otherwise leave it alone. Taxing it is a punishment everytime you buy it.
 

hush

Señor Member
Veteran
Hush must be one of those hypocrites that wants to pay to have permission to do something he is already doing.

Not at all, and I really don't understand that argument that you and many other people throw out there. How did you extrapolate and get THAT? I simply don't want people to be arrested for possessing or using cannabis anymore. That's it. Nothing else motivates me. And I will never vote NO on any proposition that means people will stop being arrested and incarcerated, regardless of how much it affects profits for growers. That would be selfishness at its finest.

Legalization is just paying a tax for permission from the man to do something, you notice their is no talk of legalization without taxation.

Correct, because there is no precedent for that. Get over it, maybe? Everything is taxed. Were you just born yesterday or something? No offense, I say that jokingly.

So really this just takes the penalty off of MJ but puts the penalty onto MJ related tax evasion. If you don't pay the tax you aren't allowed to participate.

That's an entirely different discussion altogether. All anyone should be focusing on right now is making sure people STOP being arrested, and are never arrested again for possessing or using cannabis. NOTHING ELSE MATTERS UNTIL THAT HAPPENS.

I don't see why people are in such a race to the bottom, this is not about cash croppers needing to pay for a porche it's about joe average grower that that feels his time is worth more than minimum wage. Why is a it such a crime, you don't see people harassing the cattle farmer about deriving a modest wage from his work.

It's a crime against humanity, IMO, to consider your income or "comfort level" while people around you are going to jail for an herb.

There should be no jail time for MJ, but set limits, fine it if you find it, otherwise leave it alone. Taxing it is a punishment everytime you buy it.

Again, that is nothing new. Everything is taxed. Why bring that up? And why should cannabis be the first thing that isn't taxed? I'm not arguing the point that taxes should or shouldn't exist, I'm simply saying we live in a civilization that taxes everything, so why bring that up over one thing? Especially when it's a thing that currently sends people to jail for long periods of time?

It seems to me that one of the biggest obstacles in the way of legalizing cannabis is, ironically, commercial cannabis growers. That is a sad fact to me.


At any rate, it's not worth arguing about here. I respect everyone's right to their own opinions, that's just how it's going to have to be. Any time this heated debate occurs threads get binned. No one is going to change my mind that people who vote against any legalization or medical propositions are selfish and greedy. Just like I'm not going to change anyone else's mind that their comfort level is more important than the ability for their customers to stay out of jail.
 

Crusader Rabbit

Active member
Veteran
Hush, Did you overlook this statement in the original post?

... are said to be in the top five in terms of lobbying and paying lawmakers to keep marijuana illegal.


We do interact here within an insular bubble in terms of the wide range of public views on the topic of cannabis. It seems that many here live within this bubble. It's been said on these boards many times that California's Prop 19 failed because so many growers voted against it in order to maintain the profit margins of selling under prohibition. There simply aren't enough voting commercial growers/sellers for that notion to float.

On the other hand, wasn't Prop 19 written and backed by commercial operations out of Oakland? ... and that is why it didn't emphasize enough the rights of individuals? I'd think that writing and getting an initiative on the ballot could be considered lobbying.
 

hush

Señor Member
Veteran
I actually did overlook that part in bold there. Sorry about that. But, still, I think commercial growers are in good company with the aforementioned top five groups of people.
 

Crusader Rabbit

Active member
Veteran
What gets me is state governors signing contracts with the private prison companies that guarantee a constant supply of inmates. Seems this could support a lawyer's argument that his client is being prosecuted not for the crime, but to feed the machine.
 

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