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Pot industry exhales (a little) after Trump's attorney general pick testifies

neversickanymore

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Pot industry exhales (a little) after Trump's attorney general pick testifies
Polly Mosendz
1/17

When Donald Trump appointed Jeff Sessions as attorney general, the cannabis industry let out a collective groan. This week the industry, which is expected to balloon to $50 billion by 2026, got a hint of reprieve after Sessions was questioned about marijuana policy during his confirmation hearing.
One cannabis investor went so far as to call the hearing a "huge victory." Others in the industry expressed cautious optimism.

Sessions has called pot "a danger" and has long opposed legalization. "Good people don't smoke marijuana," he said last year at a Senate hearing. In an infamous quote attributed to Sessions in the 1980s, while he was being considered for a federal district judge position, he said he thought the Ku Klux Klan "were OK until I found out they smoked pot." He later apologized and said he was joking.

But the conservative Republican senator from Alabama is also a proponent of states' rights, and more than half of the states in the U.S. have legalized some form of cannabis, despite federal laws prohibiting its sale and consumption.

In his hearing, Sessions said he wouldn't "commit to never enforcing federal law" but added that "absolutely it's a problem of resources for the federal government." Recently, a spokesman for the Drug Enforcement Administration told Bloomberg that, given the growing opioid crisis, agents can't dedicate resources to monitor or curtail the distribution and use of cannabidiol products, which are technically controlled substances.

"It is notable that Sen. Sessions chose not to commit to vigorously enforcing federal prohibition laws in states that have reformed their marijuana laws," Robert Capecchi, director of federal policies for the Marijuana Policy Project, a cannabis legalization lobbying organization, said in an emailed statement. "He also recognized that enforcing federal marijuana laws would be dependent upon the availability of resources, the scarcity of which poses a problem. He was given the opportunity to take an extreme prohibitionist approach, and he passed on it."

Troy Dayton, co-founder of the Arcview Group, an Oakland, Calif.-based cannabis industry investment firm, went further, saying by email that the senator "left the door open but indicated it would be a low priority. That's a huge victory considering [Sessions'] previous inflammatory statements about this topic."

Dayton said Sessions "may be against marijuana policy reform, but he is not stupid. He knows that these cannabis laws are hugely popular, not just among Americans in red and blue states, but with his boss who campaigned in favor of these laws."

BC-POT-INDUSTRY-EXHALES-A-LITTLE-AFTER-TRUMP-S-ATTORNEY-GENERAL-PICK-TESTIFIES© Polly Mosendz BC-POT-INDUSTRY-EXHALES-A-LITTLE-AFTER-TRUMP-S-ATTORNEY-GENERAL-PICK-TESTIFIES
While his responses, on their face, were hardly a coup for the cannabis industry, Sessions didn't morally condemn pot smokers either.

"The United States Congress has made the possession of marijuana in every state, and distribution of it, an illegal act," he testified. "If that ... is not desired any longer, Congress should pass a law to change the rule."

The Drug Policy Alliance, an organization opposed to the war on drugs, called the testimony "wishy-washy at best." The group's senior director of national affairs, Bill Piper, added: "It is clear that he was too afraid to say the ‘reefer madness’ things he said just a year ago, and that’s progress. But he made it clear throughout the hearing that he will enforce federal law."

The National Cannabis Industry Association supported Sessions' deferral to Congress. "It's time for federal lawmakers to represent the clear choices of their constituents," Executive Director Aaron Smith said in an emailed statement. "The responsible cannabis industry has helped countless critically ill patients, contributed billions of dollars to the economy and to tax coffers, taken marijuana out of the criminal market and put it behind a regulated counter, and dealt a significant blow to international cartels and traffickers."


Continued https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/mar...ps-attorney-general-pick-testifies/ar-AAlMYZS
 
Trump and Sessions should have a session with some dank and kick back, have a few laughs and then legalise it country wide.
 
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Sorry but can you give me a TLDR version?

Basically, Sessions ISN'T going to try to enforce the laws in states where weed is already legal?
 
Sessions is too scared to do anything because he realizes his opinion on marijuana is no longer in the majority (if it ever was). He knows the people as a whole have the most power and he is very scared of being proved wrong by the people.


I think it's kind of funny to watch him change opinions on marijuana. It's like watching a fish out of water, flopping helplessly from one side to the other.
 
These people don't really speak for the industry. NCIA and DPA are the choir boys pretending they represent the football team and the skaters too.
 
I don't know, when I hear him saying he will enforce what the law is set by congress and with his past I don't trust him and I'm actually putting hope in Trump that he does the right thing.
 
What i don't understand is that I heard that CBD is now illegal in all 50 states, but does this mean that weed can't possibly become legal in those states because it contains CBD??

That would be completely fucked up.

I totally don't understand what they are doing with CBD and why since it can't even get people high.
 
The cbd thing is turning huuuge profits bc its snakeoil in most cases. Here in MD where we've he'd .Edical on the books but only as an affirmative defense in CT, so there is no dispensaries ECT... But you have these smoke shopss selling cbd oil vape carts for crazy prices despite that it's pressed from industrial hemp and barely has an effect. It's not like an extract made from Charlotte s web or one of the other super high % cbd strains.

I get bad migraines and have for almost 3 decades, have tried low dose LSD and just about every pharm you can imagine, but some really strong indica wax will give me relief for a few days. Interestingly LSD took them away for a few months, and it was subscribe dose bc I'm really sensitive to perceptual changes. Finding a good balance is what works the best. Or a handful of Valium lol
 
no its certainly not snake oil. The Cherry is a hemp producing cbd and the products i have seen from it are great.

do your migraines start in your neck.. do you usually wake up with one or do they come on during the day?

from my years as a mj caregiver the Flow can work wonders for some migraine sufferers
 
So basically they won't try to shut down things completely, but they will always have the law in their back pocket that they can use to selectively harass, intimidate, and prosecute whenever they see fit.
 
I sincerely hope he uses the resources granted to him to deal with far-more pressing issues than a minority group's preference for the recreational consumption of a largely-benign plant, which, has been utilized by homo sapiens for thousands of years without catastrophic consequences to their productiveness and/or quality of life.

It's just a species of plants (Sativa, Indica) - not some insidious level 4 bio-hazard, ffs.
 
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