reeen said:
also, sale and cultivation of pot was not made legal, even possesion wasnt it was decriminalized, which means you can still get a fine. but sale and cultivation wasn't decriminalized, if you were caught with over an ounce or a bit more, you could still be charged.
Sorry, bud, you have your information wrong.
The fact was that courts first in Ontario, followed by BC then Nova Scotia said that ALL pot laws were unconstitutional, and therefore, they became invalid. That included cultivaion, selling, smoking, posession (even of ten kilos); everything.
I don't know why everyone seems to think that it was decriminalised in Canada at some point. There have been talks in Parliament, Senate commissions set up, studies made, suggestions, etc. all pointing in this direction, but for a real law change such as that to happen, a bill would have to be passed in Parliament. When those court rulings were made, they didn't change the laws: they simply threw them all out.
But that "mistake" was soon rectified by the Canadian Supreme Court. Now they are working on bills to decriminalise it, ie. make small posession on par with a parking or speeding offense. But with how the political situation is going in Canada right now (changing of governments, the inevitable Bend-Over-To-The-US-And-Forget-The-Rest-Of-The-World-Conservative Party victory in the next election), I don't think those bills have any chance of being passed any time in the future. I view that as a good thing, because as things are right now, the police in Canada, at least in BC, are super leniant about posession, and usually just take your weed and tell you to bugger off. If there were such laws, and we just got fines, there would be no excuse for them to be so lenient, and I believe it would become even more strictly enforced.
My two cents. I hope things stay the way they are, or there is a magical Green Party victory some time soon.