dilated_pupils
Bluelighter
It seems the future is coming faster then I thought, it may be Mexico and not the US, but if everyone surrounding the US follows, the US wont be too far behind hopefully (yes I know it's still going to be a long time).
Not likely. Despite widespread support for decriminalization of personal-use marijuana, it simply hasn't happened -- and won't in the near future; our recently elected Conservative government wakes up every morning, washes and lubes up, and bends over to take one up the chute from its Lord and Master, the U.S. Government. If we get another Liberal majority sometime down the road, the mj decriminalization might be possible, but there is absolutely no public sense here that other drugs are acceptable at all - certainly not cocaine or opiates. We're under the DEA's spell, I'm afraid.fastandbulbous said:Wouldn't it just be so funny if Canada was to do the same - drug crazed countries on every US border.
the legislation allows Mexicans to legally possess more than TWO POUNDS of peyote. Looks like Mexico is set to become the undisputed peyote capital of the western hemisphere once this law goes into effect.
grandbaby said:Not likely. Despite widespread support for decriminalization of personal-use marijuana, it simply hasn't happened -- and won't in the near future; our recently elected Conservative government wakes up every morning, washes and lubes up, and bends over to take one up the chute from its Lord and Master, the U.S. Government. If we get another Liberal majority sometime down the road, the mj decriminalization might be possible, but there is absolutely no public sense here that other drugs are acceptable at all - certainly not cocaine or opiates. We're under the DEA's spell, I'm afraid.
gloggawogga said:However, while legalizing peyote is nice, IMO they now need a law to protect the peyote from being picked in the wild. Because now with this law you're going to have all the gringos going south of the border to pick peyote. It takes about 15 years for a button to grow, and with everyone picking them they will be picked to near extinction.
`bLow? said:mexico time.
gloggawogga said:However, while legalizing peyote is nice, IMO they now need a law to protect the peyote from being picked in the wild. Because now with this law you're going to have all the gringos going south of the border to pick peyote. It takes about 15 years for a button to grow, and with everyone picking them they will be picked to near extinction.
grandbaby said:Not likely. Despite widespread support for decriminalization of personal-use marijuana, it simply hasn't happened -- and won't in the near future; our recently elected Conservative government wakes up every morning, washes and lubes up, and bends over to take one up the chute from its Lord and Master, the U.S. Government. If we get another Liberal majority sometime down the road, the mj decriminalization might be possible, but there is absolutely no public sense here that other drugs are acceptable at all - certainly not cocaine or opiates. We're under the DEA's spell, I'm afraid.
psychedelicious said:No shit voodoochild! 2.5 hour drive for moi. Texas just got even sweeter.
No, and in fact, it makes sense for a true small-c conservative to support personal freedoms and less government intervention in people's individual choices. However, up here we have two major (i.e. have a hope in hell of forming the national government) parties: the (large C) Conservative party and the (large-L) Liberal party. Since Sep 11 01 the Conservatives (not the ruling party until this January past) have allied themselves strongly with Bush's government and sniped at the Liberals every time they took a step out of line with U.S. policy on any issue. The Liberals, until their defeat in the last election, had been drifting farther and farther away from the US line as it veered farther and farther right. They approved medical marijuana, they went to battle over unfair US lumber tariffs, they supported gay marriage... the list goes on and on. It was kind of the way Clinton's government could have gone had he had the sense to keep it in his pants. But unfortunately, the Liberals also made some serious domestic missteps which caused them to go kerflooey & get ousted, and now social conservatives (who tend more toward the Republican party line; I've even met some Canadians who identify themselves as "Republicans" - wtf?) are taking over somewhat.Delta9 said:I don't think conservatives are necessarily an enemy of drug legalization.
Delta9 said:I don't think conservatives are necessarily an enemy of drug legalization. Vicente Fox's party is conservative and they fully support this new law. Gary Johnson was also a conservative Republican (for those who don't know, he is the former governor of New Mexico that advocated drug legalization.)
You're probably right though, I doubt Canada will ever do anything major to its current drug laws due to U.S. government influence.