This will be very interesting. Let's see if he calls off the alphabet boys now.
alasdairU.S. allows states to legalize recreational marijuana within limits
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In a move marijuana advocates hailed as an historic shift, the Obama administration on Thursday began giving U.S. states wide leeway to experiment with pot legalization and started by letting Colorado and Washington carry out new laws permitting recreational use.
The Justice Department said it would refocus marijuana enforcement nationwide by bringing criminal charges only in eight defined areas - such as distribution to minors - and giving breathing room to users, growers and related businesses that have feared prosecution.
The decisions end nearly a year of deliberation inside President Barack Obama's administration about how to react to the growing movement for relaxed U.S. marijuana laws.
Advocates for legalization welcomed the announcement as a major step toward ending what they called "marijuana prohibition."
Madhatter4;11795712 said:^^^This is great news but at the rate we are going it will only take another sixty years for the Federal government to reschedule Marijuana. Lets not forget that each state will have to legalize marijuana on there own accord and that's going to be a tough sell in the bible belt. Marijuana will heal humanity but expect certain people/organizations to fight it tooth and nail
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Foreigner;11796158 said:This is pretty worthless, IMO. His kingship might let it stand, but the Federal laws on the books are unchanged. He has changed his mind before and will probably do it again.
These allowances are just to give the dispensary system time to get setup so that the Fed can raid them all when the time is right. In other words, it's yet another bait and switch.
I will have more faith when cannabis is decriminalized at a Federal level.
3 said:I think it will be legalized at the Federal level in less than a decade.
Problem is, states will still be allowed to maintain their current laws, so if you live in Oklahoma or Arkansas where the laws are fucking absurd, it might be 60+ years before you are legally allowed to smoke marijuana there.
Hopefully, certain states will begin legalizing cocaine and MDMA in that time frame, paving the way for full scale legalization of all drugs, from marijuana to LSD to heroin. I think that a gradualist approach is actually the way to go in terms of ramping down the drug war, as legalizing everything all at once would have devastating society wide effects, mostly related to the sudden loss of income that would be faced by individuals the drug war has turned into psychopaths. It's better to chip away at that income slowly over time, making the business decreasingly lucrative over the course of decades.
Foreigner;11796158 said:This is pretty worthless, IMO. His kingship might let it stand, but the Federal laws on the books are unchanged. He has changed his mind before and will probably do it again.
These allowances are just to give the dispensary system time to get setup so that the Fed can raid them all when the time is right. In other words, it's yet another bait and switch.
I will have more faith when cannabis is decriminalized at a Federal level.
Elven Warriorr;11797238 said:I see no evidence that drugs (other than cannabis), will ever be legal. The only reason that pot was legalized in Colorado and Washington was because of NORML's lobbying. There's an organization called LEAP, whose goal is to legalize all drugs (not just marijuana), but in order for a drug to become legal, the people of the states have to vote on it. According to certain polls, while many people support legalizing pot, very few people support legalizing any other drugs.
endotropic;11797251 said:Sadly I have to agree with you. This is the same song and dance that he's been pulling since his first term, when he claimed the feds would no longer prosecute medical marijuana operations who were in compliance with state law.
If we don't see any raids in the next 12 months, then I'll believe this is more than just hot air.
3 said:There are increasing numbers of sociologists, psychologists, medical doctors, pharmacologists, molecular biologists, neurologists, lawyers, former law enforcement officers, and even the occasional politician, who feel that The War on Drugs needs to come to an end. We are a long way from majority support, but if influential and prominent individuals across multiple disciplines are all saying the same thing for a long enough time, public perception will shift eventually. Just five years ago somebody would have said there is absolutely no chance marijuana would be legalized anywhere within the U.S. within the next 10 years.