Spicer: States will likely see 'greater enforcement' of federal law against rec mj

"He could not force state and local governments to enforce federal law. That's due to the principles of federalism ..." DI #157

There are "principles" (your word) and there are laws. They are not always the same.
Years ago the standard was that the local police were not to "enforce federal law", but to hold suspects, persons without papers, until they could be interrogated / investigated by the proper federal agents.
But the feds were lackadaisical about holding up their end of the bargain thus snarling and squandering local police resources. Eventually, perhaps not out of spite but out of necessity the locals stopped holding the W.O.P.s

There's more than one way to skin a cat.

That might be part of it but it is not the real reason. They do not enforce it because doing so discourages their residents from working with the state or seeking state help. If you can't get residents to report crimes that they are victims of or may have witnessed then that is a big problem. Another one is that making it a priority will discourage those residents from medical services intended to protect public health. Also, many of them have citizen children who might then be kept away from those things that are intended to help them be functioning and productive members of society. It really makes no sense for them to enforce it. Yes the lack of federal action probably exacerbates that as the only real value the state/local governments gain from enforcement is removal of REAL criminals (as opposed to simple civil violators).
 
DI #161,

a) Thanks much for adding that. Surely I don't disagree. It's only that I was addressing a separate issue, whether locals can enforce federal law.

b) In New York State sheriff is a county-wide office, whereas chief of police may be local to one municipality.
But both sheriffs and chiefs of police have said much of what you have so concisely recounted here. And they've been saying it recently.

But now you have me wondering:
Rather than federal deputization of State / county / local law enforcers, how about instead paying those sub-federal agencies a modest bounty? Not so high a bounty as to get them to drop their murder investigations, but enough to help pay the electric bill, and perhaps lighten up a bit on the local tax burden?

Without a per capita bounty, the locals are providing a free service to the feds; the poor donating to the rich.
Why not at least provide reasonable compensation that reflects the ACTUAL cost of local assistance to federal ICE?
 
No, it's nothing like that. If he does not want to make enforcement of the federal mj laws a priority or wants to show respect to the power of the people in ALL states to choose for themselves that is one thing but he cannot (or should not be able to) use our federal laws to go after his enemies in one state while ignoring that his friends are violating the law in another.


Nice try, comrade, but I don't think you are up to making it work with informed Americans.
it's called prioritization or prosecutorial discretion. It's the same thing Obama used -albeit different metrics,
You are making it political about red and blue states/The states decide what they want- if a red state went for legalization by Spicer's definition they would be gone after too
 
i can barely follow this. plebiscite is process.the issue is how the fed;s enforce no matter how the states came about
marijuana law..

what is "paramilitary means" to thwart the will of the people-?

Buy a fucking dictionary, retard
His/her meanings are clear and obvious.
 
it's called prioritization or prosecutorial discretion. It's the same thing Obama used -albeit different metrics,
You are making it political about red and blue states/The states decide what they want- if a red state went for legalization by Spicer's definition they would be gone after too

Again, I don't need your help on language, comrade.

It's not simply prosecutorial discretion. That is only part of the larger executive power to set enforcement priorities.

Obama did not use his enforcement priorities to punish states that voted against him.

If you insist on enforcing the law then there is no room for a distinction unless it is made by congress. The President has no power to make that distinction and he creates a problem with the entire concept when he abuses his power in this way.
 
Again, I don't need your help on language, comrade.

It's not simply prosecutorial discretion. That is only part of the larger executive power to set enforcement priorities.

Obama did not use his enforcement priorities to punish states that voted against him.

If you insist on enforcing the law then there is no room for a distinction unless it is made by congress. The President has no power to make that distinction and he creates a problem with the entire concept when he abuses his power in this way.
that's ridiculous. The Cole memo complete contradicts you, and your attempt to make this political holds no water.
Alaska has legal weed. there may be more to follow.

Not that I support Trump on this - he's got a puritanical view on all drugs. His brother died of alcoholism i believe
But this isn't about politics as much as you want it to be.
 
that's ridiculous. The Cole memo complete contradicts you, and your attempt to make this political holds no water.
Alaska has legal weed. there may be more to follow.

Not that I support Trump on this - he's got a puritanical view on all drugs. His brother died of alcoholism i believe
But this isn't about politics as much as you want it to be.

Dirty liar
 
Again, I don't need your help on language, comrade.

It's not simply prosecutorial discretion. That is only part of the larger executive power to set enforcement priorities.

Obama did not use his enforcement priorities to punish states that voted against him.

If you insist on enforcing the law then there is no room for a distinction unless it is made by congress. The President has no power to make that distinction and he creates a problem with the entire concept when he abuses his power in this way.

Still covering for Obama, NL?
 
Yeah, honestly, I am not sure they will actually follow through here. Spicer is an idiot and nothing he says is very important. Sessions has long had it out for mj but there is going to be pushback. Their attempt to enforce it only in the blue states where they have little to lose might not be enough to protect them from it.
As I've stated earlier, when Obama wanted to cut back on the abuse of the MM industry, he simply refused to allow banks to do business with the shops. Further, the IRS still doesn't allow any marijuana shops to take standard business deductions.

Continuing along those lines, and reinstating the bank ban that Obama eventually dropped is all that trump needs to do to throw a wrench in the works.

Of course, his attention span is so short, maybe he'll just forget he even mentioned it?
 
donald_opt_1_opt.jpg
 
If Trump goes after the holy plant, it will be just another lie, flip flop, or whatever, by him.

I say we petition the WH and gather millions of signatures to make MJ legal, just like alcohol. Alcohol kills more people daily than MJ does in a decade. If booze are legal, there is absolutely no reason why MJ should be illegal.

None. Nada. Zip.
 
#164 & #165

a #164:

1) It is complicated, and thus requiring a mind capable of multi-tracking complexity.

2) The simple view is:
- local COPs enforce local law
- State police enforce State law, &
- feds enforce federal law.

That's fine.

BUT !!

Let's not lose sight of our roots here. Shall we lose sight of our principles, due to distraction on focus on process?

3) Thomas Jefferson penned our DOI, from which I will now quote:

men "are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that
among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.— That to
secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their
just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form
of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the
People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its
foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to
them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness." TJ / DOI


And so you see sir:
to reject THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE of Colorado as expressed by plebiscite, and simply over-rule it with superior federal force,
is to undermine the very principle upon which our nation was Founded.

If Colorado doesn't have that right, the what is the legitimacy of the United States in the first place?

Shall we abandon our status as citizens, and declare ourselves royal subjects of Queen Elizabeth?

You can't have it both ways.

The Founders spoke, and we gained our sovereignty.

And now Colorado has spoken. And Trump intends to impose a foolish, destructive, punitive War of martial oppression on Colorado instead?

FOR WHAT ?!

What noble principle would be enforced by so doing? Federal rights trumping States rights?! I thought Republicans were the STATES RIGHTS party. But is that only with guns, and school toilets?

I don't care which side you pick in that dispute. But please pick only one. I don't want to have to educate you as you continue to take BOTH sides; as your whim pleases.
 
If Trump goes after the holy plant, it will be just another lie, flip flop, or whatever, by him.

I say we petition the WH and gather millions of signatures to make MJ legal, just like alcohol. Alcohol kills more people daily than MJ does in a decade. If booze are legal, there is absolutely no reason why MJ should be illegal.

None. Nada. Zip.
At which point trump will claim that he's had millions of people contact him about enforcing existing marijuana laws.
 
" Obama failed to enforce federal law on immigration " CM #152

"Trump will not be able to force the police of California or any other state/municipality to enforce the federal law on mj. He can't make SF enforce those law any more then he can force them to enforce federal immigration law." DI #153

Some report the Trump administration might want them deputized.
But their local commanders don't want that. I gather it's unlikely to happen.

"There are ways in which Trump can do things to where those locals will choose to do so and think it was their idea in the first place." CM #154

Right, and Mexico's gunna pay for the wall.

"He could not force state and local governments to enforce federal law. That's due to the principles of federalism ..." DI #157

There are "principles" (your word) and there are laws. They are not always the same.
Years ago the standard was that the local police were not to "enforce federal law", but to hold suspects, persons without papers, until they could be interrogated / investigated by the proper federal agents.
But the feds were lackadaisical about holding up their end of the bargain thus snarling and squandering local police resources. Eventually, perhaps not out of spite but out of necessity the locals stopped holding the W.O.P.s

There's more than one way to skin a cat.

When the black President's numbers are counted differently than any previous administration, it's easy to make an apples to oranges claim that appears as something it really isn't. Maybe that was just another form of affirmative action where the black person has to have something done differently because he's unable to live up to a certain standard.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/mar/12/deportations-come-mostly-from-border-dhs-chief-say/
 
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