Like Alcohol and Tobacco?
they amended the constitution
Like Alcohol and Tobacco?
Nobody will force you to smoke it.
Demonization of pot is bad. Legalization could enable LEOs to pursue actual criminals more, open up some cottage industries, too.
Free up jail space for people that are actually criminals and not some dude that had a 1/2 oz on them.
Pot is less damaging than alcohol, IMO.
Demonization of pot is bad. Legalization could enable LEOs to pursue actual criminals more, open up some cottage industries, too.
Free up jail space for people that are actually criminals and not some dude that had a 1/2 oz on them.
Pot is less damaging than alcohol, IMO.
Nobody forces you to smoke cigarettes either.
I wouldn't test their authoritie on that.
Pot is equally damaging only in different ways IMO. If we legalize it, sobeit. If we don't fine too. What I don't want is those advocating most strongly for it to lie to me and the public that smoking pot is somehow harmless.
they've been ignoring their constitutional limits since damn near the onset of the constitution..........maybe it should be time to start killing them.......but no, can't have that shit, can we?
https://mynorthwest.com/3407404/dor...ans-more-to-state-lawmakers-than-human-lives/When given a chance to do something about the wave of 70-plus armed robberies since the start of the year involving pot shops in Washington state, local lawmakers did nothing in the most recent legislative session to stem the attacks – and in some cases, bloodshed.
Instead, state legislators got behind House Bill 1210, to change the word from “marijuana” to “cannabis” in all state documents. KIRO Newsradio reporter Hanna Scott told listeners and me that it passed with bipartisan support, 83-13.
Why the need to change the word?
Bill sponsor Rep. Melanie Morgan (D-Parkland) told fellow lawmakers it’s because the word “marijuana is a reminder of the history of racism and persecution” in the United States. She cites a quote from Henry Anslinger, considered the first U.S. “drug czar,” who in the 1930s tied marijuana use to people of color.