So you admit you don't have any proof the Ndp will start issuing tickets when they decriminalize weed? I don't care what the police on down say they won't be the ones make the rules. Where has mulcair said anything about making possession a ticket able offence? He hasn't so stop saying that he has. And another thing we're on the internet why don't you google what the Colorado platform is instead of guessing. And yes jt is absolutely a silent partner in tweed. Until they open their books and prove me otherwise I'll keep saying it. So again I'll ask when and where did jt say we will be able to grow our own?
The real problem here is the Faustian bargain created by marijuana decriminalization laws. In the story of Faust, he makes a deal with the devil, selling his soul in exchange for power and knowledge. So in a Faustian bargain, someone sacrifices values for material gain.
Marijuana decriminalization reduces the legal penalties for people arrested for marijuana possession, and that’s a good thing.
But it comes with a cost, hence the allusion to a Faustian bargain. What’s lost, or sacrificed, is a true accounting for the injustice of marijuana prohibition.
Marijuana decriminalization makes prohibition affordable for the police and local criminal justice systems. Indeed, when you think about the costs and benefits from the law enforcement perspective, they don’t have to pay the costs of jailing people, and instead, they reap the benefits of people paying fines.
The other problem with decriminalization is that it creates the damaging myth that people only use very small amounts of marijuana for personal use.
Think about it, decriminalization affects what is referred to as small personal-use quantities of marijuana. Usually this is defined as an ounce. (Although credit goes to Ohio, where decriminalization of marijuana possession covers up to 100 grams, or a little of over 3 ounces.)
This narrow definition of a personal-use quantity of marijuana is one of many ways marijuana prohibition helps to support the black market—it makes it sensible for marijuana consumers to buy small amounts of marijuana and pay more for them rather than risk harsher penalties for possessing amounts greater than what decriminalization allows.
However, this also reinforces the position taken by police that anyone who has more than an ounce of marijuana must be a drug dealer, especially if they have several ounces or worse, several marijuana plants. That’s the felony equation—if you have more than a little bit of pot, you’re not a marijuana user, you’re a marijuana dealer.
And that means years in prison, or, for in many cases, a felony conviction and a long time under correctional supervision in the form of probation or parole.
People are allowed to buy gallons of scotch and vodka. People are allowed to buy cases of wine. People are allowed by kegs of beer. There are several reasons for this, but the reasons don’t really matter—it’s called freedom.
You can read the rest in HT mag. All about decrim and how it is bad.