https://www.rollitup.org/california-patients/370795-im-voting-yes.html
i think i should of posted it originally here instead of in the CA section.
i think i should of posted it originally here instead of in the CA section.
Precisely.so i just got done with a a lil over 20 pages of your thread before it seemed the same debates started repeating...
so whats YOUR issue with the law? that YOU cant grow what you want to smoke in a 25sq ft area?
It beats death.well ive read your other posts and i still cant come to the conclusion how your giving 3oz of combustible vegetation a week and claiming that is a healthier alternative. 3oz for one person just seems like you'd be so heavily sedated it would defeat the purpose. mathematically i cant put a finger on it. thats like half an oz a day. holy cow! im not denying u know your stuff but when you say u dont want it legal so YOU can grow and you admit your wife alone is in the 3oz/week mark and you finish saying that if it becomes legal you'd like that thousand dollars cash to cover what you'd be losing....
it just all doesnt sound right ya know?
I guess I'll sell your organs to pay for my short fall?When Prop 19 passes you, your wife, and any other adult you know will be able to purchase marijuana at lower costs than ANY other medication. You'll still be able to grow your own as well.
Stop complaining and crying to everyone that they should keep throwing people in jail for marijuana just because it doesn't fit YOUR needs.
How selfish.
True. Now, counterpoint... when have you ever known law enforcement or government agencies to correctly interpret law. And it's the way that they've tended to exert that interpretive authority in the past and even currently that makes the ambiguous wording of the bill so potentially dangerous. And if I can see it, as an activist, you can be assured that the powers that be see it, too. Plus the places where the bill aren't so ambiguous and are rather specific are equally worrying. I won't argue the children present clause because that's a pretty subjective thing, but the clause suddenly excluding the 18-20 crowd is just disturbing. Given the staggering rate at which the sub-21 year-old crowd is able to acquire and consume alcohol in blatant disregard for existing law, I fail to see how adding more things for them to break the law about is a good thing. One other specific that is pretty bothersome is the authority that is granted to local government to decide policy. The verbiage seems very much to support that ultimate decision authority sits with the local government agency (typically the city council or county board of supervisors) without any provisions for the community to challenge the decision because their decision is authorized by voter-initiative legislation. These may just be assumptions, but they are reasonable assumptions of actions that are squarely in line with the precedents that the entities in question have demonstrated repeatedly over several decades and continue to exhibit. Each side can throw out all the crazy numbers they want, the facts on the field are that the majority of local government agencies are NOT on our side and that Prop. 19 has provisions that can be far too easily abused by those same "hostile" entities.but the proposition doesnt state ANYTHING over medicinal usage. and u were called out on it in your thread. what does having blessings from leo's do? your legal as far as they are concerned your nothing to worry about. so saying that means nothing. and u want to talk math once again... how does your crop get reduced? it DOES NOT specifically say anything like that in the text. your just assuming it.
I'm not veggie, but I can offer a few reasonable arguments from a semi-objective perspective. As semi-objective as one who is against 19 could be.now heres my questions so if they are too personal u dont have to answer but it would clear a lot of things before i personally start assuming lol.
Getting caught up in the numbers game is just a propaganda ploy on both sides. The fact is that there are plenty of valid and real reasons that someone could need far more cannabis than one would expect or believe. Some people are only able to assume cannabis through tincture or balms or edibles, and everyone has a different titration threshold. The real point here is why the limit? Under current legislation, there is mention of 1 ounce as being the threshold at which personal consumption can be assumed as opposed to intent to sell. But, that's not to say that you can't have more than an ounce. The caveat is, obviously, that if you have more than an ounce then you'll need a court appearance to prove "personal consumption". But an ounce or less now is a $100 fine, if you are caught. No jail time, no detainment. You might have to do the cannabis equivalent of traffic school to drop the charges from your record, but it's really no worse than traffic school. Essentially, the rights that 19 grants, we already have with greater freedom now.-if your wife consumes 3oz a week, by which method is she going through all of it? because if shes smoking it by open flame then wheres the health concerns of inhaling 3oz of plant material?
if shes using a vape then theirs no way shes going through that much, if she is i still find that hard to believe.
Once again, these number games don't really amount to much. They're about as useful as political polling. There are plenty of people with conditions that require them to medicate more than any of us, or perhaps they're having to overcome a certain amount of tolerance. If someone is using cannabis for pain-management, I can't really see them wanting to discontinue medicating long enough to give their system time to de-acclimate. Again, personal titration is far too subjective to be making any judgments on anyone's usage requirements.-if your growing such quality bud as you claim then why the need for her to have 3oz a week? if shes medicating enough to get the effects that shes required, then technically she should'nt need so many doses?
Well, since the inception of Prop 215, patients who didn't grow or know a grower well enough, had to go somewhere for their meds. The rather haphazard and risky nature of the system made it seem necessary to put buffers between growers and patients. Prop. 19 doesn't do anything to address that problems specifically. It just makes provisions for permitted entities to take up the place as the new middlemen of the recreational circle. Effective legislation would put patients/clients in closer or more direct contact with growers. Pretending that Prop. 19 will allow for this requires complete ignorance of the last 80 years of commercial industrialization.where are you getting the idea this is a push for getting medical users to buy from clubs?
as is with the system these clubs are taking advantage of patients with current costs. so whos really winning?
I'm sorry... this seems a bit hypocritical to me. This proposition is dripping profits for "permitted" entities. Profit margins potentially in the millions for large-scale producers even. But you want to begrudge the small/medium grower who is direct marketing to patients and/or clubs. Keep in mind that the grower is the low-end in the medical supply system. If there's anyone's profit margins to be questioned, it's the middle men. I know that, personally, I've had to search around a bit to find clubs that don't charge ridiculous prices over what they've paid. Nothing in 19 fixes or addresses these problems.and lend you 1k a week to cover shortage? shortage to that weed your growing and possibly marketing? even if you lowballed your prices between those 3ppl a wee,k seems like a lot of weight being moved somewhere for you to get those figures.
Since 19 will grant local government the authority to decide policy without the need for voter approval or input, anyone stuck in a "dry" region will have little legal recourse. City council/County Supervisors will say that Prop. 19 grants them the authority to decide and that's that. The problem is that Prop 19 is ambiguous in favor of local government over the populace. Prop. 215 was purposely ambiguous in favor of patients/the public which is why it's been a damn hard fight for prohibitionists to gain inroads into restricting medical cannabis.i think your getting it wrong, or maybe i am. but this law seems to 'allow' a chance for weed to be legal with certain discrepancies. the state will ultimately leave it up to the county's to "regulate and tax" it. which how laws should be anyways. if you want to charge a rahrah over your rights, then vote yes and take the arguement to your local officials when they try to over tax it.
Our foot has been in the door for more than 20 years now. The movement is progressing all the time. We're waiting on the Governator to sign legislation to reduce simple possession from a misdemeanor to an infraction. It's never a good idea to vote in badly-worded legislation that has any potential to harm our community as a whole. Sure, there are risks in things as they are, but we have many legal options to protect us today. It just requires that you know what your rights are as a citizen of California and be willing to stand up and fight for them when LEO and city hall come to take them from you.this measure is just the foot in the door, which is what we need to continue the movement. things can change they always do. hell how many times has being in gay been banned already?
And your constant name calling and ignorant statements only further my point that people should take ANYTHING you say with a grain of salt and understand that you're using lies and half-truths to spin your propaganda.I guess I'll sell your organs to pay for my short fall?
Any other volunteers?
I haven't paid for our meds in a very long time.
I won't go broke because a dick head says I should.
Dickhead = YOU.
True. Now, counterpoint... when have you ever known law enforcement or government agencies to correctly interpret law. And it's the way that they've tended to exert that interpretive authority in the past and even currently that makes the ambiguous wording of the bill so potentially dangerous. And if I can see it, as an activist, you can be assured that the powers that be see it, too. Plus the places where the bill aren't so ambiguous and are rather specific are equally worrying. I won't argue the children present clause because that's a pretty subjective thing, but the clause suddenly excluding the 18-20 crowd is just disturbing. Given the staggering rate at which the sub-21 year-old crowd is able to acquire and consume alcohol in blatant disregard for existing law, I fail to see how adding more things for them to break the law about is a good thing. One other specific that is pretty bothersome is the authority that is granted to local government to decide policy. The verbiage seems very much to support that ultimate decision authority sits with the local government agency (typically the city council or county board of supervisors) without any provisions for the community to challenge the decision because their decision is authorized by voter-initiative legislation. These may just be assumptions, but they are reasonable assumptions of actions that are squarely in line with the precedents that the entities in question have demonstrated repeatedly over several decades and continue to exhibit. Each side can throw out all the crazy numbers they want, the facts on the field are that the majority of local government agencies are NOT on our side and that Prop. 19 has provisions that can be far too easily abused by those same "hostile" entities.
I'm not veggie, but I can offer a few reasonable arguments from a semi-objective perspective. As semi-objective as one who is against 19 could be.
Getting caught up in the numbers game is just a propaganda ploy on both sides. The fact is that there are plenty of valid and real reasons that someone could need far more cannabis than one would expect or believe. Some people are only able to assume cannabis through tincture or balms or edibles, and everyone has a different titration threshold. The real point here is why the limit? Under current legislation, there is mention of 1 ounce as being the threshold at which personal consumption can be assumed as opposed to intent to sell. But, that's not to say that you can't have more than an ounce. The caveat is, obviously, that if you have more than an ounce then you'll need a court appearance to prove "personal consumption". But an ounce or less now is a $100 fine, if you are caught. No jail time, no detainment. You might have to do the cannabis equivalent of traffic school to drop the charges from your record, but it's really no worse than traffic school. Essentially, the rights that 19 grants, we already have with greater freedom now.
Once again, these number games don't really amount to much. They're about as useful as political polling. There are plenty of people with conditions that require them to medicate more than any of us, or perhaps they're having to overcome a certain amount of tolerance. If someone is using cannabis for pain-management, I can't really see them wanting to discontinue medicating long enough to give their system time to de-acclimate. Again, personal titration is far too subjective to be making any judgments on anyone's usage requirements.
Well, since the inception of Prop 215, patients who didn't grow or know a grower well enough, had to go somewhere for their meds. The rather haphazard and risky nature of the system made it seem necessary to put buffers between growers and patients. Prop. 19 doesn't do anything to address that problems specifically. It just makes provisions for permitted entities to take up the place as the new middlemen of the recreational circle. Effective legislation would put patients/clients in closer or more direct contact with growers. Pretending that Prop. 19 will allow for this requires complete ignorance of the last 80 years of commercial industrialization.
I'm sorry... this seems a bit hypocritical to me. This proposition is dripping profits for "permitted" entities. Profit margins potentially in the millions for large-scale producers even. But you want to begrudge the small/medium grower who is direct marketing to patients and/or clubs. Keep in mind that the grower is the low-end in the medical supply system. If there's anyone's profit margins to be questioned, it's the middle men. I know that, personally, I've had to search around a bit to find clubs that don't charge ridiculous prices over what they've paid. Nothing in 19 fixes or addresses these problems.
Since 19 will grant local government the authority to decide policy without the need for voter approval or input, anyone stuck in a "dry" region will have little legal recourse. City council/County Supervisors will say that Prop. 19 grants them the authority to decide and that's that. The problem is that Prop 19 is ambiguous in favor of local government over the populace. Prop. 215 was purposely ambiguous in favor of patients/the public which is why it's been a damn hard fight for prohibitionists to gain inroads into restricting medical cannabis.
Our foot has been in the door for more than 20 years now. The movement is progressing all the time. We're waiting on the Governator to sign legislation to reduce simple possession from a misdemeanor to an infraction. It's never a good idea to vote in badly-worded legislation that has any potential to harm our community as a whole. Sure, there are risks in things as they are, but we have many legal options to protect us today. It just requires that you know what your rights are as a citizen of California and be willing to stand up and fight for them when LEO and city hall come to take them from you.