canndo
Well-Known Member
No, they collected no money. Raich V. Ashcroft - Gonzales v.Raich.I can give a fellow medical person weed and I don't go to jail, Whole dispensaries exist and they stay open.
So did those people collect monies? Is that why they were in trouble I assume?
We did pass medical. It's a template for all as I understand it since it held up on constitutional review.
I'll check out the SCOTUS link.
I know we have one of our own in for growing for others above 99. so there are practical limits for all things.
And- We are here doing as we do because of medical..
"The government also contended that consuming one's locally grown marijuana for medical purposes affects the interstate market of marijuana, and hence that the federal government may regulate—and prohibit—such consumption. This argument stems from the landmark New Deal case Wickard v. Filburn, which held that the government may regulate personal cultivation and consumption of crops, due to the effect of that consumption on interstate commerce, however minute it may be."
"Raich has personally participated in that market, and Monson expresses a willingness to do so in the future. More concretely, one concern prompting inclusion of wheat grown for home consumption in the 1938 Act was that rising market prices could draw such wheat into the interstate market, resulting in lower market prices. Wickard, 317 U.S., at 128. The parallel concern making it appropriate to include marijuana grown for home consumption in the CSA is the likelihood that the high demand in the interstate market will draw such marijuana into that market. While the diversion of homegrown wheat tended to frustrate the federal interest in stabilizing prices by regulating the volume of commercial transactions in the interstate market, the diversion of homegrown marijuana tends to frustrate the federal interest in eliminating commercial transactions in the interstate market in their entirety. In both cases, the regulation is squarely within Congress' commerce power because production of the commodity meant for home consumption, be it wheat or marijuana, has a substantial effect on supply and demand in the national market for that commodity"
In short Ernst, there is no private grow and there is no non-commerce. Your belief tha we can avoid difficulty by legalizing personal hortculture and not "commercializing" this substance is contrary to recent SCOTUS ruling.