hellraizer30
Rebel From The North
thats a fat pile of booger sugarGotta love that in the US you get more time for a few plants growing then
THIS STUFF HEHE
thats a fat pile of booger sugarGotta love that in the US you get more time for a few plants growing then
THIS STUFF HEHE
My point about the constitutionality of marijuana laws is this: If the marijuana is grown, traded and consumed in one state, without any form of interstate commerce, where does the fed gov get its power ( constitutionaly)? Montana had a case against the ATF where a manufacture of firearms made and sold guns to Montana citezens only, and they won their case in court based on the lack of any interstate commerce being involved. If they can win on that , then why not us as well???
Now that is some fucked up and twisted logic imo.The recent ruling was based on a ruling in the 30's. Farmers were told how much grain they could grow. One farmer grew more than his allotment and fed it to his horses. The court ruled that even though the grain never left his farm, the fact that he had an excess meant that he would not buy grain for his livestock. If he would not buy grain than his growing it had an effect on grain commerce both inside and outside his state. SCOTUS applied this precidence to the other ruling - I don't remember the name now, it was a pair of women who had their own seeds, used California fertilizers and california water and california air to grow california marijiuana for their own consumption. SCOTUS ruled that had they not done that, they might have been inclined to buy it and buying it would have had an effect on all of marijuana commerce.
I'm not saying I agree with the ruling but that was how they arrived at the decision they did.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wickard_v._FilburnThe recent ruling was based on a ruling in the 30's. Farmers were told how much grain they could grow. One farmer grew more than his allotment and fed it to his horses. The court ruled that even though the grain never left his farm, the fact that he had an excess meant that he would not buy grain for his livestock. If he would not buy grain than his growing it had an effect on grain commerce both inside and outside his state. SCOTUS applied this precidence to the other ruling - I don't remember the name now, it was a pair of women who had their own seeds, used California fertilizers and california water and california air to grow california marijiuana for their own consumption. SCOTUS ruled that had they not done that, they might have been inclined to buy it and buying it would have had an effect on all of marijuana commerce.
I'm not saying I agree with the ruling but that was how they arrived at the decision they did.