You sign up by contacting NORML, or the ASA, or taxcannabis.org, or any of the other organizations in your area and offering what you can of your time or donations or whatever.
The 2010 ballot would make marijuana possession, growing, and sales openly legal in CA for adults and taxable at all levels of CA govt. This means that the town will tax it, then the county also, then the state. The assumption is that those who support legalization will be okay with the taxes and those who don't will be swayed by the taxes.
I'm not sure how much would be legal to possess or how many plants. But it allows 25 sq ft for personal grows. They already have all the signatures they need to get it on the ballot, so we will definitely be voting on it in Nov 2010. There are also 2 or 3 other initiatives that various groups are proposing that may also get on the ballot depending on whether they get the signatures.
Then there are MMJ reforms to specify the details of the MMJ system to lock it down so that local DAs and police can't purposely misinterpret things as they do now in order to continue their crusades against it. For instance, there are officials who claim that possession of MMJ is legal by CA law, but since the law only made possession of MMJ legal and did not address the issues of growing and selling it then it can only be grown and sold by the state, and since the state has no system in place to do so then possession is still illegal because there is no legal way to gain possession.
BS, right? It's the same logic as the 1930's when you had to have a govt stamp on legal MJ to possess it, but you had to have possession to get the stamp at which point you would be arrested for not already having the stamp that you could not get without already possessing the marijuana. Thus legal possession was a moot point and the crazy bastard prohibitionists won. And don't get me started with the issue of busting smoke shops because they used the term bong instead of pipe because bongs are paraphernalia which is still illegal.
These are ongoing issues being proposed locally in each town, and more state level reforms are planned for 2012. It is obvious that we are far from winning this fight. We may be a majority now, but our opposition is highly fanatical and can tie us up and win even if we have a super majority. So many people believe that the only way to win against the crazy fanatics is to get govt on our side by bribing it with taxes. The idea is that once the govt stops persecuting use then the public will see that it is not the demonic drug it has been portrayed to be, and once the public accepts it as it does beer then the fanatics will be just screaming into the wind. They can still have their dry counties and otherwise they can be ignored.
So, there are several groups all working for their own versions of laws. NORML supports what they think will work for right now, so their positions change a little over time. The ASA by nature supports MMJ, but also legalization and taxation. I'm pretty sure the ASA is who first proposed and supported the 2010 tax ballot initiative. Then there is the Tax Cannabis organization found at taxcannabis.org which supports the 2010 ballot and others.
Every group basically supports whatever is on our plates right now because they believe that reform will always be ongoing and any forward movement is great because they can always support more reforms afterwards. The problem is that we may end up giving up more of our taxes than we wish, but that would be better than continuing prohibition. So should we pass on taxing full legalization and take the risk that we will then miss out and slowly sink back into full prohibition?
The MMJ laws are better than nothing right now, but it leaves the whole issue on the fence between full legalization and full prohibition, and that unstable balancing act can fall back on the wrong side again. Yes, we have made headway against full prohibition. But we have only gotten the issue up onto the fence, not over it. It sits there precariously wobbling back and forth while we discuss our next moves.
But the only reason w have gotten this far is that those who oppose us have been distracted of late with wars and economic woes. We can not afford to screw around until they get their acts together again or else we are doomed.
So personally, I am going to support and work for all the different initiatives until it is at least as legal as beer. Then I'll worry about the levels of taxation and regulation. I admit that I may be entirely wrong to do this, but I have a really bad feeling about leaving it on the fence for too long. My body is in medical need yes, but my soul cries for true liberty.