From the blog The Ticket: It's been quite the night for marijuana in several ballot measures across the country. Voters in Washington state and Colorado appear to have voted "yes" on measures that would legalize the sale of pot to adults, without the need
What is will do is hurt our gangs that were importing to Washington, and lower pot prices in BC. Ie it will harm our economy.
Really just a symbolic gesture. The DEA still enforces federal drug laws across the country regardless.
Most gets dealt with by local authorities in each state.
The more states that do this, the harder it becomes for the DEA to fully fill the role of state authorities.
Coals to Newcastle. When I suggested on another thread that we'd have BCrs going south to smoke pot legally, the way they used to go drinking on Sundays, I was soundly informed that why bother, nobody hassles you for it here.
What is will do is hurt our gangs that were importing to Washington, and lower pot prices in BC. Ie it will harm our economy.
There definitely will probably will be people who take that risk. I just personally do not see the point.
"I can't wait to go to the United States next year when I'm 21 so I can smoke weed there!"
"But it's illegal here, and you're smoking it now anyway..."
I just think that anyone going to Washington to light up will probably do so for April 20th or the Marijuana Marches, otherwise it seems like an expensive way to smoke marijuana.
I can't see the DEA kicking in doors for people growing a few plants in CO. In WA, OTOH, legalized growers and pot shops, that's another matter.
Washington gets to deal with California/Oregon as well as BC.
I wouldn't be shocked to see DEA becoming more interested there, though I highly doubt it will mean much.
Coals to Newcastle. When I suggested on another thread that we'd have BCrs going south to smoke pot legally, the way they used to go drinking on Sundays, I was soundly informed that why bother, nobody hassles you for it here.
What is will do is hurt our gangs that were importing to Washington, and lower pot prices in BC. Ie it will harm our economy.
There definitely will probably will be people who take that risk. I just personally do not see the point.
"I can't wait to go to the United States next year when I'm 21 so I can smoke weed there!"
"But it's illegal here, and you're smoking it now anyway..."
I just think that anyone going to Washington to light up will probably do so for April 20th or the Marijuana Marches, otherwise it seems like an expensive way to smoke marijuana.
You might want to look up what coals to Newcastle means. How about refrigerators to Eskimos?
I can't see the DEA kicking in doors for people growing a few plants in CO. In WA, OTOH, legalized growers and pot shops, that's another matter.
Washington gets to deal with California/Oregon as well as BC.
I wouldn't be shocked to see DEA becoming more interested there, though I highly doubt it will mean much.
It will depend on what's politically advantageous for Obama. Pot growers and sellers will be sitting ducks for the DEA, if that's the political directive.
If the Feds try to stamp this out, the supreme court will get to decide if they have the jurisdiction to legislate marijuana. They don't, so they will be opening pandora's box on the whole range of illegal drugs.
You should send your opinion to the US Supreme Court. They will be very thankful an activist pot head from Winnipeg, Canada, saved all those qualified American judges a ton of work.
Obama came out for gay marriage and increasingly defends it now in the face of continued controversy, maybe there can be "hope" he'll take a similar populist stand with marijuana.
One would hope so but DEA busts of marijuana growers and users has gone up in the last four years.
Still, many kudos to Washington State and Colorado for voting for sanity and personal freedom.