12/19/2008 1:04:16 PM
quick questionwhy do so many people qualify the legalization of marijuana with :"The government needs to tax the hell out of it and make a lot of revenue, blah blah blah"Ive seen that opinion a couple of times in this thread and other threads on this same issue (cause lets face it, it comes up atleast once every few months)Would people not support legalization if it wasn't taxed?
12/19/2008 1:20:07 PM
I think they use that qualifier because it's the only way to convince [some] people that legalization is a good idea. Or, it could just be an attempt to cover up one moral dilemma with another one. It's a sin tax. I'll never understand why people are generally opposed to higher taxes, unless it's a tax increase that won't effect them.
12/19/2008 4:05:54 PM
or maybe they just want to talk about their dope concerns in polite company without everyone thinking they're a stoner.
12/19/2008 6:56:25 PM
think about it...they could sell a pack of 20 joints just like cigs for 5 a pack...and its gov weed so u get high as fuck...idk how many total g's of weed it would be but for 5 dollars shit thats awesome
12/19/2008 6:58:17 PM
12/19/2008 7:03:56 PM
12/19/2008 8:03:37 PM
As I think was mentioned earlier, the main reason alcohol prohibition ended wasn't tolerance for drinking or opposition to gangsters, but rather the need for tax revenue.
12/20/2008 11:18:27 AM
12/24/2008 7:53:47 PM
So decriminalize pot while trying to bankrupt the tobacco industry?? That makes sense.
12/24/2008 8:02:25 PM
Obama said in 2004 he was for decriminalization of pot, but not legalization....... wtf?
12/25/2008 1:27:05 AM
so... what part of the concept of "decriminalization" are you confused about?
12/25/2008 3:08:56 AM
i thought decriminalization and legalization were the same. apparently decriminalization can be partial, such as lowering penalties but not getting rid of them all together.
12/25/2008 10:42:16 AM
yeah, Colorado i think, and some other states have done that. It basically means that pot is still technically illegal, but if caught with it (usually small protions) there is no punishment, or it's very small, like parking or speeding ticket. [Edited on December 25, 2008 at 11:18 AM. Reason : .]
12/25/2008 11:18:11 AM
The problem with decriminalization and even legalization, as I see it, is that it only effects whether or not you'll go to jail. And I'm sure, for a lot of people, that's a big concern. But it's not the only one.The only factor that has impacted my willingness to smoke pot over the years has been my concern about drug testing for work. This has been especially true while I've been looking for work; I get so few opportunities that if I blew a job solely based on a piss test I think I'd throw myself out a window. Never once have I been worried that the police would catch me. I've always been careful about where, when, and how much I smoke, and police intervention has just never been in the cards. But employment? That's kept me from smoking for a year.Just because the government throws open the doors to marijuana doesn't mean employers will. Some already test for legal drugs (tobacco) as a condition of employment, and if you don't quit, you're out. I don't think most companies are going to throw out their policies overnight; momentum and a questionable belief that marijuana smokers are by necessity poor employees will keep them in place.So even if Barack Obama directed Congress to completely legalize marijuana tax-free, I don't think it would be cause for an instant party.---
12/25/2008 4:38:02 PM
12/25/2008 6:32:21 PM
I will be dead in the cold, cold ground before I will move to Boston.
12/26/2008 12:55:55 AM
yo i'd be willing to trade abortion for marijuana rights...just a suggestion
12/27/2008 2:25:38 AM
U.S. to yield marijuana jurisdiction to stateshttp://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2009/02/27/MN2016651R.DTLAbout damn time
2/27/2009 4:56:51 PM
^ This is plenty reasonable in my opinion.If california wants to allow pot vending machines for medicianal purposes the DEA shouldn't be breaking down the doors unless it is proven the drugs were obtained across state lines.If NC doesn't want to legalize medicinal marijuana than the stoners can GTFO and move to Cali or push their activist voices to elect more drug friendly politicians.[Edited on February 27, 2009 at 5:03 PM. Reason : a]
2/27/2009 5:02:16 PM
2/27/2009 5:20:38 PM
2/27/2009 7:40:03 PM
^ Let's be clear, here - if true (and I'll believe it when I see it), this concerns state laws regarding medical marijuana only. This is not a wholesale devolution of authority on the matter of drug policy back to the states.Don't get me wrong - it's still a fantastic step forward - if he actually goes through with it. But this is not by any means a wholesale abdication of the War on Drugs by any means.
2/27/2009 9:12:45 PM
^^^ He use to teach a class on the constitution, i'd expect all his positions surrounding it to be very deliberate.
2/27/2009 9:20:46 PM
okay lets be serious for a minute...do you really trust our country with legalized pot?this is the same country that voted bush in a second term.
2/27/2009 10:30:14 PM
actually, that would be an argument FOR legalizing pot. prohibiting it sure didnt get us anywhere.
2/27/2009 10:41:56 PM
i don't remember where i read this, but i read the idea of legalizing growing and consuming pot, but not selling it. the logic being that we don't need another (arguably) semi-harmful substance being advertised to kids like cigarettes and alcohol. and pot is easily growable in anyone's garden (or closet). of course people would still sell it on a small scale. but there wouldn't be a huge big-business lobbying and advertising arm helping to make sure that each successive generation smokes more and more pot.anyway. i'm not really sure what i think of the idea, but i'd be interested in what people here think about the idea.
2/27/2009 10:45:26 PM
Legal to grow, legal to possess, legal to use, but illegal to sell would be an acceptable compromise. I'm about as libertarian as you can get so I'm all for making it totally legal, but I'd be willing to accept legalization of personal use and manufacture as a good step towards sanity.
2/28/2009 12:26:42 AM
3/3/2009 7:22:19 PM
It should be legal and it shouldn't be taxed anymore than any other commodity. I don't think alcohol or cigarettes should be taxed anymore than other commodities either.Sin taxes exist because they are just easier to sell to weak minded people.
3/3/2009 10:54:54 PM
more like, Puffmaster, amirite!!!1
3/4/2009 11:14:14 AM
3/4/2009 5:03:02 PM
^^ On the tangential topic of taxes. I think the Lottery System is the the slickest tax of all. A tax on poor people who are too dumb to realize it. Uncle Sam really slid that one in really easy, lots of Vaseline there.
3/4/2009 9:32:52 PM
^ I honestly do not have a problem with this. If poor people are stupid enough to hand over a bunch of money every week for the state run lottery to which they have little chance of winning than that's there own problem. Better paying the "voluantary supplemental education tax" than 40's, drugs, or spinners. Really the lottery is just a way for the state of NC to divert welfare money from the federal gov't to the state.
3/5/2009 8:22:44 AM
3/5/2009 9:00:00 AM