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Pot Politics on Capitol Hill

vta

Active member
Veteran
Pot Politics on Capitol Hill

By Huma Khan
Source: ABC News


cannabis Washington, D.C. -- Supporters of decriminalizing marijuana are hoping to build momentum on Capitol Hill after a historic election that saw the politics of pot take center stage in four states.

The marijuana industry's public relations campaign has so far been limited to states, especially California, where a ballot initiative to legalize weed failed in November.

But today, the National Cannabis Industry Association, launched in December to represent the interests of legal marijuana growers and distributors, will hold the first congressional lobbying day in the nation's capital, hoping to shore up support for an industry they say could bring billions of dollars in revenue to the government.

The industry already has some notable lawmakers on its side.

Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., has in the past introduced legislation to remove federal penalties for personal use of marijuana. Libertarian-leaning Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, is also an outspoken advocate of full marijuana legalization.

Last summer, Frank and 15 other lawmakers sent a letter to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner asking his agency to set rules that provide financial services to medical marijuana dispensaries and to assure banks they won't be penalized for conducting such business.

Today's lobbying efforts will focus on eliminating such restrictions and on easing the tax burden on medical marijuana clinics.

Supporters of decriminalizing marijuana say it will help the United States in the long term by boosting profits for the government. Socially, they say it will boost resources to crack down on hard drugs and will curb teen marijuana use, which is on the rise.

"Deregulation will absolutely succeed in keeping it out of the hands of kids more effectively than prohibition because prohibition has created a large underground market," Rep. Jared Polis, D-Colo., told ABC News. "If you legalize it just like we have with alcohol, you will have a much better control.

"It would really provide America with a leg up on the drug war by preventing the marijuana engine that fuels the coffers of the [Mexican drug] cartels," he said. "You have more resources to crack down on hard drugs."

Others also tout its economic benefits.

According to a recent report by an analyst firm See Change Strategy, the national market for medical marijuana is worth $1.7 billion in 2011 and could reach $8.9 billion in five years. The black market, the report stated, is estimated at $18 billion.

In California, cannabis is the biggest cash crop, worth $14 billion in sales, nearly double the state's second biggest revenue generator, dairy.

Forty-six percent of Americans support legalizing marijuana, a new high, according to a survey conducted by Gallup in October. The trend has shifted upward in recent decades while opposition to such a move has declined.

For medical marijuana use, the support is even higher. Seventy percent of Americans said they favored making marijuana for medicinal purposes legally available.

"It's going to take a number of years to reach a point when there's a broad consensus that marijuana prohibition should end but it will come," said Steve Fox, NCIA's director of public affairs. "When you look at the demographics in terms of polling, it's clear that the older generations are opposed to the legal cannabis market, but the younger generations are more strongly in favor. It's really just a matter of time before support outweighs the opposition."

But as proponents admit, it could be some time before lawmakers are high on the idea of loosening up federal standards for marijuana.

Polis says there are informal discussions among his peers and a possible bill liberalizing marijuana laws gains more support in every session, but it could be several more sessions before legislation is passed.

Even in states with liberal marijuana laws, full legalization has yet to gain steam. Proposition 19 in California failed in November despite heavy lobbying. In early 2010, the Washington state legislature struck down a marijuana-legalization bill that was introduced in Washington.

Medical marijuana is currently legal in 15 states and Washington, D.C.

Newshawk: Konagold
Source: ABC News (US Web)
 

dagnabit

Game Bred
Veteran
"Deregulation will absolutely succeed in keeping it out of the hands of kids more effectively than prohibition because prohibition has created a large underground market"
don't know how many times i've tried to 'splain this to the nay sayers...

i have had kids outside the store offer me a joint to buy them beer...
that speaks volumes!
 

imadoofus

Active member
Veteran
alas mr mustard; getting high as a kid KEPT me out of trouble.

wtf wanted any drama while high? i just wanted to fish and look under rocks for salamanders.
 

dagnabit

Game Bred
Veteran
children having access is the weapon the prohibitionists beat responsible adults over the head with.
cannabis=not for children
 

mean mr.mustard

I Pass Satellites
Veteran
It still grows out of the ground... alcohol production is a little more labor intensive so you see kids outside liquor stores.

I doubt they would hanging around trying to score cannabis when they could just plant a seed.
 
Prohibition has boggled my mind for a very long time, I just don't understand why so many adamantly oppose cannabis for medication or recreation. It is just irrational.
 

Deft

Get two birds stoned at once
Veteran
Pretty soon politicians will realize that being anti MJ is a liability in many places I'm sure they never thought it would ever happen.
 
D

decarboxylator

Money money mooooonnnnneeeey MOOOOOONNNAAAYYYY

I think it is more than that. It started that way. But now, this continued prohibition of medical marijuana is also about legislating morality and keeping minds closed. Money too, don't get me wrong. The pharmaceutical companies are shaking in their boots. Did you see medical marijuana passed viagra in use?
 

pearlemae

May your race always be in your favor
Veteran
Another question to ask is why is America one of the few if not the only nation that doesn't grow industrial hemp. Hemp could help solve a lot of needs,but no its illegal because of its wild cousin.
:joint:
 

mean mr.mustard

I Pass Satellites
Veteran
Money money mooonnneeeyy... MOOOOOONNNAAYYYYYYY

Hemp should've never left.

Colonists were criminally punished for not growing hemp....

Synthetic fiber producers and the logging industry buried hemp.
 
D

decarboxylator

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/03/23/medical-marijuana-stiff-competition-for-viagra_n_839678.html?ref=fb&src=sp#sb=1367443,b=facebook
WASHINGTON -- The fast growing medical marijuana trade is on pace to eclipse the market for Viagra, the first sophisticated analysis of the industry found in a report out Wednesday. The study only focused on transactions, ignoring ancillary businesses that serve the industry, such as insurance companies, law firms, public affairs companies or hydroponic equipment makers.

Medical marijuana sales will total $1.7 billion in 2011, just $200 million less than sales for Viagra, Ted Rose, the study's author, said in a conference call with reporters. The industry has ballooned since the Obama administration declared that it would not raid pot shops as long as they were acting within state law.

The significance of the industry was demonstrated by the list of news outlets on the conference call, which included reporters from CNN Money, Dow Jones, The Associated Press, Fox News and Portfolio.

The report was produced by See Change Strategy and is targeted to medical marijuana businesses, which can purchase the full report for $1,150. An executive summary was made available at MedicalMarijuanaMarkets.com.

The report surveyed just seven states where medical marijuana is bought and sold in the open market: California, Colorado, Michigan, Montana, Washington, Oregon and New Mexico. Four other states -- Arizona, Rhode Island, New Jersey and Maine, plus the District of Columbia -- will see legally sanctioned pot shops open later this year. Medical weed is legal in Hawaii, Nevada, Alaska and Vermont, but those states don't yet have stores operating in the open. (Nevada does have a few pot shops in operation, but not enough to move it into the first category yet.)

Roughly three-quarters of the trade is done in California, the report found, with much of the rest done in Colorado, meaning there is tremendous room for growth in coming years. The market will reach $8.9 billion within five years, the report found, barring a policy reversal from the federal government.

Today, one in four Americans live in one of the states where pot is openly bought and sold. By consulting with epidemiologists, the study's authors concluded that 24.8 million people live with conditions that would make them eligible for legal medical marijuana -- a number that continues to grow and could have political significance come election time.
 
D

decarboxylator

children having access is the weapon the prohibitionists beat responsible adults over the head with.
cannabis=not for children

Agreed, Cannabis is not for children. EXCEPT when it is: ADD, ADHD, Autism, OCD... like Joey Hester Perez, Sam, bunch of other kids. Seriously, with all the food dyes kids eat these days, and the affects of these dyes and high fructose corn poison on hyper active disorders, we should be dosing all the kids. They all have attention disorders from what I can tell about todays youth.
Maybe we should ask Dr. Lester Grinspoon what he thinks since he is actually researching this right now.

http://uf4a.org/
The mission of UF4A is three fold: (1) to raise awareness and support for families afflicted with this mysterious and misunderstood condition known as Autism; (2) to raise funds for cannabis-based medical research and clinical trials; and (3) to campaign for a rescheduling of cannabis from Schedule 1 narcotic (no accepted medical benefits) to a lower schedule so that the appropriate research may be conducted, and so that all patients have access to medication.

Mieko interview part 1, she is UF4A
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B7qGDVCFKok

20/20 kids and mmj
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BP-RHZqTEVs

Keith Oberman
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yj72e5q61Fs

And whatever the blonde jack ass on faux newz is named:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GPmcUmQITbY
 

dagnabit

Game Bred
Veteran
young people have had "attention disorders" from the begining of time..
the disorder is called childhood.
adhd was invented by pharmaceutical companies to sell new drugs.
it's created an entire generation of mindless sheep who accept groupthink as the norm.
instead of
"tune in,turn on and drop out"
we now have
"sit down,shut up and conform"
 

DoobieDuck

Senior Member
ICMag Donor
Veteran
VTA many thanks for posting another current interesting story for us, and Decarboxylator yours is a fine addition to it. Cannabis and medical cannabis, along with the industry, is moving forward. Now all we need is the government to follow, yet I think it would have been better for everyone involved if they would have lead the way...DD
 
Z

zen_trikester

"Deregulation will absolutely succeed in keeping it out of the hands of kids more effectively than prohibition because prohibition has created a large underground market"

don't know how many times i've tried to 'splain this to the nay sayers...

i have had kids outside the store offer me a joint to buy them beer...
that speaks volumes!
I think we are on the same team here, but this statement you quoted is far from true. This is saying that deregulation, ie lawlessness, is better than prohibition.

I would like to understand how the government just saying "do what you want" is going to reduce availability to children, or reduce crime, or ensure safe product, or ensure quality. If there are no regulations, and no penalties, and no laws, then kids, scamers and blackmarket will be rampant.

What we need is regulation and legalization, not deregulation. I find it hard to believe that you think that a free for all is going to keep it out of the hands of kids. I do agree with your sentiment, but I think you may not realize what deregulation is, or you more likely read it fast and brainfarted.

If you really think this is the answer, then please explain.
 

dagnabit

Game Bred
Veteran
I think we are on the same team here, but this statement you quoted is far from true. This is saying that deregulation, ie lawlessness, is better than prohibition.

I would like to understand how the government just saying "do what you want" is going to reduce availability to children, or reduce crime, or ensure safe product, or ensure quality. If there are no regulations, and no penalties, and no laws, then kids, scamers and blackmarket will be rampant.

What we need is regulation and legalization, not deregulation. I find it hard to believe that you think that a free for all is going to keep it out of the hands of kids. I do agree with your sentiment, but I think you may not realize what deregulation is, or you more likely read it fast and brainfarted.

If you really think this is the answer, then please explain.

you and i are in total agreement..
regulation/normalization is what is needed!
 
D

decarboxylator

young people have had "attention disorders" from the begining of time..

What about OCD and the autistic children? Did you forget about them in your attempt to argue with me over a joke I made about medicating all children for being hyper. Are you familiar with Uf4A? Did you watch the 20/20 show with that kid who wants to die because of his extreme OCD? Did you listen to Mieko tell of her autistic child almost starving to death before they started giving him medical marijuana?

This is about so much more than kids getting high.
 

imadoofus

Active member
Veteran
when i say a kid, i dont mean 9 years old smoking a doob with grandpa out in the barn. anything past 14 is in the realm of acceptability. i mean, who didnt experiment with marijuana as a kid?

and if
the first time i got high, i knew i was in love. went inside and ate half a cake, then went into my bedroom and listened to music for 5 hours... was effin unreal.
 
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