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Uruguay: Cannabis Is Legal !

vta

Active member
Veteran
It's Official !!!



Uruguay becomes first country to legalize marijuana trade


131210-uruguay-marijuana-hmed-812p.photoblog600.jpg



By Malena Castaldi and Felipe Llambias, Reuters

Uruguay became the first country to legalize the growing, sale and smoking of marijuana on Tuesday, a pioneering social experiment that will be closely watched by other nations debating drug liberalization.

A government-sponsored bill approved by 16-13 votes in the Senate provides for regulation of the cultivation, distribution and consumption of marijuana and is aimed at wresting the business from criminals in the small South American nation.

Backers of the law, some smoking joints, gathered near Congress holding green balloons, Jamaican flags in homage to Bob Marley and a sign saying: "Cultivating freedom, Uruguay grows."

Cannabis consumers will be able to buy a maximum of 40 grams (1.4 ounces) each month from licensed pharmacies as long as they are Uruguayan residents over the age of 18 and registered on a government database that will monitor their monthly purchases.

When the law is implemented in 120 days, Uruguayans will be able to grow six marijuana plants in their homes a year, or as much as 480 grams (about 17 ounces), and form smoking clubs of 15 to 45 members that can grow up to 99 plants per year.
Registered drug users should be able to start buying marijuana over the counter from licensed pharmacies in April.

"We begin a new experience in April. It involves a big cultural change that focuses on public health and the fight against drug trafficking," Uruguay's first lady, Senator Lucía Topolansky, told Reuters.

Uruguay's attempt to quell drug trafficking is being followed closely in Latin America where the legalization of some narcotics is being increasingly seen by regional leaders as a possible way to end the violence spawned by the cocaine trade.

Rich countries debating legalization of pot are also watching the bill, which philanthropist George Soros has supported as an "experiment" that could provide an alternative to the failed U.S.-led policies of the long "war on drugs."

The bill gives authorities 120 days to set up a drug control board that will regulate cultivation standards, fix the price and monitor consumption.

The use of marijuana is legal in Uruguay, a country of 3.3 million that is one of the most liberal in Latin America, but cultivation and sale of the drug are not.

Other countries have decriminalized marijuana possession and the Netherlands allows its sale in coffee shops, but Uruguay will be the first nation to legalize the whole chain from growing the plant to buying and selling its leaves.

Several countries such as Canada, the Netherlands and Israel have legal programs for growing medical cannabis but do not allow cultivation of marijuana for recreational use.

Last year, the U.S. states of Colorado and Washington passed ballot initiatives that legalize and regulate the recreational use of marijuana.

Uruguay's leftist president, Jose Mujica, defends his initiative as a bid to regulate and tax a market that already exists but is run by criminals.

"We've given this market as a gift to the drug traffickers and that is more destructive socially than the drug itself, because it rots the whole of society," the 78-year-old former guerrilla fighter told Argentine news agency Telam.

Not all convinced
Uruguay is one of the safest Latin American countries with little of the drug violence or other violence seen in countries such as Colombia and Mexico.

Yet one-third of Uruguay's prison inmates are serving time on charges related to narcotics trafficking that has turned Uruguay into a transit route for Paraguayan marijuana and Bolivian cocaine.

Even though it is set to clear the Senate, the legislation faces fierce opposition from conservatives and Mujica has yet to convince a majority of Uruguayans that it is a good idea.

According to a recent opinion poll by Equipos Consultores, 58 percent of Uruguayans oppose legalizing pot, although that is down from 68 percent in a previous survey in June.

Critics say legalization will not only increase consumption but open the door to the use of harder drugs than marijuana, which according to government statistics is used by 8 percent of Uruguayans on a regular basis.

"Competing with drug traffickers by offering marijuana at a lower price will just increase the market for a drug that has negative effects on public health," said Senator Alfredo Solari of the conservative Colorado Party.

If it works, the legislation is expected to fuel momentum for wider legalization of marijuana elsewhere, including the United States and in Europe. Decriminalization of all drug possession by Portugal in 2001 is held up as a success for reducing drug violence while not increasing drug use.

"This development in Uruguay is of historic significance," said Ethan Nadelmann, founder of the Drug Policy Alliance, a leading sponsor of drug policy reform partially funded by Soros through his Open Society Foundation.

"Uruguay is presenting an innovative model for cannabis that will better protect public health and public safety than does the prohibitionist approach," Nadelmann said.
 

snu

Member
but Uruguay will be the first nation to legalize the whole chain from growing the plant to buying and selling its leaves.
... state of the art journalism... I guess the author smoked to much leaves...
 

bombadil.360

Andinismo Hierbatero
Veteran
"Competing with drug traffickers by offering marijuana at a lower price will just increase the market for a drug that has negative effects on public health," said Senator Alfredo Solari of the conservative Colorado Party.


:laughing:

that guy is an idiot...

so, when is the mass exodus from icmag to Uruguay begins?
 

catbuds

Member
Yeah! Uruguay! Show our gov how to do it! Maybe they'll shit & fall face first in it as they watch your organized crime rings crumble & fall! Hope they wallow in their shame as Uruguay shows them to be the liars that they are & rubs their noses in how wrong they've been! But then again, we all know the real deal here as america led the world prohibition movement to keep big corps rich, since hemp/cannabis would make their products obsolete; so who would then finance their campaigns, grease there palms in exchange for getting bills passed to make themselves richer? Hemp/cannabis farming will raise the poor up out of poverty & take billions away from the very wealthy. Now who could have the heart to hurt 'Big Brother' that way? Hummm.....
 

VirginHarvester

Active member
Veteran
What I find funny is the notion that governments support activities and trades they make money on. Did our government make money on bootleg traffic? They aren't against alcohol, they just wanted their cut. It's just enlightening to see what governments are actually willing to do as long as they are included. Certainly the control of MJ in Uruguay will now mean jobs and revenue to the government.
 

Tony Aroma

Let's Go - Two Smokes!
Veteran
Excellent move, but why has Uruguay not withdrawn from the Single Convention yet?

Good question. The UNODC is none to happy about this situation. So unhappy in fact, that they've been blatantly lying in their condemnation of Uruguay:

UNODC stresses the health dimension of drug use as Uruguay parliament passes legislation to legalize cannabis

According to the INCB statement, cannabis is not only addictive but may also affect some fundamental brain functions, IQ potential and academic and job performance and impair driving skills. Smoking cannabis is more carcinogenic than smoking tobacco. Such a decision "will not protect young people but rather have the perverse effect of encouraging early experimentation, lowering the age of first use, and thus contributing to developmental problems and earlier onset of addiction and other disorders," Mr. Yans said.

If only Uruguay had waited, the UNODC would have solved the world's drug problem in just a few short years:

Looking at the long-term implications for international drugs policy, the UNODC chief added: "It is unfortunate that, at a time when the world is engaged in an ongoing discussion on the world drug problem, a unilateral action has been taken ahead of the outcome at a special session of the UN General Assembly planned for 2016."
 

Ruosk

Active member
Congratulations to bros and sisters of Uruguay! Historical day for our movement worldwide. UN is pretty teethless so let them cry about it as much as they want.
 

Drift13

Member
Congrat to Uruguay for making that leap. Now if the rest of the world would get it's head outa it's ass it would be a much better place...
 

Tony Aroma

Let's Go - Two Smokes!
Veteran
In related news, the UN has condemned the Catholic Church's acceptance of Galileo's heliocentric theory of the solar system (i.e., that the Earth is not the center of the universe). According to a UN spokesman, "It is unfortunate that the church couldn't have waited 406 years or so, as we have our own Inquisition scheduled for 2016 which will certainly coerce, I mean ascertain, the correct answer to this pressing question."
 

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