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Poll: US marijuana legalization inevitable

trichrider

Kiss My Ring
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Poll: US marijuana legalization inevitable

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Reuters: Rick Wilking
Grower Steve Jenkins checks out his marijuana plants at the Botanacare marijuana store in Northglenn, Colo., on Dec. 31, 2013.


DENVER (AP) — Marijuana legalization in the U.S. seems inevitable to three-fourths of Americans, whether they support it or not, according to a new poll out Wednesday.
The Pew Research Center survey on the nation's shifting attitudes about drug policy also showed increased support for moving away from mandatory sentences for non-violent drug offenders.
The telephone survey found that 75 percent of respondents — including majorities of both supporters and opponents of legal marijuana— think that the sale and use of pot eventually will be legal nationwide. It was the first time that question had been asked.
Some 39 percent of respondents said pot should be legal for personal adult use. Forty-four percent of those surveyed said it should be legal only for medicinal use. Just 16 percent said it should not be legal at all.
The responses come as two states have legalized recreational marijuana, with more than 20 states and Washington D.C. allowing some medical use of the drug.
"It's just a matter of time before it's in more states," said Steve Pratley of Denver, a 51-year-old pipefitter who voted for legalization in Colorado in 2012.
Pratley, who did not participate in the Pew survey, agreed with 76 percent of respondents who said people who use small amounts of marijuana shouldn't go to jail.
"If marijuana isn't legalized, it fills up the jails, and that's just stupid," Pratley said.
Legalization opponents, however, drew a distinction between making pot legal for all and thinking that pot users belong in jail.
"It's an illegal drug, period. I don't see it spreading," said Laura Sanchez, a 55-year-old retiree in Denver who voted against legalization. She agreed that pot smokers don't belong in jail, but she disagreed with legalization.
"I've seen no proof that it's good for anybody," said Sanchez, who also did not participate in the survey.
The poll suggested that despite shifting attitudes on legalization, the public remains concerned about drug abuse, with 32 percent of those surveyed calling it a crisis and 55 percent of respondents viewing it as a serious national problem.
And a narrow majority, 54 percent, said that marijuana legalization would lead to more underage people trying it.
As for mandatory minimum sentences, public attitudes have been shifting for years.
In 2001, the survey was about evenly divided on whether it was a good thing or bad thing for states to move away from mandatory minimum sentences for non-violent drug offenders. In 2014, poll respondents favored the move by a nearly 2-to-1 margin, or 63 percent to 32 percent. The other 5 percent either didn't respond or said they didn't know.
Public officials are well aware of the public's shifting attitudes on drug penalties.
Just last month, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder testified in support of proposed sentence reductions for some non-violent drug traffickers in an effort to reserve the "the harshest penalties for the most serious drug offenders."
"Certain types of cases result in too many Americans going to prison for too long, and at times for no truly good public safety reason," Holder said last month at the U.S. Sentencing Commission.
Drug legalization activists said the Pew results come as no surprise.
"We see a growing bipartisan recognition that mandatory minimums went too far and did more harm than good," said Ethan Nadelmann, head of the Washington-based Drug Policy Alliance, which opposes criminal penalties for non-violent drug users.
Marijuana legalization opponents saw signs of hope in the survey, too.
Kevin Sabet, co-founder of Smart Approaches to Marijuana, which opposes pot legalization, pointed to the fact that 63 percent said it would bother them if people used marijuana openly in their neighborhood.
"Saying that we don't want people to serve prison time for marijuana is very different from saying I want a pot shop in my neighborhood selling cookies and candies and putting coupons in the paper," Sabet said.
The poll of 1,821 adults was conducted Feb. 14-23. The survey had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.6 percentage points.
 

WeedLover80

New member
I think that legalization is inevitable. Once more states start to legalize then big lobbies like the banking industry will start to bug the fed so they can make some green from all the green being sold.
 

armedoldhippy

Well-known member
Veteran
"I've seen no proof that it is good for anybody" well hell, no one claims that beer is good for you but it is damn sure legal! there are no medicines that work for EVERYONE, but she wants scientific proof that it is good for you. fuck, eating BACON is not good for you either... dammit!:tiphat:
 

944s2

Well-known member
ICMag Donor
Veteran
I believe sociologists say that things come and go in cycles,,this is seeming like prohibition ending when the first states ok booze then the other states fell "like dominoes",,,seems like same thing again,,s2
 

bentom187

Active member
Veteran
Kevin Sabet, co-founder of Smart Approaches to Marijuana, which opposes pot legalization, pointed to the fact that 63 percent said it would bother them if people used marijuana openly in their neighborhood.
"Saying that we don't want people to serve prison time for marijuana is very different from saying I want a pot shop in my neighborhood selling cookies and candies and putting coupons in the paper," Sabet said.

Hey Kevin , as an adult no one is forcing it upon you so you don't have to smoke it or eat it. You can even educate your own kids to leave it alone, no one is going to force them to do anything either. Peoples rights don't end where your feelings begin. If complete sensory deprivation is what you are after then shove your head further up your arse. Leave the productive members of society alone.

:rant:
 

armedoldhippy

Well-known member
Veteran
RE-Kevin Sabet citing the 63% of folks that don't want "open use" of weed in their neighborhood. I don't either, and I would not sit on my front porch with a bong or a hookah pipe even if it was legal. no one really gives a shit what anyone else does unless you rub their nose in it. that is the kind of attitude that causes problems. discretion is the better part of valor. let me give you an example- no one cares if you & your "significant other" (what or who ever that might be) have oral/anal sex nightly. but don't you think that you should confine it to the bedroom (or at least your fenced-in back yard) instead of the front yard in broad daylight?
a little common sense goes a long damn way...if you insist on being a pain in the ass, expect trouble.
 

Bud Green

I dig dirt
Veteran
RE-Kevin Sabet citing the 63% of folks that don't want "open use" of weed in their neighborhood. I don't either, and I would not sit on my front porch with a bong or a hookah pipe even if it was legal. no one really gives a shit what anyone else does unless you rub their nose in it. that is the kind of attitude that causes problems. discretion is the better part of valor. let me give you an example- no one cares if you & your "significant other" (what or who ever that might be) have oral/anal sex nightly. but don't you think that you should confine it to the bedroom (or at least your fenced-in back yard) instead of the front yard in broad daylight?
a little common sense goes a long damn way...if you insist on being a pain in the ass, expect trouble.

Thats exactly right...
a person should have that right to do whatever they want, that doesn't hurt another... But that doesn't mean parading it around in front of everyone else...
 
N

noyd666

LAST WEEK OR SO TASMANIA, ISLAND BELOW OZY MAINLAND HAS SEEN TV AND NEWSPAPERS TALKING ABOUT GROWING AND USING MEDICINAL CANNIBIS AND HEMP, SOME SHIT HEADS AGAINST IT, GAINING MOMENTUM. BUT I BET WE ARE NOT ALLOWED TO GROW, TWO BOB TO A POUND OF SHIT I'LL STILL BE AN OUTLAW,LOL. this was in Tasmania paper, a blog put in saying this is gov official party line lol about right.
 

Preacher

Member
In fantasyland?

Sure.

In the REAL world?

Not so much.
I stand by that. In fantasy, fear and the short-term, emotions win. Give anything reasonable a century or two, and it'll conquer. Sexism, racism and soon sexuality have been/will be topics our grandchildren will consider us idiots for even debating against the right side.

We're already seeing reason slowly but surely winning before our very eyes with regard to cannabis. It won't be too long now.
 

shaggyballs

Active member
Veteran
I say yes....the elimination of home grows will be implemented also.

Is this what we are willing to give up for legalization?

It will be legal, but we will lose total control to the $$$$$$$$$$$.

It has already happened in Canada and elsewhere just look you will see we are next!
It makes me sad but I see this as inevitable!

" Said Evan Nison of Terra Tech, "I believe the majority of Americans would prefer responsible companies like Terra Tech to provide marijuana to patients and adults rather than unregulated warehouse grows that currently supply retail dispensaries."

Terra Tech CEO Derek Peterson said
"I'm telling you, man, when economics gets involved, it changes everything," he replied. A year from now, he predicted, the pot business "is gonna be as ruthless as Wall Street."
 

stoned-trout

if it smells like fish
Veteran
you are now the new cash cow and instead of being arrested for growing you will go down like al for tax evasion and such...yeehaw..pucker up its gonna get ugly...MOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO..IRONICALLY THATS A HEARST COW...I tried to beep and make it go over the cliff with no affect...ocean and steep cliff right behind a few feet...lol...suk it hatrz
 

armedoldhippy

Well-known member
Veteran
only reason they hammered Al for tax evasion is that they did not need witnesses for those crimes. no one was brave/stupid enough to stand up in court & say "that is the SOB that shot those people!" they don't sic the tax man on folks for having untaxed weed, it costs more to prosecute than they will recoup by prosecuting you.
 

stoned-trout

if it smells like fish
Veteran
don't bet on it....they will need to make examples of people to set a precedent....yeehaw..and with the new flow of tax money they are gonna have an unlimited budget ....
 

armedoldhippy

Well-known member
Veteran
don't bet on it....they will need to make examples of people to set a precedent....yeehaw..and with the new flow of tax money they are gonna have an unlimited budget ....

i hate to tell you this, but....there is no such thing as an "unlimited budget" anywhere on this planet. i WILL bet that the tax man does not get active on this, they don't have enough employees to keep track of income tax fraud even...
 

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