Proposition 19 Loses To Ignorance

Discussion in 'Cannabis Legalization & Law Updates' started by oltex, Nov 12, 2010.

  1. Proposition 19 Loses To Ignorance
    LAValley / Jon Seely / 11,10,2010


    The California Police Chiefs and Narcotics Officers associations have more in common with violent Mexican drug cartels and the California Beer & Beverage Distributors than you might think. They all opposed the passage of Proposition 19, which was defeated by 54 percent of voters.

    For anyone living in a prescription drug haze -- literally half of America -- Prop 19 would have legalized the use and cultivation of marijuana for adults over 21. Additionally, it would have allowed local governments to sell and tax it in the same way as alcohol.

    Proposition 19's failure is not surprising. Californians consistently prove themselves to be either ignorant or stupid. Perhaps this state-of-being is what causes people, in utter unsmiling seriousness, to believe "voting for the lesser of two evils" is a vote well cast.

    After all, this is the land of voter-approved Prop 8 and a population educated in the lowest-ranked, civics-course-free schools in the country. It's a voting public easily fooled by propaganda. Lazy-eyed "environmentally conscious" citizens, who voted 62 percent against Prop 23 because it was funded by Texas Oil, passed Prop 26, also funded by big oil.

    Supporters of Prop 19 include retired police chiefs, judges, dozens of lawyers, a former U.S. Surgeon General, representatives in congress, and all major third parties.
    According to the official voter information guide, "there is $14 billion in marijuana sales every year in California, but our debt ridden state gets none of it." Drug cartels, business-savvy teenagers, and gangs receive most of the profits currently. The high school student selling it doesn't check for ID, nor does the drug dealer they bought it from.

    "We've tried the prohibitionists' way, for over 40 years, and the only result has been more and more drugs flowing into our country and more and more profits going into the pockets of organized criminals," said Stephen Downing, former Los Angeles Deputy Chief of Police. "We have to move away from prohibition and toward controlling and regulating the market for marijuana, just as when we ended alcohol prohibition to put Al Capone's smuggling buddies out of business."

    The Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, estimated $1.6 billion in annual profits from the commercial sale of marijuana in cash-strapped California.

    Voters must have forgotten that $17 billion has been cut from California public education in the past two years. Commercial cultivation of pot would have created an estimated 100,000 jobs and Prop 19 could have generated billions from the currently illegal hemp industry.

    It could have been a victory of rationality and civil liberty ending a 100-year-campaign, rooted in racism, against marijuana users. Alice Huffman, president of the California NAACP, called it a civil rights issue. She said despite a lower rate of usage among blacks, "blacks are arrested for marijuana possession at higher rates than whites, typically at double, triple, or even quadruple the rate."

    Marijuana has been proven to be one of the safest substances on earth by modern science and traditional usage. Prohibition didn't work on alcohol and it isn't working on marijuana either. Above all, this is a civil rights issue involving control of one's body and mind. Let's hope Californians can pull their act together in 2012 when more marijuana legalization initiatives are expected to appear.
     
  2. #2 Eric 805, Nov 12, 2010
    Last edited by a moderator: Nov 12, 2010
    fuck you i live in california. I would like to see your state pass shit on marijuana. call us ignorant and stupid.... dude you live in Texas don't even talk. the initiative failed for good reason. i'm tired of these out of state people giving us shit. you don't even know.
     
  3. Legalize marijuana,charge a $20 license fee to grow your own marijuana and you must have a growers license to be in possession of one ounce or less in public.

    Make any laws necessary to punish anyone that furnishes marijuana to young people
    and just turn it loose.

    Let marijuana enter the free market system and seek it's own supply and demand price.

    It is a non-violent solution to a violent situation created by our government,fueled by greed and ego and maintained at tax payers expense. We can remove the violence from marijuana without guns,police and helicopters. We can do it with a hoe and a water hose.
     
  4. You DO realize that he's just posting an article, right?
     

  5. and im tired of you guys thinking your better than us or some shit, your state is just one of many in this union buddy :wave:
     
  6. #6 oltex, Nov 12, 2010
    Last edited by a moderator: Nov 12, 2010
    I did not write it. Some parts of the article I agree with and some I don't,just as I agreed with parts of Prop 19 and disagreed with other parts.

    I post the good with the bad,the happy with the sad.

    I feel for Californians if the next proposition fails to make the ballot or pass,but then there is always 2016,

    And i still say that the proposition could have been fixed.

    But what is a minimum of two more years of waiting to start the beginning of the end of 850,000 arrests per year,4000 killed in Mexico per year and at least two more years of putting up with me posting every article I can so that anyone can find answers to any questions they have about marijuana. Not so much for people like you that already knows everything,but for anyone that is still interested in learning.

    You never know what scrap of information it will take to close a prohibitionist's mouth!

    And the same growers,dealers/dispensaries and narkos will oppose legalization in any form for the same reason the did Prop 19,no matter how you write it if it takes marijuana off the black market.
     
  7. What I don't understand is why Cannabis is illegal in the first place.

    It is not a dangerous drug.

    I don't live in California. How were both sides of the legalization movement trying to get out their message?

    Were there television commercials explaining to people how pot is the most harmless drug one can use? If one looks at the facts, there really isn't any logic to keeping cannabis illegal.

    Were the citizens of California unaware of this? Are the proponents of marijuana legalization not effectively getting out their message?

    I don't live in California, but I think more effort can be put into ad campaigns.

    What do you think?
     
  8. You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink. I can only wonder what would have happened if another 5 million people actually voted.
     

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