Posted on 12/16/2017 6:32:14 AM PST by Kaslin
Congress is ending the year with battles over tax reform and how to fund the government into next year. Another battle being fought is over the future of medical marijuana in America.
The Justice Department is working overtime to remove a restriction in current law that prevents the federal government from prosecuting medical marijuana businesses in states where it has been made legal. The problem is that if the Department of Justice is successful, it would undermine a number of promises that President Donald J. Trump made on the campaign trail.
A coalition of federalist-minded conservatives and libertarians have voiced strong support for the restriction that has been in existence since 2014 when Reps. Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA) offered a bipartisan amendment to defund the power of the Justice Department to prosecute medical marijuana states. Since 2014, a funding rider has been included in every appropriations bill defunding any effort by the federal government to use Justice Department resources to effectively overturn state laws permitting medical marijuana use.
It seems that Trumps own Justice Department has forgotten the repeated promises that candidate Donald J. Trump made on the campaign trail. According to a Fox News transcript posted on February 11, 2016 from the OReilly Factor, Trump said about medical marijuana Im in favor of it a hundred percent.
And that was not the only time.
There are numerous other examples of candidate Trump promising to protect states that have allowed medical marijuana. PolitiFacts brought up three examples.
On July 29, 2016, Trump said: "I wouldnt do that [using federal authority to shut down recreational marijuana], no I wouldnt do that I think its up to the states, yeah. Im a states person. I think it should be up to the states, absolutely."
On March 8, 2016, Trump said: "I think it certainly has to be a state I have not smoked it its got to be a state decision I do like it, you know, from a medical standpoint it does do pretty good things. But from the other standpoint, I think that it should be up to the states."
And Oct. 29, 2015, Trump said: "The marijuana thing is such a big thing. I think medical should happen right? Dont we agree? I think so. And then I really believe we should leave it up to the states. It should be a state situation ... but I believe that the legalization of marijuana other than for medical because I think medical, you know I know people that are very, very sick and for whatever reason the marijuana really helps them - but in terms of marijuana and legalization, I think that should be a state issue, state-by-state."
Those promises continued after Trump was sworn in as president. The New York Times reported that in February of this year Trumps spokesman said the president understands the pain and suffering that many people go through who are facing especially terminal diseases and the comfort these drugs, including medical marijuana, can bring them. How is it possible that Trumps own Justice Department can engage in an aggressive effort to undermine these promises?
The Washington Post reported on June 13, 2017, that Attorney General Jeff Sessions has personally lobbied Congress to let him prosecute medical marijuana providers.The Post reported on a letter Sessions sent to Congress in May requesting that they block a vote on the Rohrabacher-Farr Amendment that specifically protects the use, distribution, possession or cultivation of medical marijuana. The Republican leaders of the House listened and blocked consideration of the amendment during the appropriations process earlier this year.In the Senate, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) was successful in attaching the language to the Senate version of the appropriations bill. The end of year spending bill is expected to resolve the House and Senate language on this subject later this month.
The libertarian group Free the People has activated to educate voters that Trumps own Justice Department is trying to undermine a campaign promise. There is a strong possibility that Sessions, not President Trump, wins on this issue if this issue is buried in a year-end spending bill with no opportunity for members to force a vote on the specific issue of the funding rider. Leaders in Congress will end up drafting up a year-end spending bill behind closed doors and many worry that this will not contain the Leahy-Rohrabacher language.
President Trump has been a promise keeper as president. He has worked hard to keep promise after promise from pushing a tax cut to nominating Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court. It is tough to understand how his own Attorney General has been allowed to undermine his numerous promises to allow states that have passed laws to allow medical marijuana.
In this case, liberty to fry your own brain.
The war on drugs bonanza has helped fund the swamp. Prosecutors, civil asset forfeitures, defense attorneys, private prisons, the rehab and counseling bonanza.”
Exactly. Prohibitionists = Swamp creatures and their enablers.
He'd be absolutely correct—just as with alcohol and tobacco.
It's all based on this scary, threatening, annoying concept called "Liberty", wherein—if an individual isn't infringing on the rights of somebody else via force, fraud, or negligence—they have every right to be left the f-ck alone by government and nanny-staters, and to engage in the pursuit of happiness as they see fit...
“if an individual isn’t infringing on the rights of somebody else via force, fraud, or negligence”
Fatal accidents caused by drivers with marijuana in their blood have close to tripled since the State of Washington ‘legalized’ marijuana.
That's why DUI is a crime, whether for marijuana, alcohol, or any other intoxicant.
Personally, I'd rather be driving around on a road with 1000 stoned-on-marijuana drivers, than with half a dozen drivers who are drunk.
In any event, such observations have nothing to do with those circumstances when people aren't driving, or are simply enjoying themselves in the privacy of their own home or under some other benign circumstances...
How do they get home from the potshop?
I assume he wants to grow a lot and become rich.
On the contrary, one more reason why he is doing a fantastic job!
Here in SW OR, there are many hundreds of growing ops, just in my valley alone. It’s so insanely horrible that the majority of people want it banned on rural residential property.
People who want to know what legal mj growing is really like, come and stay here or in rural Northern CA for a while.
Then you’ll wake up to reality.
That is, if you can stop using long enough to be able think straight.
RJ Reynolds and I think another big tobacco outfit reportedly has bought huge acreage in SW OR.
Is it open air grows?
“Fatal accidents caused by drivers with marijuana in their blood have close to tripled since the State of Washington legalized marijuana.”
Fake news, Marvin. You now qualify to be a panelist on CNN or PMSNBC.
https://www.livescience.com/54693-high-drivers-double-after-marijuana-legalization.html
“The percentage of drivers involved in fatal crashes who had traces of marijuana in their blood has doubled since marijuana was legalized in Washington state, a new study suggests.”
So it’s not “tripled” but doubled, Marvin. That kind of fallacy probably gets you on 2+ panels a day on CNN but not much else.
“The findings, which were released by the (AAA), suggest that states that have legalized marijuana use need better rules to protect drivers on the road, Nelson said.”
Works for me. How about you, Marvin?
Hardly any greenhouses; mostly open air. Some miles from here in another town there are some really giant greenhouses; read about them only. In my county there are 120 permitted and licensed grow ops, and upwards of 1000 altogether. So the vast majority are still illegal. I’ve posted many comments about what it’s like here in SW OR. Hell.
Should have added probably 1000 in my valley, I have no idea how many in the whole county. Some are of course in the National Forest, as well as all over in rural residential lots.
Are you saying those grows wouldn’t be there in nearly as great a number if Oregon hadn’t legalized?
If so, I don’t follow your logic.
You want to ban alcohol?
Potheads are like Mexican jumping beans.
They cannot confront any discussion of their own marijuana and immediately flee to other topics.
FREE Republic
FREE to drive their cars at me and my family?
No way.
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