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Oklahoma, Nebraska suing Colorado over legalization of marijuana
KFOR ^
| December 18, 2014
| KFOR
Posted on 12/18/2014 2:20:21 PM PST by balch3
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To: Night Hides Not
Set up checkpoints at the state line and search all incoming vehicles with CO or WA plates. Thanks for pissing on the 4th Amendment.
Any other sections of the Constitution you wish to trash?
21
posted on
12/18/2014 3:04:24 PM PST
by
Ken H
(What happens on the internet stays on the internet.)
To: balch3
How can you sue a state for engaging in their 10 amendment rights?
To: Responsibility2nd
But that violates the right of Americans to freely travel between the states.
To: hondact200
I smell a friend of the court filing.
24
posted on
12/18/2014 3:08:30 PM PST
by
morphing libertarian
(Defund , sue, impeach. Overturn Obamacare, amnesty.)
To: VanDeKoik
How can you sue a state for engaging in their 10 amendment rights? I think drug warriors have a special program that blanks out the words 'Tenth Amendment'.
Thus your question will be read as, 'How can you sue a state for engaging in their ____?'
25
posted on
12/18/2014 3:09:21 PM PST
by
Ken H
(What happens on the internet stays on the internet.)
To: ZOOKER
I would order online if the cartels have a web site. Maybe drone delivery.
26
posted on
12/18/2014 3:09:44 PM PST
by
morphing libertarian
(Defund , sue, impeach. Overturn Obamacare, amnesty.)
To: VanDeKoik
How can you sue a state for engaging in their 10 amendment rights?The same way you sue a bakery for engaging in their 1st Amendment rights - you find a liberal judge who doesn't give a rat's ass what the Constitution says.
To: EEGator
And it is even cheaper if you fake an illness and get medical marijuana.
28
posted on
12/18/2014 3:13:07 PM PST
by
dhs12345
To: Responsibility2nd
Yes, by all means lets continue to waste billions of taxpayer money for the war on a marijuana that was a legal cash crop and played a significant, positive role in this nation until 100 or so years ago when it magically became a vile, evil weed.
To: Responsibility2nd
If they could demonstrate a specific case where a driver, driving under the influence of cannabis traced to Colorado, caused death, injury, or property damage, that threshold would be met.
30
posted on
12/18/2014 3:14:44 PM PST
by
Lexinom
To: Responsibility2nd
Marijuana is now legal for pain relief in 23 states... therefore, it’s fine for you?
So what’s the problem?
31
posted on
12/18/2014 3:18:18 PM PST
by
Marie
To: Marie
I don't really have a problem with legalization of marijuana provided it's restricted to specific states and the states rights of Nebraska and Oklahoma are respected as well as Colorado's. As a recreational drug, it makes one stupid and is a bad choice for anyone looking to be at the top of their game intellectually, academically or careerwise and, as such, is a foolish personal decision. It is one, nonetheless, which only hurts the user as long as s/he stays home and doesn't try to drive.
32
posted on
12/18/2014 3:20:04 PM PST
by
Lexinom
To: Lexinom
If they could demonstrate a specific case where a driver, driving under the influence of cannabis traced to Colorado, caused death, injury, or property damage, that threshold would be met. Don't think so. Try this =>
If they could demonstrate a specific case where a driver, driving under the influence of cannabis alcohol traced to Colorado, caused death, injury, or property damage, that threshold would be met.
You got no case.
33
posted on
12/18/2014 3:20:05 PM PST
by
Ken H
(What happens on the internet stays on the internet.)
To: Rebelbase
Or we could take your approach and kick the 10th to the curb.
34
posted on
12/18/2014 3:20:16 PM PST
by
Responsibility2nd
(NO LIBS. This Means Liberals and (L)libertarians! Same Thing. NO LIBS!!)
To: Ken H
That opens up an entirely different discussion about civil liberty and DUI laws in general.
35
posted on
12/18/2014 3:22:03 PM PST
by
Lexinom
To: DannyTN
The states rights argument only works as long as Colorado keeps it within their borders. If it crosses the border, it makes the case for Federal involvement as interstate commerce.How does it make the case for "interstate commerce" if someone goes to Colorado to buy it? Both the buyer and seller are in the same state.
To: Lexinom
That, or find just one minor in possession of a joint or some weed tied directly to some crime that could be verifiably traced to Colorado.
37
posted on
12/18/2014 3:23:03 PM PST
by
Responsibility2nd
(NO LIBS. This Means Liberals and (L)libertarians! Same Thing. NO LIBS!!)
To: EEGator
Nobody uses seeds anymore. All the good stuff is cloned.
Once they get a strain with the desired attributes it even gets a cool name like “Denver Kush” or somesuch.
I think individuals here can have six clones/plants, which they have to purchase with proof of a medicinal need.
38
posted on
12/18/2014 3:37:14 PM PST
by
GRRRRR
(He'll NEVER be my President, FUBO! Treason is the Reason! Impeach the Kenyan)
To: balch3
I thought this would be about the Sooners and Cornhuskers losing out on their top football and basketball recruits...
39
posted on
12/18/2014 3:41:48 PM PST
by
OrangeHoof
(Every time you say no to a liberal, you make the Baby Barack cry.)
To: Responsibility2nd
Congrats, you just made the New York state argument that gun laws Virgina are too lax and that those laws cause problems in New York.
Leave Colorado alone on this. Oklahoma and Nebraska are dead wrong here. They have no business demanding Colorado live according to their norms.
40
posted on
12/18/2014 3:46:32 PM PST
by
DesertRhino
(I was standing with a rifle, waiting for soviet paratroopers, but communists just ran for office.)
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