Posted on 01/07/2018 6:40:30 AM PST by MarvinStinson
Attorney General Jeff Sessions made a cataclysmic mistake by rescinding Obama-era federal marijuana policies, according to Roger Stone, President Trumps former campaign adviser.
Mr. Stone, 65, formed a bipartisan, pro-marijuana lobbying group earlier this year, the United States Cannabis Coalition, dedicated to influencing federal level decision makers, including the president, so they honor states rights and state mandated marijuana laws as well as reform our antiquated and failed federal drug laws, according to its website.
Mr. Stone, the presidents campaign adviser through August 2015, criticized the attorney generals recent decision to roll back marijuana protections during a luncheon Friday at the Tiger Bay Club of Central Florida, the Orlando Sentinel reported afterwards.
The Department of Justice has outlawed marijuana for decades, but the Obama administration put in place policies that allowed dozens of states to legalize the plant without prompting federal interference. Mr. Sessions nullified those policies on Thursday, however, casting uncertainty over the future of existing medical and recreational marijuana programs already in place across the country.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...
I don't think today's pot is the same as the pot we grew up with a few decades ago.
Is he now Roger Stoned?
Washington serves as an eye-opening case study for what other states may experience with road safety after legalizing the drug.
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WA had the 7th lowest rate of traffic fatalities among the states in 2016.
http://www.iihs.org/iihs/topics/t/general-statistics/fatalityfacts/state-by-state-overview
“The desired effect is that the state politicos want the money that this generates and to hell with the consequences.”
Then why has no legislature legalized? The 8 states that have legalized have all been by ballot. Politicians are dragging their feet.
Huge mistake, the cat is out of the bag, people know that Marijuana is not a significantly harmful substance and will continue to use it. There’s absolutely no way for Trump to stop it without sending in the military to CA (don’t expect local help) to declare a literal war on weed (eg. shooting growers and sellers, sending users to gitmo). Don’t know what this guy is thinking, medical marijuana was passed in CA in 1996, now it’s time to change policy 22 years later?
Yesterday, and then today, the world had yet another opportunity to be entertained by the VSG (very stable genius).
Now, how does that type of brash, bold, unique approach - which, truthfully, no one has ever seen before - comport with a subordinate in the context of "sleepy Sessions"?
Answer: it doesn't.
“They are appointed by the AG. The criteria is that they be licensed in the state they will practice in. They are not free to make up the law based on public sentiment in their state as you suggest.”
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Better tell the US Attorney for CO, who was appointed by Sessions =>
“U.S. Attorney for Colorado: No changes on marijuana enforcement”
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3619532/posts
“Stone parrots the straight Soros, pothead talking points.”
Only according to the truly ignorant, the willfully ignorant, nanny-state supporters & FR trolls.
This fits precisely with Rosenstein’s tweet.
What percentage were caused by marijuana?
Did your Soros agenda propaganda omit that?
That is a fair point. Thanks.
Sickman is ignorant of the Soros drug “legalization” propaganda
and the fact that Sickman and Roger Stone are parrots of the Soros drug “legalization” propaganda
You have it correct - there is no crusade. We are a nation of laws and the fact remains that the legislature (congress) has still made marijuana illegal. Sessions did not direct DEA or other Federal law enforcement to target marijuana - he put such decisions back at the district level and rescinded the Cole memo, which was another DEFACTO legislation by the executive branch.
It’s all about pot to the supporters, but consider that the same people oppose the amnesty that came about, absent legislation, for illegal immigrants using the same tactic - i.e. - “you will not enforce the law.”
We MUST get our house back in order. If the American people want legal pot let the legislature legalize it. Until then, we have an inconsistent mess and states that have legalized it in some form are only interested in taxes and not enforcing their own laws so marijuana cultivated in Washington is being pushed out of state to other states that do not want to legalize it or even other nations (WA pot is going to Canada). In short, it is a mess.
It is about the rule of law - not the emotionalism of pot for the supporters. If a licensed grower is selling pot out the back door with no taxes or regulation paid to the state it should be prosecuted. In order to have the rule of law folks we HAVE to enforce the law and if we don’t like it change it.
Marijuana, illegal immigration, Hillary’s emails - the law should apply equally to all, right?
I do not think marijuana is the panacea many around here do, but I don’t really care about it. I won’t partake of it, but I do partake of the law and we cannot continue this pattern of selective enforcement because it is corrosive and leads to “too big to fail” and “too big to jail.”
Some of you must take off the blinders and recognize the truth of this. If you want to smoke - carry on, but using a memo from the executive branch to rescind a law from the legislative branch turns our republic into a dictatorship no matter who is in office.
Soros has taken over the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety?
“Marijuana, illegal immigration, Hillarys emails - the law should apply equally to all, right?”
Two of those three are legitimately based on the Constitution and don’t violate the Tenth Amendment. MJ prohibition at the federal level is based on the fraudulent Commerce Clause.
Should we support fedgov usurpation of state powers?
Soros has taken over many state governments with his “Secretaries of State” program”—ask Governor Gregoire of Washington and Senator Al Franken of Minnesota about the effects of that.
Now Soros is spending millions on single state Attorney General elections.
You would be surprised at the extent of his network.
So has Soros taken over the IIHS, as you claimed?
These threads all seem to align the same way. But the most disturbing are those who post that really dont accept the conservative view here.
One can argue that pot is bad. There are several studies that point to that. One can argue that pot is good. There are new emerging studies that point to that. By the same token, anything in excess is bad regardless of the good and bad.
What folks here on this particular forum shouldnt be able to argue is that regardless of your position on pot itself the laws that were used to implement its prohibition, including the 1937 Marihuana Act and the 1970 Controlled Substances Act, were derived and invented on very shaky Constitutional grounds. This is especially obvious when looking at what it took to prohibit and make available again alcohol.
You dont have to be a pro-pot person to understand why this should and must be a State issue. Constitutionally, the Federal government has no right in this realm, unless they take the step of creating an Amendment that would override the boundaries of the 10th Amendment. And no, the Supremacy Clause should not apply here, as a strict reading of that clause states very clearly that it only applies to laws made in Pursuance of the Constitution not laws outside of its purview.
Congress does need to act, but not to enforce its wrongly-derived law, but to fix it by passing it back to the States.
It is likely this will go to the Supreme Court with so many States now on board. Im hoping that the Originalists on the court will rule with the Constitution, and not jump through hoops (as Roberts is want to do) to come up with some vaporous reason to keep Federal prohibition in place.
As loathe as I am to give any federal agency more powers, I honestly think the only sensible action is to fold marijuana growing and cultivation into the BATF with limits on THC content and leave it to the states (and localities) to regulate distribution and sales.
Not doing so risks a case coming before SCOTUS and their rightly deciding that prohibition requires constitutional amendment which would be far more problematic for the rest of the schedule 1 prohibited drugs.
And thankfully, there’s enough court precedent to make overturning convictions problematic for previously prosecuted marijuana offenses with the switch to regulation vs a SCOTUS finding.
Do I want marijuana sold at the corner store? No. But rolling it out of the FDA and putting it into BATF solves an incredible number of problems and while still iffy on constitutional grounds, at least we wouldn’t suddenly find us paying for people’s joint prescriptions.
I’ll just have to live with gagging on the odors of the stinky weed when walking the dog. Least one positive thing about rolling it into the BATF is that we can stop pretending it is legitimate drug; yes, it can have some useful uses. So can alcohol and tobacco.
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