Bible_Belt
Master Don Juan
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colorado_Amendment_64_(2012)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Initiative_502
I never thought I'd live to see this happen. Yesterday's election was a new chapter in the War on Drugs.
There's still a lot of questions about the future. No one knows what the Feds will do. They are fighting medicinal state laws by threatening to seize the real estate and bank accounts of everyone involved. They might expand those tactics.
My biggest concern is how much the states are going to screw things up by taxing everything until what is illegitimate due to being untaxed once again becomes very profitable. Then the black market never goes away, and we end up locking up just as many people for tax evasion as we used to under the old prohibition laws.
The states are after money, more than they are freedom, but there will be a lot of money in legalization. Whenever the medicinal laws passed, there was a 'green rush' of economic activity and people flocking to that state, trying to get rich. My first thought was industrial hemp, but no one must be interested in growing hemp - it's specifically exempted from CO's ballot measure. So now pot is illegal in CO if it doesn't get you high.
One thing I see that is positive out of this is it gives a large group of very ostracized (and paranoid) people who are very jaded about the political process a reason to believe again. It makes people vote who would never otherwise do so. Political scientists call the trait 'political efficacy,' and it basically means the feeling that you matter and that your participation can make a difference. That's something that has been going downhill in the US for a long time.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Initiative_502
I never thought I'd live to see this happen. Yesterday's election was a new chapter in the War on Drugs.
There's still a lot of questions about the future. No one knows what the Feds will do. They are fighting medicinal state laws by threatening to seize the real estate and bank accounts of everyone involved. They might expand those tactics.
My biggest concern is how much the states are going to screw things up by taxing everything until what is illegitimate due to being untaxed once again becomes very profitable. Then the black market never goes away, and we end up locking up just as many people for tax evasion as we used to under the old prohibition laws.
The states are after money, more than they are freedom, but there will be a lot of money in legalization. Whenever the medicinal laws passed, there was a 'green rush' of economic activity and people flocking to that state, trying to get rich. My first thought was industrial hemp, but no one must be interested in growing hemp - it's specifically exempted from CO's ballot measure. So now pot is illegal in CO if it doesn't get you high.
One thing I see that is positive out of this is it gives a large group of very ostracized (and paranoid) people who are very jaded about the political process a reason to believe again. It makes people vote who would never otherwise do so. Political scientists call the trait 'political efficacy,' and it basically means the feeling that you matter and that your participation can make a difference. That's something that has been going downhill in the US for a long time.
