Legalizing Marijuana: Should Georgia Do It?

Robert Celt

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Today's Midtown Patch Question of the Day takes a look at the idea of legalizing marijuana in Georgia. On Monday, a new push to reform Georgia's marijuana (Cannabis) laws will kick off as lawmakers consider criminal justice reform measures.

The Georgia Campaign for Access, Reform & Education or Ga. C.A.R.E. Project, will host a press conference at the Georgia state capitol Monday at 11 a.m. to announce the campaign's mission. A project of the Georgia Taxpayers Alliance, founders James Bell and Ron Williams have supported and advocated for law reform for 25 years.

Bell said this is the first time in the 25 years Georgia has considered law reform legislation and the time is right to focus on the state's antiquated marijuana laws.

"We applaud Gov. Nathan Deal and the legislature for their courageous efforts to reform ineffective and costly laws we can no longer afford to sustain", Bell said. In a news release. "Decades of "get tough on drugs" legislation has cost taxpayer billions and has done little to solve real crime problems."

The Georgia C.A.R.E. Project's agenda will focus on a four point plan to;

1. Establish a special study committee to focus specifically on marijuana laws;
2. Reschedule the classification of marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule II or lower;
3. Modernize Georgia's medical marijuana access laws to allow for legal medical marijuana by doctor prescription
or recommendation;
4. Decriminalize a personal use amount to eliminate prosecution and incarceration;

Ron Williams, a reform activist, said 18 states have allowed medical marijuana and two state have now legalized personal use amounts.

"Those states have led the way to show that we can decriminalize and medicalize marijuana and bring this substance under regulation and control without affecting public safety and save taxpayers dollars. It's time to focus on this issue."

The campaign has set up an educational website and Facebook page to connect with the public, media and lawmakers.

Earlier this month, a crowd of hundreds gathered to light up joints under the Space Needle in Seattle as recreational marijuana use officially became legal in the state of Washington.

A similar scene is likely to unfold on the streets of Denver in a couple of weeks as Colorado's marijuana legalization law goes into effect.

In Washington, it is now legal for people to possess up to one ounce of the drug, which is illegal in most states, including Georgia. While the new state law in Washington doesn't usurp federal laws that criminalize marijuana use, local cops are no longer going to give people age 21 and up a hard time for lighting up a joint in the privacy of their own homes. The public display at the Space Needle technically remains illegal, but police in that state decided to let it fly on the morning pot smoking became legal there.

Cops in Washington seem to be taking a rather nonchalant approach to the new state rules, too. The Seattle Police Department has issued some interesting directives to its officers.

Police spokesman Jonah Spangenthal-Lee is quoted on the Huffington Post as saying, "The police department believes that, under state law, you may responsibly get baked, order some pizzas and enjoy a `Lord of the Rings' marathon in the privacy of your own home, if you want to."

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News Moderator: Robert Celt 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Legalizing Marijuana: Should Georgia Do It?
Author: Hunt Archbold
Photo Credit: None found
Website: Midtown Patch
 
Yes Georgia should do it, and so should every state in the nation. MJ is a plant which contains a natural drug that is beneficial to us as human beings. Unlike tobacco or Alcohol it actually can help everyone who uses it and it is completely non-lethal which you can not say about the other 2 drugs I mentioned. Yes the side effect of this drug makes you high but you could argue that tobacco, alcohol and even coffee make have the side effects that make you high to one extent or the other. As a society we do not arrest people for using coffee, tobacco or alcohol because we realize that as adults we have the choice to either use these drugs or not, it becomes a personal choice.

I pray Georgia, as well as every state, joins Oregon, Colorado, Washington, Alaska. and the District of Columbia in sending a message to our federal government that we as a people have had enough and will not stand for them incarcerating our people for the mere purpose of greed anymore. It is just wrong.
 
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