November Elections Could See One Quarter Of Americans Free From Marijuana Prohibition

Katelyn Baker

Well-Known Member
One in four Americans may soon be living in places where marijuana is fully legal, thanks to state ballot initiatives this November.

California, Massachusetts, Arizona, Maine and Nevada will all be asking voters next month whether to end prohibition on the recreational consumption of cannabis.

Polling in all states but California indicate the outcome of the referenda will be close, according to an article published Thursday by The Hill. Voters in the Golden State - the first jurisdiction in the country to legalize medicinal marijuana - appear to back legalization by more than twenty points.

According to studies cited in a 2014 Congressional Research Service paper, the pretax price of cannabis is expected to drop in California by between 50 and 80 percent, in the event of full legalization.

"This price reduction would suggest a price of $100-$150 per ounce on average," CRS said, while noting excise taxes would likely see retail prices much higher than that.

Medical sales last year in California at $2.7 billion accounted for nearly half of all legal marijuana transactions in the country, as The New York Times noted in April.

Close polling, however, doesn't necessarily bode well for legalization advocates in Massachusetts, Arizona, Maine or Nevada.

"If the pro-legalization side is not at 55 percent at this point, it will likely lose," said Sean Noble, a Republican strategist and prohibition advocate in Arizona. "We know that polling on legalization generally over performs actual results."

In the past few years, voters have approved of recreational marijuana in Colorado, Washington, the District of Columbia, Alaska, and Oregon.

Despite the fact that medicinal cannabis is legal in 25 states and Washington, DC, the Drug Enforcement Administration earlier this year refused to remove it as a Schedule I controlled substance.

The decision means the federal government still officially considers cannabis to have no medicinal applications: as dangerous as heroin and cocaine, and more dangerous than Schedule II opioids that cause tens of thousands of annual fatal overdoses.

Drug scheduling also became the subject of controversy in late August, when the DEA fully banned kratom, an herbal opioid substitute.

The move, however, has not yet taken effect, though it was supposed to on Sept. 30. DEA officials are reportedly delaying enforcement and rethinking the move, after coming under significant public pressure. Dozens of lawmakers in the House, both Democrats and Republicans, asked the White House last week to stop the kratom ban on procedural grounds, noting that the DEA had not held a public comment period.

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News Moderator: Katelyn Baker 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: November Elections Could See One Quarter Of Americans Free From Marijuana Prohibition
Author: Sam Knight
Contact: Truth Out
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Website: Truth Out
 
Re: November Elections Could See One Quarter Of Americans Free From Marijuana Prohibi

Thanks for sharing. It's great to see the power of democracy in action as states legalize while the DOJ and DEA act like they do not work for taxpayers. We have the power to change these laws with our votes and advocacy. I really like what the Vice channel is doing. Although it does have its silly programming, it does show how there are intelligent individuals who use cannabis and constantly question the old 'wives tales' and ignorant perception of the plant.

It really does not make sense why cannabis it even lumped in with herion and coke. I have yet to hear of a news story of anyone ODing on weed or that they killed someone for $5 just to get a toke. I think someone in the government is making money keeping it as a schedule 1 or they are to embarrassed to admit that they are wrong. If it's just because it is an addictive substance, so what! People are always going to want things that make them feel good or taste good (alcohol, sugar, sex, etc...)

Seed banks need to donate like 4,200,000 seeds to the US and have everyone just plant them all over and near government own properties. lol
I think prohibition actually does more harm than good. Instead of increasing our GDP we fuel the cartels/gangs with large amounts of cash and help create black markets. This usually equates to more violent crime and more people in prison. In my opinion, if what you are doing is not encroaching someone else's rights or hurting them you should be able to do it. Meh... what do I know. :geek:
 
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