There are Coloradans who are doing Federal time for marijuana related 'offenses', 'committed' after Colorado's medical marijuana laws and even recreational laws went into effect.
Thus so far as I am aware, there is no place on earth which can claim to be totally, completely marijuana legal. Not even here.
So we know it's wrong, soooo what do we do about it?
Yeah i wasn't even including any part of the U.S. in those few scarce places... the CO/WA laws leave me with mixed feelings. I'm glad "something" is happening, but... i feel like they're doin' it wrong. Surprise surprise, right?
"What do we do about it?" is indeed the most important question, and where the biggest obstacle is found.
I think the only way we can really even "do" anything about it, is to establish the need for some kind of... systems integrity committee, or something, populated only by people qualified to understand right and wrong, and who are given the authority to Abolish laws, but not to create them. All branches of gov't would have to submit to investigations and analysis, even the SCOTUS. We need a recognized and "WTP" authorized entity that can overrule both the POTUS and the SCOTUS, if/when necessary, including all "alphabet groups" like the FDA, DEA, and IRS.
But i'm sure that will go over wonderfully... lol.
An alternative to that notion, would be to make a huge public gathering and demand a change, and stay there until it happens. Seems unfeasible.
Another... would be to "force" a debate with the SCOTUS, and show them they are legitimately wrong to allow any agency or group authorized use of force in anything regarding cannabis, and that all cannabis-related penalties (minus "adulterated" or "tainted" goods) are unconstitutional, illegal, inhumane and unacceptable. That will be incredibly difficult, because there is no currently existing method of overruling them or ousting them when they are revealed to be either malicious or incompetent, unless it's some kind of blatantly destructive behavior.
We have to get them to agree to a rational debate which focuses on the crux of the issue: it is not inherently dangerous to do anything with cannabis. Therefore, any penalty imposed through force, is illegal
already. But it will be difficult to get them to separate the implications of truth-blowback and potential resulting infrastructural instabilities (due to everyone realizing the "authorities" have actually been committing crimes against humanity, against their own citizens, for multiple decades), from the heart of the issue. We can easily prove they are unable to remain intellectually honest and unbiased. We cannot easily get them to admit it. They are more afraid of admitting there ever was a problem, than they are of correcting the mistake. They still carry this air of "oh, well, the precedent says such and such, and it couldn't
possibly have been illegitimately established..." and so they just disregard that part of reality, and "make a ruling" not in accordance with the actual facts... which is exactly what the SCOTUS is supposed to be at the highest court for NOT doing.
This is a pattern everywhere. It's all backwards, all Orwellian doublespeak, plausible deniability, parallel construction, blah blah blah.
If we can get them to BE REASONABLE, we can win. In many ways, we've already constructed an indisputable position. It's just a matter of getting them to acknowledge it, and for them to accept that doing the right thing means accepting the consequences for all the years they maintained illegitimate authorization to do the wrong things, and the fact that millions of people's lives have been ruined.
But you know, we can sentence them later. We just need to get them to be reasonable first, and let the justice system function the way it was intended. But there's big money and power in obstructing and manipulating that function to their own advantage, which is why things are as they are.