Vermont House approves recreational cannabis......

greg nr

Well-Known Member
The Senate still has to vote, and the gov has to sign of course, but good news. The gov has reversed his previous stand and says he will sign bill....

Congrats VT. Welcome to the club (almost...).

http://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/367526-vermont-house-votes-to-legalize-marijuana

The Vermont House passed a bill Thursday night to legalize recreational possession of marijuana just hours after Attorney General Jeff Sessionsrescinded a Department of Justice policy on legal marijuana.

Lawmakers voted 81-63 in favor of the bill, which would allow adults over the age of 21 to grow and possess small amounts of legal marijuana beginning in July. The State Senate still needs to approve the measure, but Vermont Governor Phil Scott (R) has signaled that he will sign the bill. He vetoed a similar measure last year.

House members rejected an effort led by Republicans to delay voting on the bill amid reports that Sessions would rescind a Justice Department policy on states legalizing marijuana, according to the Burlington Free Press.


The Marijuana Policy Project, the largest marijuana policy reform group in the US, praised the vote in a statement, calling it an “important step.”
“Vermont is poised to make history by becoming the first state to legalize marijuana cultivation and possession legislatively, rather than by ballot initiative,” Matt Simon, New England policy director for the group, said. “We applaud lawmakers for heeding the calls of their constituents and taking this important step toward treating marijuana more like alcohol.”

Vermont will become the ninth state to make recreational marijuana legal for adults upon the bill’s signing, and the first state to legalize marijuana via its state legislature.

The vote came hours after Sessions rescinded an Obama-era policy that ordered U.S. attorneys in states where marijuana has been legalized to deprioritize prosecution of marijuana-related cases.

Sessions was slammed by lawmakers on both sides of the aisle following the announcement.

Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.) took to the Senate floor to assert that Sessions had told him before his confirmation as attorney general that he didn’t plan to try to reverse his state’s policies legalizing marijuana.

"I would like to know from the attorney general what has changed,” Gardner said. “What has changed the president's mind? Why is Donald Trump thinking differently than what he promised the people of Colorado?”

Gardner, who leads the Senate GOP campaign arm, threatened to block all Justice Department Nominees until Sessions “lives up to the commitment that he made to me.”​
 
Senate approved. Gov says he will sign. 2 flowering plants suck, but it's a start.

Vermont poised to enact legal pot through Legislature

Source: Associated Press

By WILSON RING
Today

MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — The state Senate on Wednesday gave final approval to a bill that would allow the recreational use of marijuana, putting Vermont on course to become the first state in the country to legalize pot by an act of the Legislature rather than through a citizen referendum.

By voice vote, the Senate agreed to the proposal that would make it legal for adults to possess and grow small amounts of marijuana but does not set up a system to tax and regulate the production and sale of the drug. The bill that was approved by the House last week, and Gov. Phil Scott has indicated he would sign it.
....

The bill would allow adults over 21 to possess of up to 1 ounce of marijuana and have two mature marijuana plants or four immature plants in each dwelling unit no matter how many people live there.

The Senate approved the legislation on a voice vote. Those who voted against it didn’t ask for a roll call. It takes effect July 1.

Read more: https://apnews.com/4e5ccb6179d74e968e5c4836f46920ff
 
I wonder where "Vermont" ever got the idea that they could disallow people from growing or using cannabis in the first place?
 
I wonder where "Vermont" ever got the idea that they could disallow people from growing or using cannabis in the first place?

probably the same place every other state did, when the feds passed the controlled substances act, but this is merely a guess on my part.. :)
The Controlled Substances Act (CSA) is the statute establishing federalU.S. drug policy under which the manufacture, importation, possession, use and distribution of certain substances is regulated. It was passed by the 91st United States Congress as Title II of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970 and signed into law by President Richard Nixon.[1] The Act also served as the national implementing legislation for the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs.
 
You always have the inherent right to end it all.

Apparently the people in Vermont do not have the right to use their own bodies as they chose and must be granted a revocable and limited privilege from their masters now. You good with that ?
 
probably the same place every other state did, when the feds passed the controlled substances act, but this is merely a guess on my part.. :)
The Controlled Substances Act (CSA) is the statute establishing federalU.S. drug policy under which the manufacture, importation, possession, use and distribution of certain substances is regulated. It was passed by the 91st United States Congress as Title II of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970 and signed into law by President Richard Nixon.[1] The Act also served as the national implementing legislation for the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs.

Well, prior to that there was the marijuana tax act of 1937. When the tax act was finally struck down, the controlled substances act was passed. Apparently, it was unconstitutional to require farmers to buy a tax stamp that the government wouldn't issue. Who'd a thunk.
 
probably the same place every other state did, when the feds passed the controlled substances act, but this is merely a guess on my part.. :)
The Controlled Substances Act (CSA) is the statute establishing federalU.S. drug policy under which the manufacture, importation, possession, use and distribution of certain substances is regulated. It was passed by the 91st United States Congress as Title II of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970 and signed into law by President Richard Nixon.[1] The Act also served as the national implementing legislation for the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs.

Yes, the CSA is a problem, but I think State Plantations prohibited cannabis use before the Nixon era. Nixon was a real douche bag. One of the worst.

So if a state is said to be the "people" how could it tell anyone a substance was illegal to ingest in your own body, if none of the individual people within the state have any right to tell others what they can't do with their own bodies?
 
Yes, the CSA is a problem, but I think State Plantations prohibited cannabis use before the Nixon era. Nixon was a real douche bag. One of the worst.

So if a state is said to be the "people" how could it tell anyone a substance was illegal to ingest in your own body, if none of the individual people within the state have any right to tell others what they can't do with their own bodies?

its what the religious right and moral majority do.

then there are also these little issues
1. tobacco lobbyists
2. alcohol lobbyists
3. big pharma lobbyists
4. Prison Industrial Complex
5. LEO profiting from drug busts


congrats to Vermont, Fuck Sessions/Trump/DEA
 
its what the religious right and moral majority do.

then there are also these little issues
1. tobacco lobbyists
2. alcohol lobbyists
3. big pharma lobbyists
4. Prison Industrial Complex
5. LEO profiting from drug busts


congrats to Vermont, Fuck Sessions/Trump/DEA


It's what all flavors of political creatures do. I'm glad you at least see the wrong with the religious right though.
 
The religous right raided harborside.
Then they let the attorney general of oregon in 2010 hand over entire medical program details to the DEA. They didn't even need a warrant, she did it willingly, without patient notice.
 
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