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Topic: Vermont Legislature Could Be the First to Legalize Marijuana (Read 318 times)

xht
sr. member
Activity: 462
Merit: 250
hey you, yeah you, fuck you!!!
If grocery stores were as powerful as the drug companies there would be laws forbidding personal gardens. The only people who stand to benefit from it being illegal to grow marijuana are the people can legally grow it and then sell it. Once again, laws to benefit the top, Special interests rule the day as usual.
hero member
Activity: 616
Merit: 500
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I am happy to hear that because in my opinion it is not enough just to legalize marijuana for medical use, i think prohibition on that great plant should end.
legendary
Activity: 2310
Merit: 1028
I know you are thinking it's been done before, but not through legislation...

http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2016/03/vermont-lawmakers-may-be-first-to-legalize-weed.html

Quote
Bernie Sanders, who is not, in fact, a pot-smoking socialist, would nonetheless be proud of Vermont. As Reuters reports, the liberal-leaning state might become the first to legalize marijuana through legislation rather than through a voter initiative, as was the case in California, Colorado, Washington, and Alaska. In those four states (and Washington D.C.) voters put the issue on the ballot, but in Vermont, state representatives are set to vote on a bill passed by the Senate that would allow adults older than 21 to buy and smoke the drug beginning in 2018. The law would also prohibit residents from growing their own marijuana plants or selling edibles and would impose a 25 percent sales tax on the drug to fund state programs.

Voting on legalization this way "makes for a much more thoughtful and measured approach," State Senator Jeanette White, one of the bill's sponsors, told Reuters. "We got to work out the details, we got to ask the questions first and put the whole infrastructure in place before it happens." What's more, it would monetize a substance that a study reports one in eight Vermont residents (and one in three people ages 18 to 25) already use. "If it's one in eight, to me that tells me that society for the most part is accepting it," said Windham County sheriff Keith Clark. "If 12 or 13 percent of the population isn't being open with law enforcement when we're trying to investigate serious crimes, that's holding us back from working with our communities."

Of course the bill faces a certain amount of opposition, especially from House Republicans wary of legalization. Lawmakers have until May, when the current legislative session ends, to pass the bill.


Photo Credit: JOSH EDELSON

i think smoking weed is not a dangerous and unhealty thing on the contrary it can be good for some serious illnesses for that reasons it must be legitimized in all countries.. i am happy for vermont..
hero member
Activity: 798
Merit: 722
I know you are thinking it's been done before, but not through legislation...

http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2016/03/vermont-lawmakers-may-be-first-to-legalize-weed.html

Quote
Bernie Sanders, who is not, in fact, a pot-smoking socialist, would nonetheless be proud of Vermont. As Reuters reports, the liberal-leaning state might become the first to legalize marijuana through legislation rather than through a voter initiative, as was the case in California, Colorado, Washington, and Alaska. In those four states (and Washington D.C.) voters put the issue on the ballot, but in Vermont, state representatives are set to vote on a bill passed by the Senate that would allow adults older than 21 to buy and smoke the drug beginning in 2018. The law would also prohibit residents from growing their own marijuana plants or selling edibles and would impose a 25 percent sales tax on the drug to fund state programs.

Voting on legalization this way "makes for a much more thoughtful and measured approach," State Senator Jeanette White, one of the bill's sponsors, told Reuters. "We got to work out the details, we got to ask the questions first and put the whole infrastructure in place before it happens." What's more, it would monetize a substance that a study reports one in eight Vermont residents (and one in three people ages 18 to 25) already use. "If it's one in eight, to me that tells me that society for the most part is accepting it," said Windham County sheriff Keith Clark. "If 12 or 13 percent of the population isn't being open with law enforcement when we're trying to investigate serious crimes, that's holding us back from working with our communities."

Of course the bill faces a certain amount of opposition, especially from House Republicans wary of legalization. Lawmakers have until May, when the current legislative session ends, to pass the bill.


Photo Credit: JOSH EDELSON
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