Decriminalization YES!...PROP 19 NO!

Yes/no prop 19. Exsplain your answer.

  • YES

    Votes: 57 62.6%
  • NO

    Votes: 34 37.4%

  • Total voters
    91

mccumcumber

Well-Known Member
I'll quote some of the goodies.

11310.1. (a) It is lawful and not a violation of California law
for a person 21 years of age or older to personally possess, process,
share, or transport not more than 16 ounces of marijuana solely for
the individual's consumption and not for resale.
11311.2. This article shall not apply to the medical use of
marijuana which is regulated by Section 11362.5 and Article 2.5
(commencing with Section 11362.7).
 

NLNo5

Active Member
Dude, get real. Yes to Prop 19. Forget all the fine print. If I can grow in a 4x4 space with liberty and make my own stuff for free. Now that's how it should be in America. You don't think that after 5 years of legal growing in homes across CA we're not going to see a decriminalization measure come to pass.

It's illegal where I'm at and we have all sorts of problems related to the fact that people have to do lowlife things to get a little bit of smoke. Free MJ Free society.
 

NLNo5

Active Member
If I was making a living as a drug dealer then I'd be pretty pissed if the drugs suddenly became legal. I'm out of business on the black market where I was happy and now I've got to get an honest job and make a boring living while all my old customers happily grow their own shit right in their own kitchen window. The billion dollar MJ black market has gotten so good that society has decided to bring those profits into the white market. VOTE YES TO PROP 19.
 

klmmicro

Well-Known Member
If I was making a living as a drug dealer then I'd be pretty pissed if the drugs suddenly became legal.
You just nailed the largest group of Prop 19 haters on this and other cannabis sites. There is a large group of people that want it to stay illegal because it is their livelihood. They keep saying that they support decriminalization. Well, I would too...but there is no one putting their money there. In essence, they want things to remain the same.
 

mccumcumber

Well-Known Member
With the new amendment to the prop the only people who will be against it are the dealers. They dedicated a whole section to say that 215 is unaffected... there really isn't any more argument. The sad thing is, a good amount of weed smokers in Cali deal. So... we'll see what happens come November, hopefully it's a yes.
 

jonnynobody

Well-Known Member
I personally haven't seen a valid argument for no on prop 19 and I seriously doubt that I ever will. You have the standard issue prohibitionists slinging their usual propaganda then you have the lowlife, greedy, piece of shit growers who are afraid of their unscrupulous profits shrinking after prop 19 passes. I'm all for the progressive movement that has happened in california but voting "NO" for recreational use is not an option in the next step of this movement. On top of that, I don't think the market value for medical grade marijuana will shrink as dramatically as the pundits are claiming...alcohol is legal and has been legal for a long fucking time but there are still plenty of "top shelf" branded liquors / wines that people are paying up to 15x as much for because IT'S BETTER! The same will go for high quality med-grade marijuana post prop 19. damn greedy people just have a way of getting under my skin...
 

colonuggs

Well-Known Member
I'll quote some of the goodies.

11310.1. (a) It is lawful and not a violation of California law
for a person 21 years of age or older to personally possess, process,
share, or transport not more than 16 ounces of marijuana solely for
the individual's consumption and not for resale.
......Schwarzenegger just sign the bill like 15 days ago

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed SB 1449 on October 1, 2010. Effective January 1, 2011, SB 1449 turns the possession of less than an ounce of marijuana from a criminal misdemeanor into an civil infraction.

not a pound of weed..... 1 oz


Prop. 19 forces voters to choose between the rights of patients and the rights of recreational users (although we have seen that it will not provide any rights that we either don’t already have, as in the case of possession, or that we can afford to exercise, as in the case of cultivation)—a choice that will inevitably divide the movement. Will you vote yes on Prop. 19 even if it extinguishes the rights of patients—the group of marijuana consumers we should most protect?

Prop. 19 aims to eliminate the black market for marijuana. But it could have the unintended consequence of expanding the black market, because by encouraging exorbitant licensing fees, it would push currently legitimate growers underground.

Currently, anyone with a Prop. 215 recommendation can legally provide marijuana. Under Prop. 19, however, only licensed vendors may distribute marijuana. Although specific licensing arrangements are left up to local governments, Oakland, birthplace of the initiative, has already set the precedent for what other cities will likely follow. Oakland’s licensing process for commercial vending is prohibitively expensive for ordinary citizens. A license costs $60,000 per year—not to mention the application process itself, which is so rigorous that even well-established, law-abiding dispensaries have been denied. Furthermore, Oakland has started a trend that every other city preparing for the possibility of Prop. 19 has adopted—capping the number of licensed dispensaries allowed to operate (in Oakland, that number is four. Conveniently, Richard Lee, the millionaire businessman behind the initiative, owns one of them). A commercial cultivation license is even more prohibitive. The application fee alone is $5,000, a license costs an astronomical $211,000 annually, and only six are allotted. This all but guarantees that average, small-time, legal growers will be shut out of this multibillion-dollar industry and forced underground, expanding the black market that has been consistently dwindling since the passage of Prop. 215 created a legitimate marijuana industry.

These growers, who have invested tens of thousands of dollars creating these presently legal, home-based businesses, are not likely to tear down their grow rooms and apply for a job working the cash register at a dispensary. If they can’t afford the expensive licensing fees that would enable them to participate legally in the green market, it is much more likely that they will take their business to the black market underground, creating the opposite effect of what Prop. 19 intends to do.

Another explicit purpose of Prop. 19 is to limit the viability of Mexican drug cartels. But the reality is that these cartels are already being undermined tremendously, thanks to the legions of small-time farmers growing in California legally since 1996. The Washington Post reports:

“Almost all of the marijuana consumed in the multibillion-dollar U.S. market once came from Mexico or Colombia. Now as much as half is produced domestically, often by small-scale operators who painstakingly tend greenhouses and indoor gardens to produce the more potent… product that consumers now demand, according to authorities and marijuana dealers on both sides of the border. … Stiff competition from thousands of mom-and-pop marijuana farmers in the United States threatens the bottom line for powerful Mexican drug organizations in a way that decades of arrests and seizures have not, according to law enforcement officials and pot growers in the United States and Mexico.”

These mom-and-pop growers don’t fit the stereotype of the gang-war era drug pusher or cartel growing irresponsibly and setting forests on fire. “They are real people, decent people with families to support,” said Steve D’Angelo, owner of Harborside Health Center, the largest and most profitable marijuana dispensary in the world, which buys cannabis from more than 400 small-time farmers. They’re the people you see shopping at your local organic health food store, putting much-needed cash directly into the local economy while the national economy flounders in recession They use the money they earn from providing medicine to finance their kids’ education, help out their laid-off parents and put themselves through school. In some cases, entire communities depend on them.

However, if this initiative passes, these growers that are single-handedly undercutting the Mexican drug cartels would no longer be able to legally operate, and we might end up exchanging one cartel for another—a corporate cartel that would leave a spate of displaced marijuana farmers in its wake. Are corporations inherently evil? No. But if we have the option to keep millions of dollars in our own communities, spread out over hundreds of thousands of people, it hardly seems sensible to outsource this employment to corporations and into the hands of a few. “Why does this whole new system have to be created?” D’Angelo asked at a City Council meeting. “Let’s bring these citizen farmers out of the shadows and into the light and give them a role in this new industry.”

But under Prop. 19, the marijuana industry will not be a free market in which everyone has a chance to compete. Instead, it would mark the beginning of the corporatization of cannabis
 
this is easy people! stop puttin nonviolent pot smokers in jail! all bills are flawed, but this is a HUGE step in the right direction. check your race and class privilege if you're against 19!
 

MrSaint

Active Member
please, California, vote Yes on Prop 19! We're counting on you over in the east coast, and I'm sure all over. (Even all over the world!)
 

GrowBank

Member
So much is involved with Prop 19, I'm just not sure how detrimental many of those effects may be.

Senate bill 1449 was a great help for us, and I hope medical patients are still able to receive all they need in future years. Legalization is a tough thing to do correctly..
 
This prop will not start a movement across the states. Some governors would just simply not allow it. Especially after they see Howe flawed it is and the bad effect that it will have on our state. Kids will have even more access to marijuana. I remember when I was in junior high It was impossible to get pot. If this passes kids wont need to know a drug dealer, they can get from the store by whatever means. Which means more irresponsible under the influence teenagers. The drop out rate in parts of my county are already near 50 percent. Do you think that giving teenagers more access to pot is gonna help. This state already has issues will drinking and driving, now stoned and driving, or even drunk and stoned driving. Safer roads?? No.
Businesses are in business to make money not make a little bit of money. The price will stay the same plus tax though. This prop could possibly create jobs however they would be low paying labor jobs and very few at that. ther are people out here that are unemployed and providing for their family by growing. another job lost for them. f+*$ them though cause I have a job and i can't grow. right?
 

MeJuana

Well-Known Member
Screw parents who can't mind to their kids, people who "make a living" off the current industry, any other lame self serving excuse.. There has never been a good reason to criminalize MJ and this bill is better than what we got now. So you vote yes it isn't brain surgery.

There are so many reasons I want this bill to pass and none of them help me at all. I have to reduce my grow area, I already have plenty of weed, hey this can't help business any.... I will vote yes for others even though for me I am fine with my med card.
 

dirrtyd

Well-Known Member
One question for everyone who said yes in this thread. How many of you honestly get high with someone under twentyone currently? If you do and this passes you can go to jail. Currently you wouldnt so tell me where is the no brainer. You are actually adding more laws than you alredy have. with this. dirrtyd
 

stonedmetalhead1

Well-Known Member
I'm going to bet this bill is not going to pass. Whatever reason someone has for voting no, reasonable or not, if the stoners aren't unified on this bill there will never be enough votes to pass it.
 
Some of the arguments aginst 19 are ridiculous, like the under 21 catch. You can't drink under 21 either... duh....

A prop that makes growing legal for all? WTH not? Cause your customers learn to grow their own? Heaven forbid people be allowed to carry an ounce on them. Many of us in other states face a year or more for the same infraction. And you are going to whine about taxation on marijuana?

Go ahead and vote no and kick back and wait to see how long it is before another prop comes along. Even if prop 20 came up in 2012, the state can still tax it. Your arguments are baseless.

Vote YES on 19!! It is a STEP in the right direction.
You said it brotha. Previous poster was upset over the under 21 part of prop 19 ? Gimme a break !
 
One question for everyone who said yes in this thread. How many of you honestly get high with someone under twentyone currently? If you do and this passes you can go to jail. Currently you wouldnt so tell me where is the no brainer. You are actually adding more laws than you alredy have. with this. dirrtyd
The only "no brainer" is your skull. Apparently your a little younger so I'll try to see your point. Nah !
 
I dont care legalize this wonderful thing! California residents, vote yes and do the right thing. I wonder how many new friendships and good times will come from this...
 
Top