Sessions

dagwood45431

Well-Known Member
True. But first off, it's highly unlikely he'll get what he wants. Secondly, even if he does any lawyer with half a brain will get the typical case tossed out of court in less than 10 minutes.

People have been panicking over all of this for years. In all that time, I've said the same exact thing. In all that time, I've been proven 100% correct.
Can you cite a case that got thrown out? I believe you're assuming this has all been thoroughly tested in the courts. AFAIK, it hasn't been. Do you know otherwise?
 

TacoMac

Well-Known Member
In fact, another thought is this: Jeff Sessions just might turn out to be the guy that legalizes marijuana nation wide. Here's how he'll do it:

IF, and it's a BIG fucking IF, he gets what he wants and goes after legitimate growers in California, Colorado, or anywhere else, you can bet that the very first case is going to go before a Federal Judge. The lawyer will then move for an immediate dismissal because the Federal Government has no standing in the case.

Now, for those of you who don't know: The thing a Judge hates more than anything is to be overruled. So they typically always follow the letter of the law. As such, they will rule that the Federal Government has no standing, and kick the case over to State Court where the State will of course dismiss it as it isn't illegal under state law.

But good ol' Jeff isn't going to take that lying down. He'll appeal. It will then go to the 9th circuit court of appeals in the case of California.

Once again, for those who don't know, that's about the LAST place on earth you ever want to go if you're trying to trump states rights. Only the 11th circuit is worse.

They'll toss it too.

But Jeff wont take that lying down either. He'll appeal it to the Supreme Court. And this is where it gets really, really ugly for Jeff. IF the court decides to hear it (which is very, very unlikely as none of them are going to want to rule against the Justice Department) then they'll have no choice but to side with the State.

Either way, Jeff is going to lose and there will be a very, very loud THUD heard 'round the world when the ability of any drug enforcement agency to enforce anti-marijuana laws in states that allow it hits the bottom of a 6 foot deep grave.

Can you cite a case that got thrown out? I believe you're assuming this has all been thoroughly tested in the courts. AFAIK, it hasn't been. Do you know otherwise?
Read. NO CASE has EVER BEEN FILED TO BEGIN WITH.

Why? For the reasons I've already listed.
 

dagwood45431

Well-Known Member
Read. NO CASE has EVER BEEN FILED.
Which is why I'm confused by your absolute statements here. It hasn't been tested. When Obama took office, weed wasn't fully legal in any state and so far, the Justice Department has chosen to mostly stay out of it. These are relatively untested waters. Sessions might be up for testing it. Your scenario sounds completely plausible and well thought out, though.
 

TacoMac

Well-Known Member
*sigh*

The only reason it's never been tested is because everybody with a brain already knows how it will end.
 

dagwood45431

Well-Known Member
*sigh*

The only reason it's never been tested is because everybody with a brain already knows how it will end.
*sigh*

No. Only you do, apparently.

As of this printing, the federal government claims that marijuana is not medicine and in Gonzales v. Raich (2005), the United States Supreme Court held that the federal government has the constitutional authority to prohibit marijuana for all purposes. Thus, federal law enforcement officials may prosecute medical marijuana patients, even if they grow their own medicine and even if they reside in a state where medical marijuana use is protected under state law.
http://www.safeaccessnow.org/federal_marijuana_law
 

TacoMac

Well-Known Member
*sigh*

No. Only you do, apparently.
Wrong, nimrod.

If anybody thought any differently at all then they would have tried it by now. They haven't because they know the exact same things that I know and then some. That is exactly how it will end. Again, everybody with a brain (or an education) knows it. That is why they've never even tried to pursue it and are looking for new power so that they can. They know with the current set of rules they're powerless.
 

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
You are quite delusional in your absolute convictions here. You pretend to know exactly how this would play out in the courts (by the way -- why have you ignored the Supreme Court decision I cited, pussy?).

I also love your frequent boast:



You haven't been proven 10% correct, shithead.

And what's this I hear about you being a Nazi?

Fuck off, shit stain.

Triggered.
 

londonfog

Well-Known Member
You're being stupid, obtuse, and troll-tastic. You've shown a complete lack of comprehension in a vain effort to prove some point that doesn't exist.

I'm stating absolute fact.

You're playing the "what if" game.

Go sell your wild, baseless, unfounded conspiracy theories elsewhere.
The guy stated case law for you.
Either you are no good at this or you are a dumb fucking troll.
either way you fucking sucking, but continue
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
Again, no. It doesn't. It amazes me that people think that it does.

Why do you think states have different laws to begin with? Because the federal government has NO CONTROL over state laws. None. At all. Ever.

UNLESS

It involves interstate commerce (going over state lines) or it's a violation of the constitution.

That is the law of the land. It always has been. You learn it pretty much week one in any law enforcement, law, criminal justice education.
You are a supreme douche. but absolutely correct on this. interstate commerce has been twisted and stretched to the point it has become the biggest source of federal power imo. some of those decisions are so blatantly in contrast with the clause it's rediculous.

and yet here we are hitting the limits of even that.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
Example: If you're caught growing a metric ton of pot without a license in California, you're going to be in a world of trouble. You'll face STATE felony charges and probably lose your house as well.

.
civil infraction, standard notice-compliance procedure depending on local municipality.

ask me how I know.
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
So Sessions invoked executive privilege without actually invoking executive privilege?

He's playing legal pretzel games.

He wouldn't need to do that if he had nothing to hide.

Great. We have a weasel for an Attorney General.
 

dagwood45431

Well-Known Member
So Sessions invoked executive privilege without actually invoking executive privilege?

He's playing legal pretzel games.

He wouldn't need to do that if he had nothing to hide.

Great. We have a weasel for an Attorney General.
Heinrich was masterful at exposing Sessions' pathetic attempt to claim "possible future executive privilege invocations the president may wish to make later" (or whatever the fuck that bullshit was) for what it was. Obstruction and obfuscation. Our Democratic system has been attacked by a foreign hostile power and these motherfuckers want to lie and obfuscate? I found it very telling that Sessions answered 'no' when asked if he had been part of any cabinet-level discussions about what the Russians did and how to defend against future attempts which will surely come -- as soon as next year. They were in on it or they don't care. Those are the only two possible options here.
 
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