Indiana Is At Least Thinking About Its More Progress?

robmills

Member
Sorry I cant give a link, but wishtv.com has a story on it. Kind of hard to find.
What basicly happen was, both sides talked about it and now they are looking at everything they talked about. They will talk some more later. Don't know when. But it does look like the police are on our side on this issue.
 

ozman

Well-Known Member
And I found this also on wsbt.Cant wait for prohibition to be over.



http://www.wsbt.com/news/wsbt-ind-lawmakers-ponder-state-marijuana-laws-20110728,0,4917526.storyINDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Experts tell Indiana lawmakers that the prohibition against marijuana use in the United States has failed.
The legislature's Criminal Law and Sentencing Policy Study Committee heard testimony Thursday as it began studying whether to legalize marijuana or reduce criminal penalties on small amounts of the drug.
Noah Member of the Marijuana Policy Project says marijuana use is widespread despite its illegality and that laws against possession ruin people's lives. Daniel Abrahamson of the Drug Policy Alliance says states that have legalized medical marijuana or decriminalized personal use haven't seen an upswing in drug use.
Member suggests marijuana should be regulated by the state much like alcohol.
Abrahamson estimates Indiana could raise $44 million a year in sales tax alone if it regulated and taxed marijuana.
 
Something else I found, think its the same thing you found, but, mine has a bit more info.

Associated Press

2:57 p.m. CDT, July 28, 2011
A state panel heard from a parade of experts Thursday as it began studying whether to legalize marijuana in Indiana or reduce criminal penalties on small amounts of the drug.

The experts shared a common message: The prohibition against marijuana use in the United States has failed and Indiana and its citizens stand to benefit from changing the law.

Topics
Indiana
Justice System
Laws
See more topics »
XCrimes
Marijuana Use
Recreational Substance Use
Medical Marijuana Therapy
Health Treatments
Criminals
Synthetic Marijuana
Indiana Legislature
Mitch Daniels "The public recognizes that our marijuana laws have done more harm than good," Daniel Abrahamson of the Drug Policy Alliance told the Indiana Legislature's Criminal Law and Sentencing Policy Study Committee.

Lawmakers have approved medical marijuana in 16 states and the District of Columbia. They have eliminated penalties on small amounts of marijuana in 13 other states.

Abrahamson said those changes have not met with negative consequences such as an uptick in marijuana use. And he said there is nothing standing in the way of Indiana changing its law as other states have.

"The federal government cannot require states to make marijuana illegal," he said. In no instance, he said, has a state changed its mind and "re-criminalized" marijuana after decriminalizing personal use.

Noah Member of the Marijuana Policy Project said marijuana use is widespread despite being illegal and that laws against possession ruin people's lives by sending them to prison for using a substance he said is safer than alcohol.

Member suggested marijuana should be regulated by the state much like alcohol. He said states that have legalized medical marijuana have seen no increase in teen use of the drug.

Abrahamson estimated Indiana could raise $44 million a year in sales taxes alone if it regulated and taxed marijuana.

Democratic state Sen. Karen Tallian of Ogden Dunes successfully pushed lawmakers to study the issue. She says the state has "draconian" marijuana laws.

Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels has said he would like to wait and see what the panel finds before taking a position.

Indiana lawmakers this year banned the sale and possession of synthetic marijuana, also called spice.


Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
chi-experts-tell-indiana-panel-ban-on-marijuana-has-failed-20110728
 

Toorop

Well-Known Member
It will not happen in Indiana. The state is very conservative and many people there are too brainwashed to realize that marijuana is not a bad thing. The fact is that the state is really a hardcore conservative bastion. The powers that be are much too worried about other things like the economy and keeping corporations in the state. The state has cut social programs and is working towards destroying labor as well.
 
Top