Cannabis in 3 extra VS staten gelegaliseerd, ondanks zware antilobby van de farmaceutische maffia en die van de georganiseerde alcoholmisdadigers

Tegelijk
met de midterm verkiezingen, werd er in 4 VS staten ook gestemd over de
legalisatie van cannabis. In Michigan, Utah en Missouri werd met
meerderheid gekozen voor de legalisatie van cannabis. In Michigan
gaan de nieuwe regels aangaande cannabis over ongeveer 10 dagen van
start. Inwoners van Michigan, mogen vanaf hun 21ste jaar cannabis in
bezit hebben, het kopen, gebruiken en het zelfs verbouwen!! (dus
geen belachelijk achterdeur beleid!)

Mooie zaak: Michigan laat ook de aanklachten en strafbladen vervallen van gebruikers van softdrugs die geen geweld hebben gebruikt, maar puur en alleen zijn opgepakt voor het bezit van cannabis (voor het overgrote deel gekleurde jongeren…..).

In North
Dakota mislukte het en stemde 60% achterlijke hypocrieten tegen,
je weet wel van die lui die minstens een paar keer in de week bezopen
zijn van de vernietigende harddrug alcohol……..

Het
blijkt dat er een fikse lobby in de VS bestaat, die cannabis verboden
wil houden, ‘niet geheel toevallig’ de farmaceutische maffia en de
georganiseerde alcoholmisdaad, fabrikanten die inderdaad van alles te
vrezen hebben van de legalisatie van cannabis, immers cannabis is
niet verslavend, het sloopt niet je lichaam en geest, zoals de
verslavende harddrugs als zware medicatie
en alcohol wel doen (dagelijks 115 doden door verslavende pijnstillers en jaarlijks 88.000 alcoholdoden in de VS..)…… 

Bovendien zijn er intussen een fiks aantal aandoeningen die te
behandelen zijn met extracten van marihuana en dat voor ziekten van kanker (niet dat het
kanker geneest, maar kan verder wel de boel stopzetten, eetlust
opwekken en tot pijn stillen) en staar tot geestelijke
aandoeningen……

Uit
onderzoek is overigens gebleken dat mensen die geblowd hebben beter
autorijden dan mensen die ‘clean’ zijn……. In Nederland is de
politie ‘daarom’ naarstig bezig blowers op de bon te slingeren, meer
dan schandalig, daar cannabis lang in het bloed te zien is…… Er
is ook geen flinter aan bewijs dat blowers zoals dronken rijders
ongelukken veroorzaken en als dit wel zo is, blijken er altijd andere
zaken mee te spelen, zoals het gebruik van psychofarmaca, zware
pijnstillers (waarmee je belachelijk genoeg mag autorijden) en/of
andere harddrugs…..

Ooit
had Nederland een voortrekkersrol op het gebied van softdrugs, waar de
miezerige kleingeestelijke hypocrieten van CDA en VVD een eind aan
hebben gemaakt, te schandalig voor woorden!! Lui die wel zelf bijna
dagelijks alcohol gebruiken………. Gevolg van de jacht op softdrugs en de meer dan belachelijke wietpas: er zijn nu volop harddrugs op straat te krijgen als speed, chrystal meth, ketamine en andere vernietigende troep……. Terwijl ons eerdere gedoogbeleid ervoor zorgde dat we in vergelijking met het buitenland aanmerkelijk veel minder verslaafden hadden aan harddrugs als heroïne……

Het volgende artikel werd geschreven door Randi Nord en werd eerder gepubliceerd op MintPress News:

Despite
Big Pharma’s Heavy Lobbying, Cannabis Legalization Efforts in US
Make New Gains

Marijuana ballot measures

November
08th, 2018

By Randi
Nord

ANSING,
MICHIGAN — 
While
Democrats and Republicans went toe-to-toe for control of Congress,
voters across three states voted to relax marijuana laws, resulting
in a huge victory for the grassroots decriminalization and
legalization movement.

With
medical marijuana already legal in Michigan for several years, voters
passed a ballot proposal on Tuesday to legalize recreational
marijuana possession with 55 percent in favor of the measure. The
measure made Michigan the first Midwestern state, and the tenth state
within the U.S., to legalize recreational cannabis.

Efforts
in Michigan paid off thanks to a group called 
Coalition
to Regulate Marijuana Like  Alcohol
.
Although the measure passed by a relatively wide margin, legalization
faced stiff opposition from a group known as Healthy and Productive
Michigan which seeks to push local municipalities to prohibit sales
by focusing on the federal ban on cannabis.

The
new laws, which are set to take effect in roughly ten days, allow
Michigan residents 21 and over to possess, use, buy, and grow
marijuana. The next step in terms of organizational efforts will
focus on expunging the criminal records of anyone with non-violent
marijuana possession charges. Between 20,000 and 24,550 people are
arrested on 
marijuana-related
charges
 in
Michigan each year, with charges disproportionately targeting young
black males.

Missouri
and surprisingly Utah also passed cannabis-friendly ballot measures
on Tuesday.

Missouri
residents endorsed Amendment 2, which favors the cultivation of
medical marijuana which would result in a 4% tax on all transactions.
Unlike Michigan, Missouri faced relatively no opposition.

Key
legislators in Utah reportedly planned to pass medical marijuana
legislation regardless of Tuesday’s results thanks to overwhelming
support from the Mormon church.

Unfortunately,
North Dakota’s Measure 3 didn’t win over enough voters to pass,
with nearly 60% voting against legalization legislation similar to
Michigan’s. Measure 3 also would have expunged the records of
citizens charged with non-violent marijuana offenses.

Who’s
Behind the Push to Keep Marijuana Illegal?

Many
industries
 have
a vast financial interest in keeping marijuana prohibition laws on
the books including pharmaceutical giants, alcohol lobbies, casinos,
and the prison-industrial complex.

In
Arizona, drug manufacturer Insys forked over $500,000 to a group
advocating against legalization. Insys had recently gained FDA
approval for a synthetic cannabinoid called Dronabinol and grew
concerned that legalization efforts would damage its commercial
success.

In
Massachusetts, pro-legalization efforts face stiff competition from
the alcohol lobby, which invested $75,000 to keep cannabis illegal in
2016.

Prison
suppliers also worry that legalization could hurt their bottom line.
Companies that supply correctional facilities with meals, consumer
goods, phone access, clothes, and other items rely on non-violent
crimes to keep jails and prisons overcapacity and boost profits.

Proponents
of marijuana legalization and decriminalization argue that
accessibility could reduce patient reliance on addictive opioids. To
put things into perspective, 115 people die each day from opioid
overdose.

Meanwhile, 88,000
people
 die
from alcohol-related deaths in the United States each year, making
alcohol consumption the third leading preventable cause of death in
the country. More than 15 million Americans suffer from alcohol use
disorder.

Despite
its widespread abuse and danger, alcohol’s legality faces virtually
no opposition from lobbying groups in the same way marijuana does.
Indeed, profits seem to always outweigh safety and public health.

Top
Photo | A young marijuana plant starts showing signs of
flowering in a backyard home garden in Los Angeles, Nov. 5, 2018.
Richard Vogel | AP

Randi
Nord
 is
a MintPress News staff writer. She is also co-founder of Geopolitics
Alert where she covers U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East with a
special focus on Yemen.

Republish
our stories! 
MintPress
News is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License.

================================

Zie verder o.a.:

“VWS verlengstuk alcoholindustrie”‘ (Argos radiofragment)

Voor meer berichten over de harddrug alcohol, andere harddrugs, cannabis en andere softdrugs, klik op het betreffende label, direct onder dit bericht.

Politie VS verwijderde naarstig bericht over ‘grote drugsvangst……’

De politie van het Jasper Police Department in Missouri (VS) heeft vorige week een bok van enorm formaat geschoten: men ruimde ‘een wietplantage’ op en liet dit vol trots fotograferen. De politie plaatste e.e.a. op het internet, waaronder een fiks aantal reacties werden geplaatst van deskundigen die ‘de vangst’ herkenden in wat men in de V S ‘hemp’ noemt, ofwel hennep. In tegenstelling tot de cannabis die hier in koffieshops (wat een belachelijk woord eigenlijk) wordt verkocht, wordt je van de ‘wiet’ die deze agenten rooiden, amper of niet stoned, je moet er giga hoeveelheden van roken om iets te kunnen voelen, echter volgens mij is het dan meer de reactie van veel roken, die z’n (schadelijke) werk doet……. (bijvoorbeeld door het veel roken van deze hennep in combinatie met tabak, wat dan een nicotinevergiftiging oplevert)

Van de hennep die de politie van Jasper vond, kan men overigens veel nuttige zaken maken, zoals touw, kleding, papier en zeep.

Kortom ‘het lijkt erop’ dat de politie de pret voor een aantal sufferds heeft verpest, dit daar de politie beweert dat deze plantage werd bewerkt. Deze figuren dachten waarschijnlijk dat ze met wiet van hoogwaardige kwaliteit te maken hadden……… Ach, het scheelt hen in ieder geval heel veel joints roken, waar je amper of niet ‘high’van wordt……. Zo bezien is deze mislukte drugvangst toch nog ergens goed voor! In de VS sterven in verhouding per dag nog meer mensen aan de gevolgen van alcoholgebruik dan de 12 in ons land, alcohol is dan ook de dodelijkste harddrug op aarde…….. En toch maakt men jacht op andere drugs, die veelal via vuile deals met the Drugs Enforcement Agency (DEA) en de CIA het land binnenkomen……..

Hier het bericht van Anti-Media dat ik gisteren ontving, daaronder nog een Anti-Media bericht dat vanmorgen werd verstuurd, let op de reacties op het internet die daarin te lezen zijn, mocht je wat somber zijn, hierna kan je dag niet meer stuk! Let wel het gaat hier m.n. om softdrugs, terwijl zoals gezegd alcohol een harddrug is!

Cops
Delete FB Post of Massive ‘Weed’ Bust After the Internet Corrects
Them

Afbeeldingsresultaat voor Cops Delete FB Post of Massive ‘Weed’ Bust After the Internet Corrects Them

ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! 

September
21, 2017 at 1:07 pm

Written
by 
Carey
Wedler

(ANTIMEDIA) —
Last
week, officers from Missouri’s Jasper Police Department celebrated
a marijuana bust they deemed worth roughly $100,000. In a now-deleted
Facebook post, they disclosed their satisfaction with their
operation, which took ten cops and sheriff’s deputies and a
National Guard helicopter to conduct.

As
the 
Riverfront
Times
 noted (grabbing
screenshots before the post was taken down):

“’What
a great team effort today,’ the Jasper department’s now-deleted
post read. ‘It was hot and humid and not easy getting these plants.
We ALL got in the thick of things and got it done.’

The Times summarized
the post’s sentiment:

In
a curious bit of show-your-work math, the department calculated the
nearly 290 plants seized would have produced — “on the low side”
— 63 pounds of marijuana with a “street value” of roughly
$100,000
.”

But
commenters were quick to point out an apparent flaw in the officers’
bust: it wasn’t cannabis they had seized, but hemp, they said. You
can’t get high from smoking hemp, and the material can be used
to 
create anything
from clothing, soap, paper to sails, rope, 
fuel,
and 
concrete,
called “hempcrete.” It is 
both durable
and sustainable.

That’s
hemp
,”
one comment bluntly said, according to the Times,
though the rest of the comments are not available to view because the
original post has been removed. One of Missouri’s two entities
allowed to grow hemp for certain medicinal purposes, Mitch Meyers of
BeLeaf, said, “Sure
looks like hemp to me
.”

These
look to me like wild hemp plants, because they are tall and without
buds
,”
Show-Me Cannabis

Executive
Director John Payne told the Times,
which sent images of the confiscated plants to several experts. “That
probably means that no one was actively cultivating them. If that’s
the case, the street value of those plants is next to nothing
.”

Many
comments echoed similar sentiments, “as the post racked up
hundreds of comments, among them mocking congratulations to cops for
confiscating the raw material of natural fiber rope,

the Times reported.“Jasper Police, who cover an
area about twenty miles northeast of Joplin, pulled the post on
Wednesday morning
.”

However,
there is still some doubt as to whether the plants were hemp or
cannabis. Dr. Jason Strotheide, founder of licensed hemp grower
Noah’s Arc Foundation, said it is “nearly impossible to tell
the difference between hemp and marijuana until late in flower.

Rusty
Rives, police chief of the Lamar Police Department, which
participated in raid stuck by the claim that it was weed. “I’m
just looking at the picture,” he said. “but they look like
marijuana plants to me.”

It
doesn’t matter either way. Both are illegal in the state of
Missouri despite nationwide efforts to legalize both marijuana and
the hemp plant.

The Times had
difficulty obtaining comment other officials involved, but by last
Thursday, Jasper police chief Chad Karr responded, defending the
Facebook post.

The
goal, Karr says, was never to brag about a bunch of pot plants, but
rather to serve notice to a suspected meth dealer operating in the
area.

But the post reached many more people, accruing over 1,000 comments,
Karr said, some of which were “abusive.”

As
far as the “$100,000” estimation, “Karr says he tried to
estimate conservatively. He admits he’s no expert when it comes to
marijuana and doesn’t care to be.” 
However, he suggested
the plants were not growing on their own, without human cultivation,
because there were trails leading out to the field where they were
confiscated.

Nevertheless,
he claims cannabis is not an issue for him.

I
think the misconception is we go to work to bust pot heads,” 
he
said. “I
personally do not. I know what the problem is — it’s opiates and
methamphetamine.”

Hopefully,
his sentiment will continue to grow among law enforcement, who are
increasingly 
trolledwhen
they 
boast of
cannabis busts on social media. The 
Times reports
that for now, it doesn’t appear any charges have been filed over
the plants.

Creative
Commons
 / Anti-Media / Report
a typo

===============================================

3
Times Cops Posted About Weed Busts on FB This Week and Instantly
Regretted It

September
22, 2017 at 5:01 pm

Written
by 
Carey
Wedler

(ANTIMEDIA) — Drug
warrior cops are having a rough week on social media. Police
departments have taken to Facebook and other platforms to boast about
drug busts, and in turn, they’re receiving strong pushback from
internet users, particularly when cannabis is concerned.

From
North Carolina and Ohio to Indiana, Missouri, and Texas, cops have
been taking a beating.

On
September 7, Lincolnton, North Carolina police 
posted a
mugshot of a young man charged with PWISD (possession of a
controlled substance with the intent to manufacture, sell or deliver)
of marijuana, as well as “
Possession
of Marijuana Paraphernalia” 
and “Possession
of Drug Paraphernalia
.”
They estimated the street value of the confiscated drugs to be a
whopping $200.

Though
the post went relatively unnoticed for over a week, by Wednesday,
both trolls and serious commenters had descended upon it. 
“’Don’t
do drugs, it’ll ruin your life.’ That’s true, in most cases
it’s the government that ruins that person’s life
,”
one Facebook user wrote in a comment that received over 1,000 likes.

The
comments ranged from sarcastic to serious:

Facebook
users also bombarded their ratings section, where users can review
pages. 
Fox
46 Charlotte 
reported that
The
Lincolnton Police Department went from a five-star rated department
to a 2.1 rated star department over the course of a few days
.”  In
post,
the police boasted about the backlash:

If
you read the one star reviews you will notice we are being attacked
because we enforce the drug laws of North Carolina. So basically the
pro-drug crowd is rating us one star for doing our jobs. We see this
as a good thing.

Nevertheless,
they ultimately removed their ratings system altogether.

Meanwhile,
in Ohio, the state’s highway patrol posted on Facebook about a
cannabis bust that yielded $3,000 and 
felony
charges
 against
two men. They 
wrote:

2009
Cadillac with Ohio registration was stopped for failure to display a
front license plate. Criminal indicators were observed and a Patrol
drug-sniffing canine alerted to the vehicle. A probable cause search
revealed 600 grams of marijuana
.

Once
again, trolls and concerned citizens flooded the page, leaving over
1,600 comments and calling the cops out for everything from stealing
property to violating freedom and wasting resources chasing a plant
(their page rating has dropped well below a 3.0). Still others called
out the hypocrisy of the drug war and the dangers of legal drugs Some
even questioned the philosophical and moral legitimacy of policing
institutions all together:

Some
mocked the cops:

Others
were straightforward and blunt (no pun intended):

Some
commenters defended the cops, claiming the fact that cannabis is
illegal justified the bust or that the cops were just doing their
job. Other commenters made sure to respond:

The
same thing happened on a post from cops in Mt. Vernon, Indiana, where
Posey County police 
seized “Over
50 pounds of marijuana

and,
in turn, received an internet lashing:

One
commenter claimed marijuana was killing her friend’s son, only to
be shut down by a slew of pro-cannabis commenters:

In
yet 
another post,
on Friday, the Wharton County Sheriff’s Office in Texas claimed to
have seized $25,000 worth of “alleged” drug money. After
dissenters streamed onto their post, complaining that they stole a
private citizen’s cash without even finding drugs, they evidently
modified their post (see screenshots below), removing “alleged”
and adding that the suspect had been arrested for money laundering.

Original
post:

Edited post: 

Still,
no evidence was presented, and in seven hours over 900 commenters had
bombarded the post (some of the comments reflect the original post’s
use of the term “alleged”:

When Anti-Media attempted
to message the page for comment on what evidence they might have to
warrant their actions, we received an “Action Blocked”
notification (indicating they likely shut off private messages due to
the spike in activity). Like Lincolnton police, they also appear to
have removed their rating system (note the time in the upper right
corner of each image):

These
are just a few of the instances in which cops have received powerful
pushback for bragging about enforcing a drug war much of the nation
now 
believes is
unwinnable. The increase in resistance has been largely assisted by
at least one Facebook page: 
Liberty
Memes
.
The libertarian page often posts about police brutality and
misconduct, and last year made 
headlines when
Facebook banned them over their anti-Hillary Clinton memes. According
to their 
mission
statement
,
Liberty Memes “
uses
memes to defend the libertarian principles of the rights to life,
liberty, and property
.”

The
page has made a 
habit of sharing cops’
posts about drug busts and other controversial actions with their
nearly 400,000 followers, providing a veritable alert system for
those who want to express their opinions directly to the enforcement
class.

As
the page’s “Admin 2” told Anti-Media,”the intention is to
very specifically get them to think twice about committing these
actions, as they are in violation of their oaths and run contrary to
a vast portion of public opinions.”

As
the trend of trolling and confronting cops online grows, some
departments have 
deleted comments,
which experts say is 
unconstitutional.
Several departments have been 
sued for doing so.
 Still, in many cases, the comments are left intact. This aligns
with 
guidance from PoliceOne,
a website for law enforcement that advises officers to leave comments
on their pages unless they contain profanity or other potentially
actionable threats.

As
demonstrated this week, the internet is 
increasingly calling
out cops for cannabis busts, both sarcastically 
mocking them
and sincerely pointing out the ethical and logical problems that come
with violently arresting nonviolent people over a plant that is
increasingly found to provide medicinal benefits. But as this week
also shows, it appears cops have yet to listen.

Opinion
/
 Creative
Commons
 / Anti-Media / Report
a typo