Republicans move to decriminalize marijuana at federal level

annabenedetti

like marbles on glass
@annabenedetti I suggest that you visit a dispensary and look into buying a pre-roll, just to try it. I've heard some people say that they only need a couple of puffs from a joint to handle their pain, which isn't enough to get most people high. The staff at most dispensaries are also quite knowledgeable and can recommend the best strains to treat your condition.

Thanks, User Name. There are a lot of dispensaries around here, I just have to get myself inside the door. One of these days. :)
 
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Omniskeptical

BANNED
Banned
Yes, it is retarded.



Rand Paul does not need pressure. The libertarian in him will support it.
I very unsure of it. The funny drug makes people high then stupid for a month. I delivers a psychosis equivalent to the high it delivered. Is it safe to mix with Amphetamine has not been answered either? It smells gross too.
 
@annabenedetti I suggest that you visit a dispensary and look into buying a pre-roll, just to try it. I've heard some people say that they only need a couple of puffs from a joint to handle their pain, which isn't enough to get most people high. The staff at most dispensaries are also quite knowledgeable and can recommend the best strains to treat your condition.
Thanks, User Name. There are a lot of dispensaries around here, I just have to get myself inside the door. One of these days. :)

Sorry, Liberalism is a mental disease, but smoking dope won't cure it,. LOL

Two dopes talking about buying dope, to help with the disease of being a dope. Who says forums are not funny.
 

marke

Well-known member
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives introduced legislation on Monday that would decriminalize marijuana at the federal level and eliminate legal hazards facing many cannabis-related businesses while regulating its use like alcohol.

Representative Nancy Mace of South Carolina, who is spear-heading the legislative effort, described the bill as a "compromise" with less onerous regulations than measures proposed earlier by other lawmakers including Democrats.

The legislation's path in the Democratic-controlled House was uncertain. Mace, a first-term lawmaker, said the measure has five Republican co-sponsors.

Mace is what is called a 'moderate' republican, with some very conservative views and some liberal views. I do not believe those advocating for the legalization of mind-altering drugs are on the right side of God on that issue. I also believe Mace is wrong to support sodomy, which God condemns.
 

marke

Well-known member
Interesting and sounds good on the surface … however it’s hard to believe the GOP would sponsor anything that would ease the suffering of Americans.
Politicians are subject to support all sorts of evil, whether democrat or republican. It is rare for Republicans to support legalizing mind-altering drugs, however.
 

marke

Well-known member
Interesting and sounds good on the surface … however it’s hard to believe the GOP would sponsor anything that would ease the suffering of Americans.
Christians cannot support everything lost sinners think is a good thing to ease suffering. Just look at how many Christians opposed Dr. Kevorkian's method of "easing suffering" for example.
 

marke

Well-known member
Apparently the Republicans do. They are the ones who are introducing this pro-marijuana legislation, not me.

So do I. Perhaps you are the one who is tone deaf and retarded?
If four republicans introduce a bill that 204 democrats support, I do not believe the bill is so much a republican bill as it is a bill of the devil.
 

marke

Well-known member
I agree with this legislation. The suffering comes in when people are arrested and jailed for using a substance that, by any standard of measure, is no worse than alcohol, and therefore should be just as legal.
Rebels against God are the problem because they see nothing wrong or harmful with recreational drug use, gambling, adultery, gay-sex, pornography, drunkenness, sedition, riots, assaults, murder, theft, looting, arson, voter fraud, lying, and so forth.
 

marke

Well-known member
Is cannabis legal in your state? If it is, you should totally try it out! --Just for research purposes, of course. Not that you should enjoy it, but just so that you can know from first-hand experience what you are talking about.
Is sodomy legal in your state? If so, do not try it because it is wrong, just as is drunkenness, recreational drug use, adultery, and so forth.
 

marke

Well-known member
I tried the edibles close to a month ago. It was as a last resort for pain. They work 10 times better than the poison pills my doctor prescribed.
Pains will come and go, but when death comes it will be permanent and it will come, so be sure you are ready to meet God before you die.
 
Is cannabis legal in your state? If it is, you should totally try it out! --Just for research purposes, of course. Not that you should enjoy it, but just so that you can know from first-hand experience what you are talking about.

Is sodomy legal in your state? If so, do not try it because it is wrong, just as is drunkenness, recreational drug use, adultery, and so forth.

That was a slam dunk response.

What sort of a baboon comes to a forum and tells people they should try dope? Good grief.
 

Ktoyou

Well-known member
Hall of Fame
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives introduced legislation on Monday that would decriminalize marijuana at the federal level and eliminate legal hazards facing many cannabis-related businesses while regulating its use like alcohol.

Representative Nancy Mace of South Carolina, who is spear-heading the legislative effort, described the bill as a "compromise" with less onerous regulations than measures proposed earlier by other lawmakers including Democrats.

The legislation's path in the Democratic-controlled House was uncertain. Mace, a first-term lawmaker, said the measure has five Republican co-sponsors.

It would be a fitting stance, since it would reduce the costs of crime and incarceration. Tax it like tobacco, but treat it like alcohol with state sanctions and control.
 
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