Tag Archive: ballot

  1. Thought the Elections Were Over? Not if You Live in Los Angeles!

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    On March 7, 2017, Los Angeles City voters will be choosing new candidates to run their city and voting on several ballot measures. Two of these measures would allow the city to regulate cannabis businesses in response to the recent passage of Prop 64, which legalized the recreational use of marijuana in California.

     

    These two are Measure M and Measure N.

     

     

    Measure N: the Initiative That Sparked Measure M

     

     

    Measure N is a citizen’s initiative that was created and qualified by several of the cannabis business owners operating under L.A.’s current limited immunity rules.

     

    Measure N would establish specific rules for the commercial regulation and taxation of marijuana in L.A. and would prevent the council from making any additional changes to the regulations without specific approval from the voters. In short, Measure N would:

     

    • Give priority licensing to the current established medical marijuana dispensaries that are complying with existing law.
    • Maintain 135 dispensaries and allow the City Council to increase the number of dispensaries but not decrease them.
    • Allow the city to issue Medical Cannabis Regulation and Safety Act (MCRSA) related permits including manufacturing, cultivation, and sale.
    • Limit enforcement options against permit holders who violate the operational standards and guidelines.
    • Allow sales of recreational marijuana by permit holders at an 8% tax rate.

     

    Because Measure N also takes power away from the city to make certain changes to these laws, a voter initiative would be required if changes became necessary.

     

    A Two-Tiered Enforcement System?

     

     

    Measure N also creates a two-tiered enforcement system for violators of the city’s regulations. This system would establish criminal penalties for those who don’t hold licenses, but only allow for a misdemeanor to be levied against permit holders who violate these same regulations after a series of other penalties are levied:

    • 1st violation: a correction letter
    • 2nd violation: a two year period of infraction
    • 3rd violation: a two year period of permit suspension
    • 4th violation: misdemeanor

     

    Therefore, the initiative would allow for criminal penalties to be levied against non-permit holders only. It’s possible this type of enforcement system would face legal review.

     

    The proponents of Measure N have now abandoned their support of the initiative in favor of the city’s counter-initiative—Measure M.

     

    Measure M: the Council’s Counter-Initiative

     

     

    Measure M was created by the City Council in response to the qualification of Measure N. Since the City Council’s countermeasure seems to strike a compromise that the proponents of Measure N found acceptable, they have abandoned Measure N and thrown their full support behind the City Council’s Measure M.

     

    Measure M will give the City Council the power to tax and regulate Los Angeles’s marijuana industry under the rules of Prop 64, which is now law.

     

    Unlike Measure N, with Measure M the City Council will retain the authority to amend existing regulations and adopt new ones. But there’s a catch—they must conduct public hearings with the citizens first.

     

    These public hearings will focus on commercialization of recreational and medical cannabis, and how license applications for current compliant businesses will be processed, among other topics.

     

    Measure M will also authorize:

    • New criminal penalties for violations.
    • New nuisance abatement rules.
    • Increase in fines for use of power and water with non-compliant cannabis activity.
    • Disconnection of power and water for non-compliant cannabis activity.
    • New business taxes which include:
      -A 10% tax on gross recreational sales.
      -A 5% tax on gross medical sales (this is a 1% reduction from the current level).
      -A 1% tax on transportation, testing or research sales.
      -A 2% tax on manufacturing, cultivation and other commercial activity.

     

    Why Are These Measures Necessary? Isn’t It Already Legal?

     

    With the passage of the Medical Cannabis Regulation and Safety Act by the state legislature and Prop 64 by the people, Los Angeles’s current rules under Proposition D are no longer compliant with state law.

     

    Measure D was a simple limited immunity measure. Basically it provides prosecution immunity to a select group of people who were legally operating cannabis dispensaries before a certain date—IF they followed a specific set of rules.

     

    Since the state now requires dispensary applicants to show proof of city licensing or other positive approval of operations, an agreement not to prosecute does not qualify L.A.’s current operators to apply for a state license. Additionally, specific licenses are necessary for cultivation, transport, testing, manufacturing and other activities.

     

    Los Angeles must pave the way for new business licensing if cannabis businesses are to survive in the city under the new state regulations.

     

    Why Didn’t L.A. Offer Business Licenses in the First Place?

     

     

    Los Angeles, like many other California cities and counties, was reticent to issue business licenses to dispensaries because marijuana is still considered illegal on a federal level. These attitudes are changing now as medical marijuana is legal in more than half the states in the U.S., and is fully legal in seven states and Washington D.C.

     

    Council president Herb Wesson spearheaded the effort to put the countermeasure on the ballot, which is now endorsed by Police Chief Beck and Police Union head, Craig Lally.

     

    With the passage of Prop 64, many local municipalities are jumping to ensure they have taken full control of their licensing authority before the state begins handing out official business licenses in 2018.

     

    Others are working just as hard to ensure that marijuana businesses will not be allowed at all in their communities. Long story short—Los Angeles wisely opted for regulation.

     

    So, What Can You Do?

     

     

    That’s easy, VOTE! Make sure that you’re registered to vote, that you know where your nearest voting location is, and that you vote YES on Measure M.

  2. Presidential Candidates’ Views on Marijuana in the 2016 Election

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    Anyone who has a pulse and has been paying any attention to the 2016 Presidential Election is bound to feel disenchanted with our options for the next leader of the free world, especially when you see which candidates are leading the pack, and what their views on marijuana are.

     

    What you'll learn about:

    [Click any of the section titles below to jump there]

     

    Will the Next POTUS Be Pro-Cannabis? 

    2016 candidates views on marijuana

     

    Most of the time, when I listen to candidates speak, I find myself grinding my teeth and wondering if/how some of these people ever passed the fourth grade. Sometimes I don’t even watch. But this election season, I have been, closely, because marijuana is on the table.

     

    In my eyes, it’s the only real silver-lining to this reality-TV-shit-show. Never before has the full legalization of marijuana been used as a serious debate topic on live national television. Never before have candidates been forced to explicitly state their views on marijuana.

     

    It’s made for quite an entertaining debate season. Still, the nation as the whole has a lot of catching up to do (take Ohio as a recent example) when it comes to views on cannabis regulation, but for the issue of marijuana legalization to be discussed during the Democratic Debate, and medicinal marijuana to be discussed during the Republican Debates, is still impressive. 

     

    Obviously states like Colorado, Washington, Oregon and Alaska, as well as the District of Columbia, are trail-blazers for all other states to (hopefully) follow, but how close are we to voting in a President who is willing to legalize and regulate the use of cannabis for recreational (i.e. not just medicinal) reasons?

     

    Is it possible that the next POTUS is going to change the game, end the war on drugs and join sophisticated and sensibly-minded countries like Holland, Portugal, Uruguay, Ireland and Germany in decriminalizing or legalizing the magical plant that is Mary Jane? 

     

    The voters in 2016 will decide.  Hopefully, that means you will help decide.

     

    In order to help inform ourselves on where our Presidential Candidates stand on the issue of full marijuana legalization, and what their views on marijuana are, I created an in-depth list based on meticulous online research.  I have only included the top candidates because let’s face it: most of these ridiculous people have less than a 5% approval rating and should just go home already.

     

    Republican Views on Marijuana

     

    DONALD TRUMP

    Donald Trump's Views on Marijuana

     

    Donald Trump is a billionaire real estate mogul, business tycoon and Reality TV personality who claims America can be great again but clearly isn’t great now.  He was born in New York City and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a degree in Economics in 1968.  He later took control of his father’s company and built a successful real estate empire.

     

    He has been married multiple times, mostly to women of Eastern European origin, and owns many casinos and hotels.  He has been associated with the “Birther Movement” which actively promotes the idea that Obama was born outside of the US and should be removed from office. 

     

    In the past, Trump has supported and contributed to various Democratic and Independent campaigns but now seeks the Republican nomination for President. He is best known for financing his own campaign while refusing all donations, and for his racist/derogatory remarks against Latinos, Muslims and other groups.

     

    He is ranked # 2 (formerly he had been in the lead) amongst Republicans because he harnesses most people’s distrust of political insiders and the traditional political establishment, and represents what some consider to be real change. Yet still for others, Trump is just extremely entertaining.

     

    Trump’s platform remains vague but includes: 

    • simplifying the tax code
    • decreasing taxes on the middle class
    • taxing some of the nation’s wealthiest individuals (and some corporations)
    • reducing the national debt by increasing cuts to social services
    • supporting the Second Amendment as the law stands now
    • fixing our mental health system
    • defending the rights of law-abiding gun owners
    • creating a nation-wide law to conceal carry
    • creating legislation that would allow military personnel to carry guns on military bases and in recruiting centers
    • enforcing harsh immigration laws
    • building a wall along the entire Southern border of the US and making the Mexican government pay for it

    What does “The Donald” think about marijuana?

     

    In 1990 Trump said he supported legalizing all drugs but now he claims he opposes the legalization and regulation of marijuana.  He does however, show some support for the legal use of medical marijuana and has stated that he supports states’ rights to choose how to deal with marijuana reform without federal interference. 

     

    To quote Trump in 1990 & his views on marijuana:

    “We’re losing badly the War on Drugs. You have to legalize drugs to win that war. You have to take the profit away from these drug czars.”

     

    To quote Trump now:

    I’d say [regulating marijuana] is bad. Medical marijuana is another thing, but I think it’s bad and I feel strongly about that.”

     

    Donald Trump is one of the most controversial candidates running for the presidency, alongside Bernie Sanders (obviously for completely different reasons).  Both are political outsiders who have done very well in the presidential run despite establishmentarians claiming they would fail.

     

    BEN CARSON

    Ben Carson Views on Marijuana

     

    Carson is a former neurosurgeon and the only African American candidate running for the presidency in 2016.  He was born to a poor, single mother in Detroit. As a child he had problems at school and a very bad temper, but developed a love for reading instilled in him by his mother (who only had a third grade education).

     

    This thirst for new literature bloomed into a life-long love of learning and allowed Carson to improve his grades, graduate from Yale and go on to medical school in Michigan.  He worked at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore for 29 years and was the first surgeon to successfully separate Siamese twins (attached at the head) in 1987.  He has been accused of objecting to Planned Parenthood’s fetal tissue harvesting program, despite having worked in that field for a while himself.

     

    Carson’s platform includes:

    • banning abortion in all circumstances, including incest and rape
    • balancing the budget
    • keeping Guantanamo Bay open and fully funded
    • repealing Obamacare
    • protecting the Second Amendment
    • deepening our financial, political and military commitment to Israel
    • other conservative stances on issues ranging from education to reforming the tax code.

    What does Ben Carson think about marijuana?

     

    While Carson has shown limited support for medical marijuana he prescribes to the “gateway drug” theory and firmly stands against the full legalization of marijuana.  He has claimed that he would enforce federal laws in states like Colorado.  He has also said that if elected president he would not only continue the War on Drugs but actually “intensify it.”     

     

    To quote Mr. Carson & his views on marijuana:

     

    “I think medical use of marijuana in compassionate cases certainly has been proven to be useful. But recognize that marijuana is what’s known as a gateway drug. It tends to be a starter drug for people who move onto heavier duty drugs – sometimes legal, sometimes illegal – and I don’t think this is something that we really want for our society. You know, we’re gradually just removing all the barriers to hedonistic activity and you know, it’s just, we’re changing so rapidly to a different type of society and nobody is getting a chance to discuss it because, you know, it’s taboo. It’s politically incorrect. You’re not supposed to talk about these things.”

     

    When asked if he would continue the war on drugs: “Absolutely. I would intensify it.” 

     

    JEB BUSH

    Jeb Bush Views on Marijuana

     

    Jeb Bush is the younger brother of former US President George W. Bush and the son of former US President George H.W. Bush.  He is the former Governor of Florida and a businessman.  He married his college sweetheart, whom he met in a square in Mexico City while on a college semester abroad.

     

    He has recently been mocked in the media for stating that his brother kept our country safe during his presidency and cannot be blamed for the endless war in the Middle East or the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center on September 11th, 2001.  He trails in the polls behind Donald Trump and Ben Carson.

     

    Bush’s platform includes, but is not limited to:

    • lowering taxes on “everyone” (including Big Business) so that we may be more competitive with China
    • stopping government overspending (he cites a bill Paul Ryan has endorsed)
    • defeating ISIS by expanding US military and diplomatic power in the region and getting help from our allies in the Middle East
    • improving border patrol infrastructure (including use of drones)
    • finding a way to initiate criminal and other background checks on immigrants already in the US
    • sending people home who have overstayed their visas,
    • improving the V.A.
    • approving the Keystone XL pipeline
    • increasing our reliance on the export of oil and natural gas.  

     

    Jeb is currently seeking to crawl out from under the Bush Family’s shadow. 

     

    What does Jeb Bush think about marijuana?

     

    Bush’s stance on marijuana legalization is a bleak one: he has a long history of supporting the War on Drugs, he and his wife are on the advisory board for a far-right, anti-marijuana organization called the Drug Free America Foundation and despite admitting to smoking pot as a youth, he continues to oppose the legalization of marijuana including medical marijuana. 

     

    He does however, support the states right to choose how to deal with marijuana use and feels the federal government should not interfere in states decisions on this issue.

     

    To quote Mr. Bush & his views on marijuana:

    “I thought [legalizing marijuana in Colorado] was a bad idea, but states ought to have that right to do it. I would have voted ‘no’ if I was in Colorado.” 

     

    MARCO RUBIO

    Marco Rubio Views on Marijuana

     

    Marco Rubio is a Senator from Florida and former Speaker of the Florida House of Representatives.  He is a child of immigrants from Cuba who came to the US searching for the “American Dream.” He grew up in Miami and Las Vegas and watched his parents work their way up to the Middle Class. 

     

    His platform includes:

    • stopping the spread of Communism from Cuba and halting Chinese economic influence on the U.S. by clarifying our “moral stance” and reversing the Obama administration’s policies regarding these countries
    • reigning in government spending
    • ending Common Core
    • imposing hard-core immigration policies and stopping people from having “anchor-babies”
    • standing strong against Iran by ending the Nuclear deal
    • standing against ISIS through increased military presence
    • continuing to prop up and endorse the state of Israel
    • ending Putin’s aggression
    • putting an end to Sanctuary Cities
    • strengthening the Second Amendment, and more.

     

    Senator Rubio has been trailing Carson and Trump in the polls but is still considered a viable contender for the Republican nomination, alongside Jeb Bush. 

     

    What does Marco Rubio think about marijuana?

     

    Rubio is completely opposed to the legalization of marijuana and only supports medical marijuana if non-psychoactive forms of cannabis are used.  He is one of the least marijuana-friendly candidates running for office and despite some polls claiming 58% of Americans support legalization, he will not budge on the issue.  He believes that states that have legalized marijuana should be punished by the federal government and that the federal government is not enforcing the law the way it should.

     

    To quote Rubio & his views on marijuana:

    “I’m against the legalization of marijuana.” 

    “Marijuana is illegal under federal law. That should be enforced.”

     

    Democratic Views on Marijuana

     

    HILLARY CLINTON

    Hillary Clinton Views on Marijuana

     

    Clinton is and has been well-known for decades.  She is a former lawyer, the former First Lady (her husband Bill Clinton was one of the most popular US Presidents in recent history despite being impeached for lying about his extra-marital activities), former Senator from New York and she served as Secretary of State during Obama’s first term as president. 

     

    She holds sway over many voters because she is a strong woman and the only woman on the Democratic side who is running for the presidency.

     

    She was favored to win the presidency in 2008 but failed due to the mobilization of millions of voters who typically don’t bother to show up and vote, who were swayed by Obama’s “Yes We Can” mantra.  Hillary is hell-bent on winning the 2016 election and becoming the first woman president of the U.S. 

     

    However, many are disenchanted with her for various reasons, including but not limited to: her flip-flopping on numerous issues over the years, the Benghazi fiasco, her foreign policy, the scandal surrounding the Clinton Foundation funding and the fact that she comes from money and has been “bought” in the past by big industry and the big banks which she now appears to be trying to divorce her campaign from (despite accepting their donations).

     

    Clinton’s current platform includes:

    • Improving gun control measures
    • including background checks (she is the most anti-gun candidate on the ballot)
    • making health care more affordable
    • immigration reform
    • campaign finance reform
    • creating a new student debt system (that sounds very complicated and doesn’t actually make college free)
    • criminal justice reform
    • making America “green”

     

    Clinton espouses to believe all these things but hasn’t believed them for very long and many question her sincerity.  However, if she means it, her platform is pretty good. 

     

    She recently claimed to be against for-profit prisons but it appears she may have accepted campaign contributions from the for-profit prison industry, although now she claims she is giving those donations to charity.  Only time will tell if Hillary means what she says.

     

    What does Hillary Clinton think about marijuana?

     

    Clinton supports medical marijuana legalization but refuses to show support for full marijuana legalization. She claims states like Colorado are “laboratories for democracy” and that she feels that the legalization of marijuana should be dealt with by the states, not the federal government.

     

    To quote Clinton & her views on marijuana:

    “I really believe it’s important that states like Colorado lead the way, so that we can learn what works and what doesn’t work. And I would certainly not want the federal government to interfere with the legal decision made by the people of Colorado, and enforced by your elected officials, as to how you should be conducting this business that you have approved. So, no, I want to give you the space and I want other states to learn from you, what works and what doesn’t work.” 

     

    BERNIE SANDERS

    Bernie Sanders Views on Marijuana

     

    Sanders is a U.S. Senator from Vermont.  He is by far the most radical, transparent and consistent of the Democratic Party bunch, although many people have trouble with the label “democratic socialist”.  People just read some books on it, it’s not that scary. 

     

    SEE ALSO: Bernie Sanders Proposes Taking Marijuana Off the Governments Most Dangerous Substances List

     

    He has built a platform based on:

    • taking on the Wall Street Banksters
    • getting corporate money out of politics
    • free higher education and medical care for all
    • the idea of building a truly exceptional America – one in which our children will have the bright future they deserve. 

     

    Bernie has no Super PAC and all of the money his campaign has raised, $44.6 million in total since April 2015, has come from almost 1 million small-scale individual contributions of less than $200. 

     

    What does Bernie Sanders think about marijuana?

     

    Sanders supports the national legalization of medical marijuana and recently admitted that if he was a voter in Nevada he would vote YES for legalizing marijuana for recreational use as well. 

     

    This implies he supports full legalization, even for recreational use. 

     

    Marijuana has been decriminalized in Vermont and as mayor of Burlington, Vermont, Bernie made sure that the police force focused their efforts on preventing violence, rather than busting people for pot.

     

    He has been extremely critical of the War on Drugs and has been very vocal about the need for a more progressive and humane way of dealing with true addicts. 

     

    He feels that the state has failed people by arresting millions of non-violent citizens and throwing them in jail for drugs, including marijuana and has stated that if he becomes president, the War on Drugs will end.  Are you feeling the Bern yet?

     

    To quote Senator Sanders at the Democratic Debate in Las Vegas:

    I suspect I would vote yes. And I would vote yes because I am seeing in this country too many lives being destroyed for non-violent offenses. We have a criminal justice system that lets CEOs on Wall Street walk away, and yet we are imprisoning or giving jail sentences to young people who are smoking marijuana. I think we have to think through this war on drugs which has done an enormous amount of damage.” 

     

    Bernie makes a great point: it is time to start arresting the real criminals (i.e. the people who are responsible for crashing the economy in 2008 or murderers and rapists who inflict willful harm on others) and stop imprisoning people for their use of a plant.

     

    Just to prove how committed he is to legalizing marijuana, putting a serious dent in the War on Drugs and supporting millions of Americans around the country who are tired of the government interfering in their private affairs, Senator Sanders filed a Senate Bill just this week that would give states total control over the decision about legalizing marijuana for recreational purposes and decriminalize marijuana on the Federal level. 

     

    If the bill passes the Senate it would mean that dispensaries and growers in states where marijuana has been legalized would be able to use federally-backed banking institutions and would be a landslide victory against the continuation of the War on Drugs.

     

    MARTIN O’MALLEY

    Martin O'Malley Views on Marijuana

     

    O’Malley is the former Governor of Maryland and in my humble opinion, his policies may or may not be directly responsible for the violence and police corruption that has plagued the city of Baltimore before and after the high-profile murder of Freddie Gray by police. However, he seems to think he can win the presidency despite his mediocre-at-best performance at the Democratic Debate last week.  We shall see. 

     

    His platform is a decent one and includes but is not limited to:

    • 100% renewable energy nation-wide by 2050
    • cutting youth and veteran employment rates entirely
    • a comprehensive (but maybe too complex) plan to combat the student aid crisis and new immigration reforms.

     

    Sounds pretty good to me, Martin.  Wait, except for one thing… 

     

    What does Martin O’Malley think about marijuana?

     

    O’Malley does not support in any way the full legalization of marijuana, nor does he personally support marijuana for medicinal use or any other use. 

     

    Despite his personal opinion on marijuana, he did, however, as Governor of Maryland in 2014, sign laws into effect that decriminalized marijuana possession for small amounts and that created a workable medical marijuana program. 

     

    He claims that if he were elected President, he would try to get marijuana re-classified to Schedule II, down from Schedule I. 

     

    But, I doubt this since under O’Malley’s watch, Maryland has become 4th in the country for marijuana arrests and more people have been arrested there in recent years for marijuana than for all violent offenses.

     

    To quote O’Malley & his views on marijuana:

    We’ve seen what drug addiction has done to the people of our state, to the people of our city,” O’Malley said. “This drug, its use and its abuse can be a gateway.”

     

    Sounds like the same old shit to me, Martin.

     

    Well, there you have it, a marijuana-lovers guide to the 2016 Presidential hopefuls and their views on marijuana.

     

    I hope that this article helps those of you who wish to push cannabis reform forward, to make informed decisions regarding who you choose to lead the U.S. for the next four years. Happy voting marijuana-lovers!

     

    As always, if you need some inspiration or need to do some real critical thinking as to who you want to lead our great nation, I recommend placing an order for delivery through Nugg! There app makes ordering cannabis an easy, reliable process, instead of the sketchy crap-shoot it is now!