Why does Trudeau dawdle when benefits of Cannabis control go to the evil side?

Danbones

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Sep 23, 2015
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www.youtube.com/watch?v=_VNZjXv3LKI
Hillary Clinton: "We Can't Legalize Drugs, There's Too Much Money In It!"

yeah, that damned hydro bill...
may have to be paid twice by some

cheers to decent outdoor
 

French Patriot

Council Member
Sep 17, 2012
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www.youtube.com/watch?v=_VNZjXv3LKI

Hillary Clinton: "We Can't Legalize Drugs, There's Too Much Money In It!"


I hope all here recognize that that clip and the information given could apply to all psychotropic drugs.


The gangsters used to kill each other for the money.


Todays gangsters kill our children for it.


Come on P.M. Trudeau, get with the program that LeDain set out and save some lives instead of letting gangsters take them.


I beg those with Liberal friends to pass on that little message.


Regards
DL
 

Danbones

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Sep 23, 2015
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geez Bill Clintons decimated mexico's economy with his democratic economic policies and left many with no choice but to be in the illegal drug trade
and of course without the money laundering many too big to fail banks would go under

so..that's who is killing the kids

not to mention the war on drugs itself:

"Bill Clinton Apologizes to Mexico for the Drug War, Now It's President Obama's Turn to End It

At a speech in Mexico last week, former President Bill Clinton seemingly apologized for the destruction unleashed upon Mexico by the war on drugs.

Addressing a group of business leaders, students, and politicians, Clinton said, “I wish you had no narco-trafficking, but it’s not really your fault.” He explained that so-called “successes” in the U.S.-led drug war in other countries had not eliminated the drug trade, but rather just pushed it into Mexico and Central America. “I apologize for that,” he said.

But that’s just the tip of the iceberg of the apology the U.S. owes Mexico. The U.S. gives hundreds of millions of dollars in military and police aid to Mexico each year – the vast majority of which is funneled into the disastrous drug war. The U.S. government has spent roughly $3 billion since 2008 on the drug war in Mexico alone.

The results of this massive drug war escalation have been catastrophic: more than 100,000 people murdered; more than 25,000 people disappeared; hundreds of thousands forced to flee their homes; tens of thousands of orphans; incalculable psychological trauma; numerous mass graves in Guerrero, Tamaulipas, Chihuahua and other states – each with dozens, even hundreds of unidentified bodies; and a dramatic increase in human rights violations committed by Mexican security forces, including thousands of documented cases of torture, disappearances and extrajudicial executions.

The revelations of direct participation on the part of local, state and federal security forces in the disappearance of the 43 students in Guerrero shows the depth of the corruption and carnage in Mexico, much of which is fueled by the corrosive, U.S.-funded war on drugs.
Bill Clinton Apologizes to Mexico for the Drug War, Now It's President Obama's Turn to End It | Drug Policy Alliance


...and the liebarrels wanted more of this by electing Hitlary while claiming to be liberal socially conscious do-gooders?
effen HYPOCRITES
;)
 

French Patriot

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Sep 17, 2012
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Good info Danbones.


Trudeau is on the right side now but needs to go further if we to protect the victims of the other types of drug users and get the pushers of adulterated substances off the streets and away fro our kids.


Regards
DL
 

tay

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May 20, 2012
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Legislation to legalize marijuana will be introduced in the House of Commons this spring, the government’s point man on the file confirmed during a visit to Durham Region Friday.

“We’re going to keep our promise,” Bill Blair, parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Justice, said. “But we’re committed to taking the time to do it right.”

Blair met March 10 at Durham Region headquarters with local politicians, first responders, public health workers and others as part of a consultative process that’s taken him across the country. The roundtable format allowed local representatives to hear about the government’s progress with legalization, and also to voice their concerns, he said.

“I think their perspective is a really important one and a really valuable one in making sure the regulations and the controls that we put in place are workable at the local level,” said Blair. “All three levels of government have a responsibility here, and working together collaboratively is the way to get this thing done.”

Central to the government’s rationale for legalization is regulation of a substance that is widely used by Canadians, to encourage “healthful and responsible” use and to wrest control of distribution from criminals, Blair said. The former Toronto police chief said he’s particularly concerned about young people accessing pot, something the current regime of prohibition is failing to prevent.

“The current system is not particularly effective in keeping this drug away from our kids. And it has in many respects created opportunities for the criminal element to profit enormously,” said Blair. “By taking away the profit from organized crime we believe we can make communities safer. Through control of production and distribution, we can do a better job of restricting youth access.”

Blair noted that until legislation is passed, police will continue to target storefront dispensaries. Durham police raided shops in Oshawa and Whitby last summer, laying charges of possession for the purpose of trafficking.

And even after legalization occurs, distribution will be tightly restricted, he said.

“The law is crystal clear on this. We’re not talking about legalizing the activity that’s taking place in those dispensaries. We’re talking about it being distributed through a licensed, regulated regime, not by criminal profiteers,” he said. “What they’re doing isn’t going to be legalized.”

In attendance Friday was Marko Ivancicevic, an Oshawa-based marijuana advocate who provides consulting services for medical cannabis users. He said that while Blair’s efforts to consult with Canadians are laudable, he’s concerned they may not be gathering input from everyone with a stake in the issue.

“They need to get the perspective of everybody that’s going to be affected,” he said. “I think there needs to be a more fulsome discussion with medical marijuana patients and people who have been part of the industry.”

Ivancicevic said that with legalization pending, police should implement alternatives to charging people with simple possession.

“Resources and finances are wasted on simple possession,” he said. “I think that has to stop.”


Law legalizing marijuana to be introduced this spring, Blair says during Durham visit
 

Danbones

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Sep 23, 2015
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with any luck
though if the people who are on ODSP(or similar) still have to pay for marijuana
it might as well stay illegal
 

JamesBondo

House Member
Mar 3, 2012
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Why does Trudeau dawdle when benefits of Cannabis control go to the evil side?


I think it insane not to turn the injustice of prohibition to the justice of control of Cannabis. Canadians deserve it.


If I had Trudeau’s ear, I would ask him to please move the files around and raise the Cannabis legalization file to the top of the heap, --- so that Canada can reap the benefit that comes from repeal of prohibition.


It is a social justice and freedom of choice issue and the constitution needs defence on the rights of individuals.


For the evils of prohibition to grow, all the government needs do, is nothing.


Should we encourage Mr. Trudeau to prioritise on this, --- and right the Cannabis wrong?

Regards
DL















Wait a minute! I've been lied to. Everyone that I know gets their weed from a friend.
 

JLM

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Vernon, B.C.
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Danbones

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Sep 23, 2015
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if they could grow weed they would be doing great up there
;)
big market down south for that stuff
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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What the f**k is 4-20?
I think the Hon. P.M. has far "bigger fish" to fry than cannibus. Maybe start by going up north with a notebook and check out the reserves. Take a drink of the water, check the dwellings for mould. Visit a few of them at dinner time and see what they have to eat!

Why JLM ... you care way too much about humanity to be associated with those Alt-Reich creeps.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit
What the f**k is 4-20?
I think the Hon. P.M. has far "bigger fish" to fry than cannabis. Maybe start by going up north with a notebook and check out the reserves. Take a drink of the water, check the dwellings for mould. Visit a few of them at dinner time and see what they have to eat!

April 20 or 4:20 in the afternoon.

If cocaine had a 420 a Rez would be a good place to partake.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit
Yeah and taking away the sale of weed from on Rez dealers and producers (hopefully) puts money in the right hands