Pubdate: Thu, 09 Apr 2009 Source: North Coast Journal (Arcata, CA) Copyright: 2009 North Coast Journal Contact: http://www.northcoastjournal.com/mailbox/index.html Website: http://www.northcoastjournal.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2833 Author: Rick Siegfried GROWING CONCERNS Editor: Prop. 215 vague and confusing? Really? It is written in plain English (not bullshit legalese) so anyone who speaks English can understand it. A person needs a doctor's recommendation (a prescription is not specified, so a verbal recommendation will do). Limits to the amounts a patient needs were not included because the authors recognized that different conditions and physiologies would require differing amounts of medication. Laws relating to marijuana possession, use and cultivation would not apply to medical cannabis users. Doctors would not be liable to punishment for prescribing pot. What is confusing or vague? The only people who find this vague and confusing are those "intelligent" people who are lawyers, politicians or law enforcement - - people whose lives are consumed with rules, regulations and telling people what to do. These people freaked because they need to have control over everything, and this removed their authority to control a specific aspect of a certain subset of the population. Legalization? No way! The government will overregulate it and probably make it illegal to grow your own. You would have to get your weed from some corporation, and we know how corporations cheapen and degrade every product to maximize profits for shareholders (corporations have forgotten that all their businesses are supported by consumers, not shareholders). Our pot will be full of pesticides and artificial fertilizers. The quality will be degraded. Finally, money will be taken from local individuals and given to giant corporations who hide their money overseas to avoid taxes. At least the locals spend their money in local stores that will pay sales taxes to benefit the local communities. Rick Siegfried, Eureka - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom