Can anyone explain why it took a constitutional amendment to prohibit alcohol, yet marijuana was prohibited by a simple act of Congress?
No they cannot rationalize that one.
Can anyone explain why it took a constitutional amendment to prohibit alcohol, yet marijuana was prohibited by a simple act of Congress?
Hmmm. I’m just gonna get my wife a card....then there’s no issue. (wink-wink)
Well I guess suing whomever I have to for usurpation of fundamental rights afforded to me in the 2nd amendment which have no provision including the usage of a plant that somehow disparage and strip me of said 2nd amendment.
Especially when the Federal Government had no power to regulate this plant to begin with, in any realm of law. These laws were dreamed up by the United Nations. And the war on Drugs is a GLOBALIST agenda enacted by TREATIES I was not party to.
I'm not fully versed on the constitution, maybe Dave can help, but I don't remember anything about a right to alter your mood. If being prescribed opioids was illegal, I'm sure there would also be a statement regarding that on the 4473. If we don't like a law, we have resources available to address that.
You just said it, within confines of the constitution.
And they cannot impede on the 2nd amendment over plant matter. Nothing gives them the authority in that document. They cannot give that authority to an International treaty 57 years ago and impede upon me born after 1980. Sorry.
No they cannot rationalize that one.
A followup: I just read the ATF letter carefully, and the ruling is less nonsensical than I first thought. (g)(3) covers possession, but the letter also cites (d)(3), which applies to the dealer, and includes language about having "reason to believe" the buyer is an unlawful user. That's consistent with the position that having a card gives rise to a reasonable belief that the person uses.
One more reason we need to end the stupid prohibition on a plant.
Can anyone explain why it took a constitutional amendment to prohibit alcohol, yet marijuana was prohibited by a simple act of Congress?
Though Goldstein is best known for representing those charged with dope crimes, one of his most celebrated wins was a 1978 appeal of a gun case. Goldstein appealed a case involving several Texas men who carried out a daring jailbreak from a Mexican prison across the border from the West Texas town of Eagle Pass. The incident, known in the media as the Piedras Negras jailbreak, resulted in the Texans freeing about a dozen American prisoners charged with drug offenses from the Mexican jail. Nobody was hurt in the raid, but the U.S. government subsequently charged the men with violating gun trafficking laws by bringing a sawed-off shotgun across the border for the raid.
Goldstein won the appeal by arguing that the Texans did not knowingly and intentionally commit a crime because the gunrunning statutes were spelled out in a thicket of administrative regulations that the men could not have been expected to know.
“To find out whether taking a shotgun across the border violated the law, you had to go to the code of federal regulations,” Goldstein said.
The same argument of intent could be used to defend someone who runs afoul of the law when it cuts across gun purchases and marijuana use, Goldstein said, adding: “Why should a gun seller be in peril of breaking the law for selling to someone who lies about being a marijuana user?”
"A federal appeals court ruled that a federal ban on the sale of guns to medical marijuana card holders does not violate the Second Amendment. The ruling by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals applies to the nine Western states that fall under the court's jurisdiction, including California, Washington and Oregon. (The Associated Press)"
https://www.oregonlive.com/today/index.ssf/2016/08/us_court_upholds_ban_on_sellin.html
Just in case anyone in Oregon is interested...
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