Based on Cannabis tolerance, where would you move?

Where would you rather live(based on whats beneath)?

  • Jamaica

    Votes: 5 10.9%
  • Canada

    Votes: 16 34.8%
  • The Netherlands

    Votes: 15 32.6%
  • Australia

    Votes: 10 21.7%

  • Total voters
    46

imtylerdammit

Well-Known Member
[FONT=&quot] Jamaica-Illegal: Cultivation, retail and consumption is illegal. However this is often overlooked and cannabis is sold openly.[/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]Canada-Illegal: Cannabis is a schedule II drug in Canada for amounts larger than 3kg. Amounts smaller than 3kg are classified as Schedule VII, and smaller than 30g as Schedule VIII. It is generally tolerated in small amounts for most of Canada (3 grams). It is legal for medicinal use with a federal permit.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]In January 2003, an Ontario court ruled simple possession laws banning cannabis unconstitutional, although it is unclear what the long term implications of this might be.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]In 2007, a Toronto judge ruled that Canada's pot possession laws are unconstitutional after a man argued the country's medicinal marijuana regulations are flawed.[/FONT]

N[FONT=&quot]etherlands[/FONT][FONT=&quot] Legal/Illegal The Dutch politics reasoned that soft drugs do not have physically addictive qualities, and are not more harmful than, say, alcohol. Therefore, the Netherlands allows limited forms of possession and trade in soft-drugs.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]One is allowed to purchase and possess up to five grams of cannabis or hashish. Possessing more is interpreted as intent to trade the larger quantities, which is illegal. Only specially permitted “coffee shops” are allowed to sell soft drugs, and never more than five grams per person, per day. One needs to be 18 or over to access a coffee shop.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]Smoking in public is technically allowed, however in many places prohibited by local regulation, limiting consumption to coffee shops, one's home, or a remote corner of a park.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]Coffee shops are allowed to sell cannabis and hashish (and pay taxes on it), but can not legally buy stock. Also referred to as the ‘backdoor problem.’ Coffee shops have very strict rules to live by and are regularly checked by local authorities. Two strikes is out.[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]Other types of sales is illegal, maximum offence for large scale trade is 4 years in prison.[/FONT]

[FONT=&quot] Australia Illegal (Decriminalized) Certain regions of Australia have decriminalized marijuana possession. In Tasmania, Victoria and Queensland one can be simply ticketed for up to 50 grams. If found in possession with intent to supply, convictions apply.[/FONT]

[FONT=&quot]In the Australian Capital Territory, possession of up to 25 grams, or two plants, is not a criminal offence but carries a $100 fine. In South Australia possession of small quantities of cannabis is decriminalised attracting fines similar to a parking ticket. However, penalties for cultivation of marijuana have become harsher since the widespread advent of large scale indoor crops in South Australia. There is much confusion on the subject, with many people believing that possession of a certain amount is legal. In Western Australia, possession of up to two plants is accepted for private use, excess of the latter can face fines of over $150. In New South Wales and Tasmania, cannabis use is illegal and attracts fines. In Queensland it is a criminal offence to be in possession of any amount of cannabis, people charged must face court and can be convicted. Possession of cannabis or any schedule 1 or 2 drug specified in the Drugs Misuse Regulation 1987 carries a maximum prison sentence of 15 years in Queensland, however jail terms for minor possessions are very rare. Possession of smoking utensils or anything used to smoke cannabis is also a criminal offence in Queensland.

Northern California-Illegal/Tolerated:
[/FONT]Cannabis is believed to be the single largest cash crop in California, and the economies of large areas of northern California (where it is, at worst, tolerated) are dominated by cannabis cultivation.
 

jahman2222

New Member
it would say jamica because of the beauty but that place is filled with to many gangsters and shit for me..so id say jamica if i was on a nice part..other than that..you forgot california, thatd be my second choice
 

Gryphonn

Well-Known Member
It'd have to be Oz for me too.

Save the plane trip
The actual penalties for possession aren't as harsh as Jamaica can be.
It's far warmer in most parts than Canada and The Netherlands.

If the Netherlands were on the Tropic of Capricorn, I'd move there though.

But then Northern Cali has always sounded like a pretty laid back place. Is that true?
 

genfranco

Well-Known Member
Spain’s marijuana policy is rather unique in that it encourages marijuana smokers to grow their own product. Personal consumption and home cultivation have been decriminalized, but buying or selling marijuana/hashish remains a criminal offense.
 

genfranco

Well-Known Member
Spain’s marijuana policy is rather unique in that it encourages marijuana smokers to grow their own product. Personal consumption and home cultivation have been decriminalized, but buying or selling marijuana/hashish remains a criminal offense.

i live in cali though... much easier to make money in the US... and in cali you can become legal fairly easy..... let me know if you live in cali and want to know how.... hehehehe
 

genfranco

Well-Known Member
Spain

Spain was one of the first modern European countries to decriminalize marijuana -- and one of the last to implement needle exchanges. The Spanish government paid a steep price for their initial reluctance to allow harm reduction measures. Spain has the highest HIV rates in Europe among intravenous drug users. These days needle exchanges - including needle exchanges in prisons - pill testing at raves, methadone maintenance and heroin maintenance trials are among the many public health interventions that are supported by autonomous regions throughout Spain. Drug use and possession for personal use do not constitute a criminal offence under Spanish law. However, public consumption is penalized with administrative fines.
Due to its proximity to Morocco and historical ties to Latin America, Spain serves as a transit point for Moroccan hashish and South American cocaine. Like the Netherlands, Spain treats drug consumption as a health problem, but participates in global interdiction efforts and has signed bilateral anti-drug agreements with third countries, especially in Latin America and Europe. Laws against trafficking are among the most severe in Europe. Spain’s marijuana policy is rather unique in that it encourages marijuana smokers to grow their own product. Personal consumption and home cultivation have been decriminalized, but buying or selling marijuana/hashish remains a criminal offense.
By U.S. standards Spanish drug policy is very permissive. Spain’s drinking age for alcohol ranges from 16 to 18, depending on the autonomous region. Treatment instead of incarceration initiatives like drug courts are designed to mainstream illicit drug offenders and as such do not preclude social welfare benefits denied to drug offenders in the U.S. Drug offenders in Spain are eligible for unemployment benefits. As one of the last countries in Europe to embrace harm reduction, Spanish drug policy continues to evolve. Public drug consumption that was once common during the post-Franco cultural revolution of the 1980’s is now frowned upon. Administrative fines for public consumption once thought to exist on paper only are now enforced in many autonomous regions. In response to a growing problem of alcohol intoxication among teenagers at ad hoc street parties, public consumption of alcohol was outlawed in March of 2002. Outdoor cafes and bars with patios are exempted from “La Ley del Botellon.”
 

OGkushOG

Well-Known Member
Afghanistan/Pakistan

I would just go to some remote part of the mountains and whenever I wanted bud, I would just walk to my backyard to the forests of marijuana.
 

genfranco

Well-Known Member
Afghanistan/Pakistan

I would just go to some remote part of the mountains and whenever I wanted bud, I would just walk to my backyard to the forests of marijuana.

Yeah but i couldnt deal with all the arabs.. they dont like Christians there.

ANd by they dont like i mean they hunt them down.
 
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