Maryland says yes to Dispenseraries.

moobyghost

Active Member
The Maryland Senate voted on Saturday to allow patients access to medical marijuana at state-licensed dispensaries. The bill now moves to the state's lower chamber.
The bill was approved overwhelmingly, with bipartisan support and without objections or discussion, by a 35-12 margin.

Maryland would join 14 other states in legalizing medical marijuana. The neighboring District of Columbia legalized it in a 1998 referendum that was only recently allowed by Congress to go into effect. The District's city council is writing rules to establish the city's medical marijuana policy.
Current Maryland law allows defendants charged with pot possession to cite a medical necessity defense. If a judge deems the drug to be beneficial, a maximum hundred dollar civil fine is imposed.
Lawmakers and advocates argued that the law unfairly forced patients to obtain marijuana in the black market. The new law would bring transparency and regulation to the industry.
"I'm very proud of my Senate colleagues today for voting to provide some of our most vulnerable residents with the compassion and care that they deserve," said Sen. David Brinkley (R-Frederick), the bill's sponsor and a two-time cancer survivor. "Anyone who has watched a loved one suffer from a debilitating illness would agree that we should not stand between doctors and patients, or deprive seriously ill people safe access to a legitimate medicine if it can help them cope with their illness."
Maryland State Senator Jamie Raskin (D-Silver Spring), often cited as one of the most talented state legislators in the nation, cosponsored the measure. "We think this bill offers the most carefully crafted medical marijuana law in the country," said Raskin. "It offers legal protection and safe medical access to patients who are desperately in need and takes every possible measure to prevent abuse. I'm hopeful that our colleagues in the House will give this proposal serious consideration, and make Maryland's medical marijuana law a national model for how to promote medical privacy, social compassion, and security in administration."

The medical marijuana movement is surging across the country. This year, more than a dozen other states, including New York, Illinois, Delaware, South Dakota, Arizona and Kansas, are considering medical marijuana laws. If present trends continue, more than half the population will soon live in states where medical marijuana is legal.
Meanwhile, California voters will be asked in November whether to legalize it for all adults, rather than just the ill. Oregon and Washington state may also see similar ballot questions if organizers obtain enough signatures.
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Democrats strongly backed the War on Drugs, frightened of being labeled as "soft on crime." Progressives, however, are now pushing for the party to rethink its approach.


Ryan Grim of Huffington Post
So is it me or is MD a bit of a hypocrite? Current laws state if you get busted with MJ and you have a doctors not on you, then you will just get a ticket, no medical note on you and you go to jail but you can plead medical as your defense to the judge who can let you go if he/she sees fit.


Now MD says ok, we will allow dispensaries so that people don't have to go to the black market, yet they won't make it completely medical legal so that anyone can carry a card and grow/medicate with peace of mind.
 
I think they see the corruption already taking place in cali....and are writing a bill to keep abuse to a minimum. It's a step in the right direction.
 
I understand that, and I condone the current legislation, but what I don't get is why they just don't make it completely medical like the 14 other states, they are the only one that will still prosecute if I understand the law correctly.
 
I think it is because of what I just posted...they see abuse already happening in gray laws like in cali...they are buttoning it up as tight as they can....for the seriously ill only.
 
They're not taking a step in the right direction ticketing patients trying to head home with the medication they just picked up.

They are taking a step in the right direction if they would place security/ police to wait by dispensaries to catch the stupid fucking kids who go to the clinics with a car full of friends waiting outside to see what they got. Then they all leave to blaze...

They're not taking a step in the right direction by ticketing patients who look "healthy" because they could very well be a caretaker of someone who is so ill they cannot leave the bed.

Whoever made those medical laws is an asshole.
 
They just want to make sure only the seriously ill get on board the MMJ train. i agree wholeheartedly.

Subverting MMJ is a sure way to BLOCK further relaxation of weed for the general public.

Cali is a mess in this regard.
 
Yeah but I don't look seriously ill, I am a manic depressant with anxiety and suicidal tendencies, but you can't tell any of that by looking at me.
 
The seriously ill aren't the only people in need of a healthier alternative to harmful chemicals that are mass produced in pill form. :rolleyes:

People need to have their eyes stretched open so far their skin rips... I swear...

/facepalm
 
true....but that is NOT what the MMJ program is for..... baby steps... or the whole thing will collapse and be rejected....again.
 
My shrink put me on a 3 week trial of abilify, the anti-depressant for your anti-depressant, that used to be a phsycotic drug... yeah, well anyway, I call to see how much the pills are in case it works, and they are $400 for a months supply.

No thank you, I will stick with pot (and Zoloft)
 
We'll be stuck on baby steps for ANOTHER decade until we throw out the bias old prudes in office. We've been at this for way too fucking long now, marijuana should be legalized. Find a plausible reason why it shouldn't that hasn't already been deemed bullshit.

Enoughs enough. The government and their chemically induced products are murdering more than any fucking war or terrorist act, we have a healthy alternative that relieves multiple ailments for millions of different people and can also benefit the shit-dirty-corrupt economy that revolves around oil and pharms.
 
everyday that goes by, i am believing more and more that dispensaries/sales should be kept illegal.... the only thing that should be legal in regards to pot are possession and personal cultivation
 
Because..... it's becoming abundantly clear that that is NOT what we are headed for? :wink:

I've said it before.... legalization can mean MANY things... be careful what you wish for....
 
Because..... it's becoming abundantly clear that that is NOT what we are headed for? :wink:

I've said it before.... legalization can mean MANY things... be careful what you wish for....


its always been like this even hypothetically.... it has to go one way or the other eventually... either it goes my way, and we are able to grow for ourselves and be left alone.... or most likely, it will go your way... commercializeed so that some rich bastard can get richer off of it
 
Indeed it can mean many things. But whatever the outcome will be a direct reflection on our government... so I can't wait to see if we fall down the cliche American path of big business and corruption... or finally pull our heads out of our asses.
 
hhahah.... it's all about TAXES.... the govt. will take the path of LEAST resistance.

Placing the means of production into a rigid and CONTROLLABLE producer(s).

Hey... it isn't MY way...:lol: I just have a knack for predicting these types of things. And yes...that has made me mucho $$$...:lol: But not with weed....not yet anyways...but I am looking into being a producer. I have the facilities...
 
I totally understand, I'm not denying any possible outcome of legalization... but either way it would do a lot of good. If I can get a job with a marijuana producing company that is also hiring 10's to the 100's more employees per location? I'd say we fixed a large chunk of our unemployed. But... another option is hemp > rival product companies and those companies going out of business, thus losing the employees the marijuana industry just gained...

Who knows, either way it doesn't seem like it would ruin us.
 
It won't have much effect on the economy...one way or another... IMHO.

It WILL have a great effect on reducing crime and keeping kids form encountering heroin and crack...when all they want is some weed. It will also reduce our prison system costs and BENEFIT all those who rot in jail for no good reason....taking away their chance at CONTRIBUTING to the society and the economy.
 
There's a lot of benefits from hemp that have yet to be tested... if it was legalized and scientists could experiment without getting busted or having to get certain authorization... who knows the outcome. Yeah they've experimented but not some of the amazing scientists who work for crazy companies lol.
 
The maximum civil fine would be $100. Not the fine would be $100. I'd imagine most judges would say "Ok, have a nice day" if they could prove the medical need. The "need" is the question, though!
 
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