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View Full Version : Prop 19 (marijuana) debate. The stupid, it burns.


Stan Shmenge
09-28-2010, 04:33 AM
From an AP article:

"If the price drops, more people are going to buy it. Low-income people are going to buy marijuana instead of buying food, which happens with substance abusers," said Pleasant Hill police Chief Pete Dunbar, who also speaks for the California Police Chiefs' Association, one of many law enforcement groups against the measure.

As a result, he said, legalizing marijuana would only encourage the cycle of theft and violence driven by people who need money to buy drugs.

So, Chief Dumbar, you are actually saying that cheaper weed will make people stop eating. Then, presumably because they have the munchies, and are broke from all the pot they bought at a discount, they will go out and steal. :rolleyes: Are you f'ing serious? If this is the best that the opposition can do...

Can anyone here make any kind of cogent argument against this measure? Because for sure folks like Chief Dumbass haven't been able to do it.

The measure is now predicted to pass, so I guess Chief Dumbar and his donut eating cronies will have to find actual criminals to catch. The horror.

Link (http://www.theeagle.com/nation/California-divided-over-measure-to-legalize-pot)

Baboonanza
09-28-2010, 08:23 AM
But if it's cheaper won't they have to steal less?

BrainGlutton
09-28-2010, 08:25 AM
But if it's cheaper won't they have to steal less?

Think of Chief Dunbar, in this setting, as a labor-union spokesman. ;)

Morgenstern
09-28-2010, 10:15 AM
The polls seem to be indicating that this measure has a chance of passing.
http://www.opposingviews.com/i/california-s-pro-pot-prop-19-makes-huge-gain-in-poll

kaylasdad99
09-28-2010, 03:00 PM
I work for the USPS. Once this passes, I wonder if the bosses will insist that the union allow drug testing on a more frequent basis.

Yookeroo
09-28-2010, 09:09 PM
The polls seem to be indicating that this measure has a chance of passing.
http://www.opposingviews.com/i/california-s-pro-pot-prop-19-makes-huge-gain-in-poll
If the The Broudus Effect (http://blogs.laweekly.com/informer/marijuana/pot-legalization-prop-19-polls/) is real, it looks like it really could pass.

BrainGlutton
09-28-2010, 09:23 PM
I work for the USPS. Once this passes, I wonder if the bosses will insist that the union allow drug testing on a more frequent basis.

I'd settle for heightened monitoring of package-tampering.

kaylasdad99
09-28-2010, 09:29 PM
Not sure I catch your drift, here...

Baboonanza
09-29-2010, 08:19 AM
I work for the USPS. Once this passes, I wonder if the bosses will insist that the union allow drug testing on a more frequent basis.I don't see why a company should be able to able to test for legal substance use outside of work hours. Unless you're using heavy machinery or driving a train or something there is absolutely no reason to allow it.

appleciders
09-29-2010, 08:35 AM
Marijuana use will not be legal in California if 19 passes- it merely won't be against state laws. It's still going to be against federal law to possess it. Unless federal law states only that it's illegal to buy, sell, or transport it, not to use it, I suspect that federal employees like postal workers will still face sanctions if they use.

Vinyl Turnip
09-29-2010, 08:43 AM
I work for the USPS. Once this passes, I wonder if the bosses will insist that the union allow drug testing on a more frequent basis.I don't see why a company should be able to able to test for legal substance use outside of work hours. Unless you're using heavy machinery or driving a train or something there is absolutely no reason to allow it.

Presumably, regardless of the [quasi-]legality of using it outside the workplace, employers would still want to prohibit working while under the influence. Is there currently a test for marijuana intoxication, as opposed to simply having THC in one's system?

In the past, one of the obstacles against marijuana legalization that I've heard thrown up is that there's no practical way for police to determine a driver's intoxication level, as they can for alcohol with a breathalyzer. Assuming that hasn't changed, and there is nothing in place similar to blood alcohol limits for DUI, what are the legal implications of working or driving while stoned?

(And although some may staunchly disagree, assume for a moment that it is possible for one to be "too stoned to drive," or that there exists a level of intoxication where driving reflexes are impaired.)

BrainGlutton
09-29-2010, 08:45 AM
Not sure I catch your drift, here...

Just thinking that postal workers working the package line in a legal-pot state might be tempted to, you know . . . reseal certain damaged-in-shipping packages . . .

Squink
09-29-2010, 09:38 AM
So, Chief Dumbar, you are actually saying that cheaper weed will make people stop eating.This is a GOOD thing.
Americans are far too fat as is.
Perhaps legalizing Marijuana can help us eliminate this national scourge?

DanBlather
09-29-2010, 09:47 AM
I had a long discussion with little Dan about this the other day. My concern is that if the Justice Dept allows the open sale of marijuana in CA, then it strengthens the resolve of other states to overrule what they see as bad federal laws. This could range from prayer in schools to abortion restrictions. How would you justify sending in federal marshals to enforce an injunction against teacher-led prayer in school while letting stores openly advertise a federally banned substance?

Morgenstern
09-29-2010, 10:09 AM
I don't see how you got from legalized marijuana to teachers leading prayer in public schools Dan. It's not like the law will force anyone to use marijuana if they choose not to.

Dogzilla
09-29-2010, 10:29 AM
From an AP article:

"If the price drops, more people are going to buy it. Low-income people are going to buy marijuana instead of buying food, which happens with substance abusers," said Pleasant Hill police Chief Pete Dunbar, who also speaks for the California Police Chiefs' Association, one of many law enforcement groups against the measure.

As a result, he said, legalizing marijuana would only encourage the cycle of theft and violence driven by people who need money to buy drugs.

So, Chief Dumbar, you are actually saying that cheaper weed will make people stop eating. Then, presumably because they have the munchies, and are broke from all the pot they bought at a discount, they will go out and steal. :rolleyes: Are you f'ing serious? If this is the best that the opposition can do...

Can anyone here make any kind of cogent argument against this measure? Because for sure folks like Chief Dumbass haven't been able to do it.

The measure is now predicted to pass, so I guess Chief Dumbar and his donut eating cronies will have to find actual criminals to catch. The horror.

Link (http://www.theeagle.com/nation/California-divided-over-measure-to-legalize-pot)

That's just hilarious. Some people think all drugs = heroin. So I'll be so broke from buying that $60 quarter bag that I'll have to steal my Cheeto's and M&Ms. Do these morons realize that a quarter ounce of pot is a LOT and would last your average stoner longer than a weekend? It's not like coke, where you get a tiny little gram for $100 and it's gone in 15 minutes and so is your high. Coke is horribly uneconomical. Nobody starves to death and turns into a life of crime from buying weed. If that were the case, you'd see college students ripping off 7-11s about every ten minutes in this country.

BrainGlutton
09-29-2010, 10:34 AM
"Cocaine is just nature's way of telling you you have too much money."

-- Richard Pryor

Llama Llogophile
09-29-2010, 10:41 AM
Marijuana use will not be legal in California if 19 passes- it merely won't be against state laws. It's still going to be against federal law to possess it.

As I mentioned in another thread, I fully expect the usual suspects who scream about states' rights when guns are involved to embrace legalization of pot on the same grounds.

Any time now... :D

Clothahump
09-29-2010, 10:52 AM
I work for the USPS. Once this passes, I wonder if the bosses will insist that the union allow drug testing on a more frequent basis.I don't see why a company should be able to able to test for legal substance use outside of work hours. Unless you're using heavy machinery or driving a train or something there is absolutely no reason to allow it.

The employer has the right to have people working for it that are not impaired. Pot does not leave the system as fast as alcohol does. Someone can get drunk on Friday night and show up to work Monday morning functional. Not so with pot, which can take up to 30 days to clear out of one's system.

filling_pages
09-29-2010, 11:04 AM
The employer has the right to have people working for it that are not impaired. Pot does not leave the system as fast as alcohol does. Someone can get drunk on Friday night and show up to work Monday morning functional. Not so with pot, which can take up to 30 days to clear out of one's system.

I, for one, would like to see a cite that getting high Friday night will leave you still high on Monday. Also, can you hook me up with your dealer? Because you must be getting some amazing shit.

BrainGlutton
09-29-2010, 11:43 AM
I don't see why a company should be able to able to test for legal substance use outside of work hours. Unless you're using heavy machinery or driving a train or something there is absolutely no reason to allow it.

The employer has the right to have people working for it that are not impaired. Pot does not leave the system as fast as alcohol does. Someone can get drunk on Friday night and show up to work Monday morning functional. Not so with pot, which can take up to 30 days to clear out of one's system.

Only in the sense that it remains detectable that long in a urine test. Believe me, if you get high Friday night you will have come down by Saturday morning.

Errrr, so I've been told.

Mr Smashy
09-29-2010, 11:55 AM
Marijuana use will not be legal in California if 19 passes- it merely won't be against state laws. It's still going to be against federal law to possess it.

As I mentioned in another thread, I fully expect the usual suspects who scream about states' rights when guns are involved to embrace legalization of pot on the same grounds.

Any time now... :D

Count me in as one of those suspects.

There's about as much authority in the Constitution granted the Feds to make drugs illegal as there is to make abortion legal. In other words, none.

It should be up to the states. Not that it can't screw up your life, as that right wing rag the New York Times (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/19/fashion/19pot.html) will tell you.

But it's not the Government's job to save us from ourselves. Let Darwinism run its course.

Interestingly, it doesn't seem to qualify, really, as a gateway drug (http://www.drugscience.org/sfu/sfu_gateway.html), at least no more than cigarettes and alcohol do. Not that that matters constitutionally, IMHO.

Vinyl Turnip
09-29-2010, 12:35 PM
I don't see why a company should be able to able to test for legal substance use outside of work hours. Unless you're using heavy machinery or driving a train or something there is absolutely no reason to allow it.

The employer has the right to have people working for it that are not impaired. Pot does not leave the system as fast as alcohol does. Someone can get drunk on Friday night and show up to work Monday morning functional. Not so with pot, which can take up to 30 days to clear out of one's system.

Which was precisely the reason for my question upthread. THC in detectable in one's system long, long after the effects have worn off. In your scenario, the Monday-morning worker will be, in all likelihood, completely sober and unimpaired, and yet would fail a drug test. Ironically, if he'd dropped acid or taken ecstasy, cocaine, or even heroin, there's a good chance he'd pass with flying colors.

Squink
09-29-2010, 12:53 PM
The employer has the right to have people working for it that are not impaired.Can you show me where in the constitution that employers are granted that right?
AFAICMO, it's not enumerated anywhere, and has no organic connection to the original intent of the founding fathers.

Joey P
09-29-2010, 01:04 PM
The employer has the right to have people working for it that are not impaired. Pot does not leave the system as fast as alcohol does. Someone can get drunk on Friday night and show up to work Monday morning functional. Not so with pot, which can take up to 30 days to clear out of one's system.

I'm not sure you understand how marijuana works. It can still be tested for a month or so later, because the metabolites are still in your system. The high typically lasts an hour or so (and maybe another hour or so after that to get back to 100% sober...I wouldn't suggest doing on your lunch break). Even the best weed in the world, smoked in amazing amounts, will still return the user to baseline in 4-6 hours or so.

Mr Smashy
09-29-2010, 02:36 PM
The employer has the right to have people working for it that are not impaired.Can you show me where in the constitution that employers are granted that right?
AFAICMO, it's not enumerated anywhere, and has no organic connection to the original intent of the founding fathers.

Why does it have to be mentioned in the Constitution? That document is meant to (primarily) talk to the relationship between people and their government.

Now, if one wanted to they could continue the recent (bullshit) trend of elasticizing the Commerce Clause, that drugged workers produce less or faulty or dangerous stuff, and therefore what they make could end up being sold in another state that damages the people of that state, and therefore the Feds could regulate such interstate commerce.... and in fact that clause has been stretched worse recently....

But even with a less liberal interpretation of that clause (I didn't know you were a conservative ;) ), in any case it's clearly not forbidden. Ergo, employers can do what they want wrt dope smokers.

Dogzilla
09-29-2010, 03:37 PM
The employer has the right to have people working for it that are not impaired. Pot does not leave the system as fast as alcohol does. Someone can get drunk on Friday night and show up to work Monday morning functional. Not so with pot, which can take up to 30 days to clear out of one's system.

I'm not sure you understand how marijuana works. It can still be tested for a month or so later, because the metabolites are still in your system. The high typically lasts an hour or so (and maybe another hour or so after that to get back to 100% sober...I wouldn't suggest doing on your lunch break). Even the best weed in the world, smoked in amazing amounts, will still return the user to baseline in 4-6 hours or so.

I'm not sure you do, either. ;)

THC is fat-soluble, so it takes a while for all that to leech out of your system. Frequent, daily smokers may still test hot after 30 days. However, the half-life is not 30 days. (I believe "half-life" refers to the amount of time it takes for half of the dosage to leave your system.) If you went to a New Year's Eve party and took a toke off a joint at a party, you would probably not still test positive 30 days later. Maybe 3 days, but I think after 4-5 days, you'd only have negligible amounts still in your system. The 30-day rule refers to people who smoke every day and are continually adding THC to their fat stores. The less you smoke, the less lead time you need to pass a drug test.

I'm not a fan of drug testing as a condition for all employment. People who drive, operate heavy machinery (including airplanes), or do things like neurosurgery should probably be required by their employers to test drug free. People who sit at a desk and do not interact with the general public, I don't care if they are stoned at work. But I don't want my brain surgeon to blaze one up before cutting into my skull, obviously. That said, I don't care if the brain surgeon hits the bong when she's off duty and not likely to be called in to cut into somebody's brain. And the problem with employer drug screening is that the weed can stay in your system long enough to test positive, even though you might have smoked days ago.

Shodan
09-29-2010, 03:53 PM
I haven't followed this at all - is this more "medical marijuana (wink wink)" or actual "if you want to get baked we don't care" stuff? I am hoping for the latter and that the rest of the states follow suit.

Regards,
Shodan

Morgenstern
09-29-2010, 04:18 PM
@ Shodan.
Prop 19 (if it passes) will allow an individual over 21, to personally possess, process, share or transport not more than one ounce solely for that persons personal use and not for sale. Also, possession of tools etc. for growing will be legal. Cultivation is legal as long as the "growing area" is no more than 25 sq ft.

As I read the prop, those who sell will have to qualify under the law as sellers. Also contained in the prop. is a prohibition against consuming when minors are present.

I'm reading the voter information material and trying to paraphrase the three full pages of small print. l

Vinyl Turnip
09-29-2010, 04:42 PM
I haven't followed this at all - is this more "medical marijuana (wink wink)" or actual "if you want to get baked we don't care" stuff? I am hoping for the latter and that the rest of the states follow suit.

Same here, although residing as I do in one of the three holdout states with no (off-premises) Sunday beer sales, I'm not holding my toke in expectation of a Pot in the Box in my neighborhood anytime soon. Or in my lifetime.

BrainGlutton
09-29-2010, 05:22 PM
Can you show me where in the constitution that employers are granted that right?
AFAICMO, it's not enumerated anywhere, and has no organic connection to the original intent of the founding fathers.

Why does it have to be mentioned in the Constitution? That document is meant to (primarily) talk to the relationship between people and their government.

No, it isn't. It is primarily to lay out the structure and functions of the government. The Bill of Rights was an afterthought, remember.

BrainGlutton
09-29-2010, 05:23 PM
@ Shodan.
Prop 19 (if it passes) will allow an individual over 21, to personally possess, process, share or transport not more than one ounce solely for that persons personal use and not for sale. Also, possession of tools etc. for growing will be legal. Cultivation is legal as long as the "growing area" is no more than 25 sq ft.

As I read the prop, those who sell will have to qualify under the law as sellers. Also contained in the prop. is a prohibition against consuming when minors are present.

I'm reading the voter information material and trying to paraphrase the three full pages of small print. l

Could you legally smoke it in public?

BrainGlutton
09-29-2010, 05:26 PM
But I don't want my brain surgeon to blaze one up before cutting into my skull, obviously.

Ah, yeah, remember that ad? :D

"*puff* . . . Now [hee-hee], let's see if I can still make a straight line!"

Morgenstern
09-29-2010, 05:32 PM
In public.... No.
Nor can you sell it unless you're licensed and permitted to sell it (whatever that requires)
You can not consume it in a public place.
Can't Smoke in a car, boat or aircraft while it is being operated or while it "impairs the operator."
Anyone employed by a seller, handling, etc., must be 21+

BrainGlutton
09-29-2010, 05:44 PM
@ Shodan.
Prop 19 (if it passes) will allow an individual over 21, to personally possess, process, share or transport not more than one ounce solely for that persons personal use and not for sale. Also, possession of tools etc. for growing will be legal. Cultivation is legal as long as the "growing area" is no more than 25 sq ft.

As I read the prop, those who sell will have to qualify under the law as sellers. Also contained in the prop. is a prohibition against consuming when minors are present.

I'm reading the voter information material and trying to paraphrase the three full pages of small print. l

In public.... No.
Nor can you sell it unless you're licensed and permitted to sell it (whatever that requires)
You can not consume it in a public place.
Can't Smoke in a car, boat or aircraft while it is being operated or while it "impairs the operator."
Anyone employed by a seller, handling, etc., must be 21+

Hm. Jeez, I kinda assumed all that was the law in California now. ;)

Dahnlor
09-29-2010, 07:08 PM
Hm. Jeez, I kinda assumed all that was the law in California now. ;)I don't know for sure, but I would imagine that the current rules for dispensaries would still apply. I see the main difference being that you won't need a doctor's "recommendation" in order to be allowed to buy/possess it.

Joey P
09-29-2010, 08:51 PM
I'm not sure you understand how marijuana works. It can still be tested for a month or so later, because the metabolites are still in your system. The high typically lasts an hour or so (and maybe another hour or so after that to get back to 100% sober...I wouldn't suggest doing on your lunch break). Even the best weed in the world, smoked in amazing amounts, will still return the user to baseline in 4-6 hours or so.

I'm not sure you do, either. ;)

THC is fat-soluble, so it takes a while for all that to leech out of your system. Frequent, daily smokers may still test hot after 30 days. However, the half-life is not 30 days. (I believe "half-life" refers to the amount of time it takes for half of the dosage to leave your system.) If you went to a New Year's Eve party and took a toke off a joint at a party, you would probably not still test positive 30 days later. Maybe 3 days, but I think after 4-5 days, you'd only have negligible amounts still in your system. The 30-day rule refers to people who smoke every day and are continually adding THC to their fat stores. The less you smoke, the less lead time you need to pass a drug test.

Oh, I understand that. Clothahump said "Someone can get drunk on Friday night and show up to work Monday morning functional. Not so with pot, which can take up to 30 days to clear out of one's system." He implied that if someone smokes pot on Friday night, come Monday morning they will still not be functional. I was just explaining that on Monday morning they will still test positive for THC, but they won't be high anymore.

Shodan
09-30-2010, 08:36 AM
@ Shodan.
Prop 19 (if it passes) will allow an individual over 21, to personally possess, process, share or transport not more than one ounce solely for that persons personal use and not for sale. Also, possession of tools etc. for growing will be legal. Cultivation is legal as long as the "growing area" is no more than 25 sq ft.

As I read the prop, those who sell will have to qualify under the law as sellers. Also contained in the prop. is a prohibition against consuming when minors are present.

I'm reading the voter information material and trying to paraphrase the three full pages of small print. lThanks.

That goes about three quarters of the way far enough, IME. Perhaps after a few years when the world doesn't come to an end because the Dread Killer WeedTM is legalized, the rest of the country can come to its senses and we can concentrate on stuff that is actually dangerous.

Regards,
Shodan

Chronos
09-30-2010, 02:28 PM
I don't know for sure, but I would imagine that the current rules for dispensaries would still apply. I see the main difference being that you won't need a doctor's "recommendation" in order to be allowed to buy/possess it. From what I understand, you should also have scare-quoted "doctor", too. As in, the list of people who could "prescribe" medical marijuana was far greater than just doctors.

WhyNot
09-30-2010, 02:53 PM
I was just explaining that on Monday morning they will still test positive for THC, but they won't be high anymore.

Nitpick: they'll test positive for metabolites of THC, not THC itself. There is no more THC in your system, as that is metabolized during the time you're high into other compounds which are what the test tests for. Once you're no longer buzzed, there's no more THC (or, actually, vice versa- once there's no more THC, your buzz goes away). AFAIK, there is no direct test for THC, which would allow us to test for very recent use and, arguably, for impairment...other than a desire for peanut butter and cheese sandwiches with a side of Funyons.

Mr Smashy
09-30-2010, 02:54 PM
Why does it have to be mentioned in the Constitution? That document is meant to (primarily) talk to the relationship between people and their government.

No, it isn't. It is primarily to lay out the structure and functions of the government. The Bill of Rights was an afterthought, remember.

OK, fair enough, but WTF does that have to do with how a private company wants to screen potential employees?

Edit to add: there is still an awful lot in the main body about how Gov interacts w/citizens, wrt taxation/direct taxes/apportionment, all the 'common welfare' stuff, etc

Joey P
09-30-2010, 02:56 PM
I was just explaining that on Monday morning they will still test positive for THC, but they won't be high anymore.

Nitpick: they'll test positive for metabolites of THC, not THC itself. There is no more THC in your system, as that is metabolized during the time you're high into other compounds which are what the test tests for.

That's actually what I said in post 25, but then when I re-explained myself, I felt it would be easier to leave that part out.

hajario
09-30-2010, 02:59 PM
I don't know for sure, but I would imagine that the current rules for dispensaries would still apply. I see the main difference being that you won't need a doctor's "recommendation" in order to be allowed to buy/possess it. From what I understand, you should also have scare-quoted "doctor", too. As in, the list of people who could "prescribe" medical marijuana was far greater than just doctors.

Incorrect. Only actual medical doctors can prescribe medical mj. Around here they'll do it for $99 cash and a cursory examination which is no more than an interview.

BrainGlutton
09-30-2010, 04:04 PM
No, it isn't. It is primarily to lay out the structure and functions of the government. The Bill of Rights was an afterthought, remember.

OK, fair enough, but WTF does that have to do with how a private company wants to screen potential employees?

The point is that no company has a constitutional right to do so -- a right set above and beyond the reach of the ordinary legislative process -- lacking an express grant/reservation of such right in the BoR. Therefore, while the federal government's authority vel non to regulate in that field does perhaps present a constitutional question under the "enumerated powers" clause, a state government's authority does not. States have plenary sovereignty encompassing the whole of the state police power; they may do whatever is not expressly forbidden by the U.S. Constitution or by their own state constitution.

BrainGlutton
09-30-2010, 04:10 PM
From what I understand, you should also have scare-quoted "doctor", too. As in, the list of people who could "prescribe" medical marijuana was far greater than just doctors.

Incorrect. Only actual medical doctors can prescribe medical mj. Around here they'll do it for $99 cash and a cursory examination which is no more than an interview.

Does a bad mood qualify as a prescribable condition?

Because it should.

I recall one stand-up comic's comment: "If weed goes up against Prozac, Prozac is gonna lose."

Mr Smashy
09-30-2010, 04:28 PM
OK, fair enough, but WTF does that have to do with how a private company wants to screen potential employees?

The point is that no company has a constitutional right to do so -- a right set above and beyond the reach of the ordinary legislative process -- lacking an express grant/reservation of such right in the BoR. Therefore, while the federal government's authority vel non to regulate in that field does perhaps present a constitutional question under the "enumerated powers" clause, a state government's authority does not. States have plenary sovereignty encompassing the whole of the state police power; they may do whatever is not expressly forbidden by the U.S. Constitution or by their own state constitution.

Go read Squink's post #24 again. Clearly Sq is under the impression that, if it isn't in the constitution, then a company shouldn't be allowed to do it.

My point is, that's not what that document is for. Assuming we're talking about the US Constitution of course. And Squink did mention the Founding Fathers, so that's what I assumed we were discussing.

Squink
09-30-2010, 04:43 PM
Go read Squink's post #24 again. Clearly Sq is under the impression that, if it isn't in the constitution, then a company shouldn't be allowed to do it.Not at all, I was wondering where clothahump put the genesis of this oddly specific right of corporations which he asserted.
Seems to me that congress could greatly curtail drug testing by private corps without running into any serious constitutional issue. It's not a 'corporate right', it's just how things are done at present.

hajario
09-30-2010, 04:48 PM
Incorrect. Only actual medical doctors can prescribe medical mj. Around here they'll do it for $99 cash and a cursory examination which is no more than an interview.

Does a bad mood qualify as a prescribable condition?

Because it should.

Probably. I honestly don't think that the docs give a shit. Just tell them that you get migraines and nothing else works. If you don't like that, try back pain. If you're a female you can tell them that it's for menstrual cramps.

Maybe mood swings would work too. Basically what really works is the $99.

Mr Smashy
09-30-2010, 06:52 PM
Not at all, I was wondering where clothahump put the genesis of this oddly specific right of corporations which he asserted.
Seems to me that congress could greatly curtail drug testing by private corps without running into any serious constitutional issue. It's not a 'corporate right', it's just how things are done at present.

OK, one more time.

a) yes Congress could pass a law forbidding discrimination against would-be employees (or renters, or whatever) due to drug use. Obviously they've done something similar w/race, religion (thanks to those Republicans passing the Civil Rights Act!)

b) they haven't done that, nor will they do it in my lifetime, or my kids' I bet

c) there's nothing in the constitution that would either allow or deny such discrimination

d) so the constitution is about as relevent to this conversation as a McDonalds Happy Meal placemat

Your post clearly implied that some right needs to be granted (to a corporation?) in order for the company to do something. While Clothahump used the word 'right' first, you're the one who brought the constitution into the discussion. Obviously there are other kinds/aspects of 'rights'. I have the right to walk down the street, not eat my vegetables, etc.... none of those are in the constitution either.

Don't thank me, pay it forward. Happy to help.

Squink
09-30-2010, 08:07 PM
OK, one more time.There was a first time?
Where did clothy anwer my question?
I don't think he'll invoke Jesus, and I don't think he's stupid enough to claim rights are nothing more than 'usual practices' as you seem to be suggesting.
So on what does he base the corporate rights he asserts?
Bill of rights is a pretty popular answer for such things, but is it his answer?
I'd like to know.
Sadly Mr Smashy, you cannot answer for him.

-------------------

Only actual medical doctors can prescribe medical mj. Around here they'll do it for $99 cash and a cursory examination which is no more than an interview.The CA Medical Assn looks to be favoring Prop 19 (http://www.opposingviews.com/i/ca-medical-association-marijuana-ban-failed-public-health-policy), so extreme cynicism with respect to the financial motives of the medical profession is probably unwarranted here.

blondebear
09-30-2010, 08:23 PM
Maybe mood swings would work too. Basically what really works is the $99.A friend of mine got his for insomnia, and it only cost $50 (they were handing out coupons at a recent Cannabis Convention). The evaluation lasted less than 5 minutes.

I'm positive that the doctors who staff those hemp conventions go home with sizable paychecks. Still, doctors can be pro-marijuana just like anyone else. If they personally consider weed as benign and potentially helpful, why wouldn't they offer a recommendation?

hajario
09-30-2010, 08:27 PM
Only actual medical doctors can prescribe medical mj. Around here they'll do it for $99 cash and a cursory examination which is no more than an interview.The CA Medical Assn looks to be favoring Prop 19 (http://www.opposingviews.com/i/ca-medical-association-marijuana-ban-failed-public-health-policy), so extreme cynicism with respect to the financial motives of the medical profession is probably unwarranted here.

What does one thing have to do with the other? I favor Prop 19 too. I gathered signatures for the original medical mj proposition here in CA. I agree with the CA Medical Assn. That said, every account I have ever heard about someone getting screened, and there have been dozens, said that the whole thing was a bunch of bullshit. One of those people was my girlfriend while we were driving away from her appointment. My comments were with regard to the motives of a very, very small percentage of doctors who make a living giving out these prescriptions not to the financial motives of the entire profession. My cynicism is not the least bit unwarranted.

It should be totally legal and I have thought that for decades. For now it is only legal if there is a true medical need. I think that it is very conservative to say that no more than 10% of the people with prescriptions have a true medical need and the prescribing doctors damn well know it.

hajario
09-30-2010, 08:32 PM
Maybe mood swings would work too. Basically what really works is the $99.A friend of mine got his for insomnia, and it only cost $50 (they were handing out coupons at a recent Cannabis Convention). The evaluation lasted less than 5 minutes.

I'm positive that the doctors who staff those hemp conventions go home with sizable paychecks. Still, doctors can be pro-marijuana just like anyone else. If they personally consider weed as benign and potentially helpful, why wouldn't they offer a recommendation?

Why not indeed? It's fine with me. I paid for my girlfriend's appointment as part of her birthday present and then drove her to the dispensary. Let's just be honest about it. The medical evaluation is, in the lion's share of the cases, a sham. Anyone can walk in and claim to get headaches and it's all done.

There are people who really need it. I truly believe that. There just aren't that many of them.

Squink
09-30-2010, 10:51 PM
My comments were with regard to the motives of a very, very small percentage of doctors who make a living giving out these prescriptions not to the financial motives of the entire profession. My cynicism is not the least bit unwarranted.Sure, and the position of the medical association backs up the idea that it's just a small minority of doctors cashing in.

Aversin
10-01-2010, 10:55 AM
I saw a couple people earlier in the thread asking about short-term testing to marijuana use. Saliva tests have been around for years, with mixed reviews. I've heard they can only detect recent use (4-5 hours), and I've heard they can detect up to a few days use, it probably all depends on the cleanliness of a persons mouth.

An interesting read on the subject (warning PDF file): http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/10_03.pdf.

Erowid has a section dicussing this, their table lists 12-24 hours as the detection time.
Erowid however mentions on a seperate page "In the past few years, new technologies have been developed which allow for saliva testing for the presence of Cannabis (THC). We do not currently have information about what the detection period is for these tests."

http://www.erowid.org/psychoactives/testing/testing_info1.shtml#duration

So I think the answer is: If current technology is not capable of detecting recent (IE less than 24 hours) marijuana use, it could be in short order with a little research.

Chimera
10-03-2010, 08:00 PM
Too bad we can't even enact Medical Marijuana in Minnesota.

Emmer, the Republican Candidate and two time DUI offender, is of course, completely opposed.
Dayton, the Democratic Candidate, is a complete pussy and has said that he won't support any Medical Marijuana bill that is opposed by Law Enforcement. Well DUH! Of course it will be! Don'tcha know that people will be burning down their apartment buildings growing the stuff unsafely? (As the Chief of Police of Burnsville, where I used to live, once claimed)

gonzomax
10-03-2010, 08:07 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marijuana_laws_in_Ann_Arbor,_Michigan The lax rules of marijuana in Ann Arbor have not caused any catastrophe. The antis are wrong if it is any kind of example.

BigT
10-03-2010, 08:38 PM
No, it isn't. It is primarily to lay out the structure and functions of the government. The Bill of Rights was an afterthought, remember.

An afterthought that some states required promise of before signing.

In the ratification debate, Anti-Federalists opposed to the Constitution, complained that the new system threatened liberties, and suggested that if the delegates had truly cared about protecting individual rights, they would have included provisions that accomplished that. With ratification in serious doubt, Federalists announced a willingness to take up the matter of a series of amendments, to be called the Bill of Rights, soon after ratification and the First Congress comes into session. The concession was undoubtedly necessary to secure the Constitution's hard-fought ratification. Thomas Jefferson, who did not attend the Constitutional Convention, in a December 1787 letter to Madison called the omission of a Bill of Rights a major mistake: "A bill of rights is what the people are entitled to against every government on earth." (http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/conlaw/billofrightsintro.html)

In other words, the Anti-Federalists (of which there were many) would not sign the Constitution without the Bill of Rights. Some afterthought.

MPB in Salt Lake
10-06-2010, 05:49 PM
I saw today that the latest poll is showing the "No On 19" vote is about 10 points ahead of the pro 19 vote, which seems to be the exact opposite of the polls from just last month.......

Any California Dopers have a feel for what the voters are likely to do?

Rigamarole
10-06-2010, 05:59 PM
Any California Dopers have a feel for what the voters are likely to do?

I can tell you what I'm likely to do. I'm going to go home today after class and fill out the mail-in ballot that just arrived yesterday and vote yes on 19!

Morgenstern
10-06-2010, 06:08 PM
I saw today that the latest poll is showing the "No On 19" vote is about 10 points ahead of the pro 19 vote, which seems to be the exact opposite of the polls from just last month.......

Any California Dopers have a feel for what the voters are likely to do?

Polls are funny things...

Prop 19 Gains Slightly in Latest Poll; Now Winning 48-41
By: Jon Walker Monday October 4, 2010 9:17 pm


http://elections.firedoglake.com/2010/10/04/prop-19-gains-slightly-in-latest-poll-winning-48-41/

I'm voting for it as I believe it will increase tourism :cool:

AmunRa
10-07-2010, 04:36 PM
I saw today that the latest poll is showing the "No On 19" vote is about 10 points ahead of the pro 19 vote, which seems to be the exact opposite of the polls from just last month.......

Any California Dopers have a feel for what the voters are likely to do?

I think it has a lot to do with the company doing the poll. Wiki shows 4 polls in the last two weeks of September heavily in favor of the yes side. I find it unlikely that there was a 15 point shift between 20 September and 4 august, not to mention that the last two polls are within less than a week of the opposing poll.

MPB in Salt Lake
10-07-2010, 04:39 PM
I saw today that the latest poll is showing the "No On 19" vote is about 10 points ahead of the pro 19 vote, which seems to be the exact opposite of the polls from just last month.......

Any California Dopers have a feel for what the voters are likely to do?

I think it has a lot to do with the company doing the poll. Wiki shows 4 polls in the last two weeks of September heavily in favor of the yes side. I find it unlikely that there was a 15 point shift between 20 September and 4 august, not to mention that the last two polls are within less than a week of the opposing poll.

As a frequent visitor to California (and someone who has spent considerable time in the Netherlands) I really hope you are right!!! ;)

Yookeroo
10-07-2010, 10:02 PM
I saw today that the latest poll is showing the "No On 19" vote is about 10 points ahead of the pro 19 vote, which seems to be the exact opposite of the polls from just last month.......

Any California Dopers have a feel for what the voters are likely to do?

I think it has a lot to do with the company doing the poll. Wiki shows 4 polls in the last two weeks of September heavily in favor of the yes side. I find it unlikely that there was a 15 point shift between 20 September and 4 august, not to mention that the last two polls are within less than a week of the opposing poll.

Maybe the Broadus Effect (http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2010/07/broadus-effect-social-desirability-bias.html)?

AmunRa
10-08-2010, 01:35 PM
I just realized I said 4 August in my last post. I did of course mean 4 October when the dissenting Ipsos poll was concluded.:o

Measure for Measure
10-09-2010, 12:48 AM
If prop 19 passes, marijuana will still be illegal: it will conflict with Federal law. And the feds very well may do something about that. The very largest growers should beware.

I oppose Prop 19 as it permits localities to certify large growing operations, ones bigger than the 5x5 ones that would be automatically legal. Admittedly, I understand that the state could over-ride that, if it wished. Anyway, in the absence of meaningful campaign finance reform, I don't want industrial scale growers and distributors running advertising and marketing campaigns on behalf of weed. Sure, cigarettes and alcohol are worse and marijuana prohibition sucks. But if we're going to introduce another mind altering substance into American public life, I want the CDC involved. Besides, I think the medical marijuana shtick is working pretty well. If you don't want to pay a physician $50, get your bud from the guy down the street.

I predict prop 19 will pass. I predict court battles will ensue. I anticipate explicit pot promotion this decade.