有請美國年輕人和以前的美國年輕人現(xiàn)身解讀大麻和煙的危害到底那個大?有的說大麻 有的說煙~~有的說一樣~求解惑~別說沒國了,我國就有很多,你不知道而已小布什年輕的時候不就吸食大麻嗎跟廣東三角地區(qū)喝聯(lián)邦奧亭止咳露一樣的吧
Pot and politics. You might not think they go together, but they mix like peanut butter and chocolate — especially if you have the munchies.
But in all seriousness, November isn't just a Presidential Election — three states are voting to fully legalize marijuana. That's right. Not medical marijuana or decriminalizing it. Full legalization could be a reality in Colorado, Oregon and Washington State.
Some experts say that Colorado stands the best chance of passage. Already, it has a well regulated medical marijuana program, and the vote on what is called "Amendment 64" could go either way.
"A million Coloradans are going to tell the federal government clearly — without any confusion — what we are voting for: That anyone over the age of 21 has access to decide what they want with marijuana," said Wanda James who owns "Simply Pure", a business that made, packaged and sold edible marijuana products. She recently suspended operations because Wells Fargo would no longer bank with her.
Even still, she is undeterred and said, she'll bring it back if the pro-pot vote wins. "The minute that I know Amendment 64 passes — and I'm fighting for that — we will bring 'Simply Pure' back as its own legal retail place for anyone over the age of 21."
John Suthers, Colorado's State Attorney General, is one of the more outspoken opponents not only of the amendment but also of medical marijuana.
"What we have in Colorado is a sham," he told CNBC. "Very few people have medical conditions.
"It's not going to be helped legalizing on a state level. It needs to be addressed on federal level."
The issues could set up a State vs. Federal debate similar to President Obama's health care bill, which made it all the way to the Supreme Court. 估計就跟上中學(xué)時班上抽煙的比例差不多吧