id like to see at least double the amount of plants allowed to grow like 24
Thank you. Please everybody take the time to read this measure and post your comments. Every comment will be taken serious.
I agree 24 plants with an exception for medical necessity. Such as people that need raw or fresh cannabis for juicing this would be by doctor recomendation.
should follow the prop 203 guide lines 12 plants 2.5 ounces is cool, of course we would like to be able to grow and posess more but if we follow the 203 guide lines that would be cool.........
Some one like myself who wants to use cannabis meaning leaf bud stock and seed as a nutritional and food source as well as a medicine for juicing smoking and making high quality curing cannabis oil rso, I need to grow as many plants as I please. If your purpose is recreation put a cap at twelve but if its medicine there can't be a limit.
Some one like myself who wants to use cannabis meaning leaf bud stock and seed as a nutritional and food source as well as a medicine for juicing smoking and making high quality curing cannabis oil rso, I need to grow as many plants as I please. If your purpose is recreation put a cap at twelve but if its medicine there can't be a limit.
Dennis Bohlke The war we fight is a political war, this war on drugs has been put upon us by politicians.
Therefore the only acceptable solution is political any other means to the solution is repulsive.
We have chosen the battle to fight to legalize the use of marijuana for people in Arizona.
We live in a state where citizen initiatives are part of the state’s constitution. Citizens initiatives are not intended to be easy or frequent and therefore a true grassroots citizen initiative is difficult to achieve, it is there as a method of last resort.
When we undertake the efforts to put an initiative on the ballot to legalize marijuana, we are saying through our actions we find no other way to make our voices heard.
We cannot have public gatherings with out fear of retribution from the state. Many among us cannot publicly admit supporting our cause in fear of loosing their jobs. We cannot put bumper stickers on our cars in support of this cause. We are not out laws but the state has deemed that our living is against the law. We are subject to being incarcerated, our property seized, humiliated and branded felons for the rest of our lives. We are subject to charges of driving under the influence, merely for having evidence of past usage in our body fluids. We have been by edict deemed sick and in need of re-education and are often given the choice between prison or rehabilitation re-education.
Under these circumstances it behooves us to act with stealth and cunning. In the beginning we are weak but we must act strong. Our networking tool is Facebook. Our network needs to be as loosely formed as the black and gray market we all participate in, but we all have a common cause and objective.
The legislature has not been acting in the best interest of the people of the state on this issue. The judges have turned a blind eye to our constitutional rights and the basic freedom to control over our own bodies and minds. We are living in a period in history where our rights as free citizens are being attacked and trampled on by our state.
Our political solution must go beyond just getting a state constitutional amendment to legalize marijuana.
We must also address the root cause and perpetuators of this insane war on drugs.
Our state legislatures are the primary high value positions that we must find ways to influence.
The county attorneys are the next highest value elected positions, the prosecutor’s discretion plays a large part in the war on drugs. We wonder why in the last election the county attorney’s for Maracopa and Pima County attorneys ran unopposed? Both are rabid drug war proponents over seeing the arrest and imprisonment of thousands of our family, friends and neighbors on totally unconstitutional charges, they look for ways around our rights clearly declared in the Bill of Rights.
There have been unintended consequences in our state’s public funding of candidates for public office. We now recognize this and we have a strategy to use it to our advantage. As it is, if you are a member of a church you have a distinct advantage in achieving the requirements to be a candidate, ergo our legislature has become a gathering of church members. Our laws have become laced with theological doctrine making sinners in the eyes of the lord to be criminals in the eyes of our peace officers. The separation of state and religion has been blurred which has made our peace officers turn into morality patrol officers.
There are ninety(90) legislatures in our state. There are thirty(30) legislative districts. Each district has one senator and two representatives. The legislature is made up of two bodies, thirty(30) in the senate and sixty(60) in the representatives. Each legislature is term limited to four(4) consecutive terms, each term is two(2) years long. Every two(2) years everyone in the legislature is up for election we must find ways to participate in this process or we will be doomed by our actions and subject to further repression.
On average it takes about five hundred(500) petition signatures to qualify as a candidate to run for a legislative position. There are no drug testing for these positions but you must be over twenty-five(25) years of age.
Public funding qualifications are that a candidate must get five hundred(500) people to sign a form and donate five(5) dollars. When a citizen qualifies they must agree to use only public funds for campaigning. Then they will receive about fifteen thousand(15,000) dollars for campaigning in the primary and about twenty(20,000) if they win the primary and compete in the general election. These figures are for Democrats and Republican Party candidates. A citizen can help more than one candidate qualify.
With this in mind we will set out to gather signatures to have a constitutional amendment on the next general ballot in November 2014. The deadline for gathering enough signatures is July 3, 2014. The number of valid signatures required is 259,213. We need to have more than that though.
We know the citizens overwhelmingly support the idea of legalizing marijuana.
Along the path of gathering these signatures we have an opportunity to find and meet candidates for the next election that are friendly to our cause. We will be helping our friends become candidates.
The more friends that we can help become qualified to run for office the more political posters will be put up touting legalize it.
Yes we can out smart the church lady.
Gathering 259,213 valid signatures is a daunting logistical task. Each petition must be attached to the full text of the initiative proposal which will require two(2) sheets of paper. The initiatives must be on 14 x 11 sheets of paper. Each petition can have fifteen(15) signatures. In a perfect world success would mean 17,280 perfectly filled out petitions, which would be 51,840 sheets of paper. With 6000 sheets of paper in a case of paper that’s almost nine(9) cases of paper. There is no such thing as a perfect world, we will end up with twenty to thirty cases of paper boxes with completed petitions in them, that’s more than one pickup load.
Each petition submitted with signatures needs to be notarized by a public notary. With at least 20,000 petitions required times two(2) bucks each for notarizing the cost just for this activity will probably exceed 40,000 dollars. It becomes obvious that we need to find public notaries that are friends of the cause.
We need to create an army of volunteers and we need to know what Legislative District they live in.
As the number of volunteers grows we will find among them friends that will volunteer to be pickup and drop off points for petitions, among them we hope to find candidates to support for public office in particular we would like them to compete for legislative positions.
There is no limit to number of candidates we can support in any given district. We would like each candidate that we support and help to qualify for public campaign funds to put on their roadside campaign posters “Legalize” and maybe marijuana a leaf as well. The goal is to game the system to our advantage, to take away the church lady’s advantage by being a member of a church.
By working this strategy we guarantee a political impact, we recognize that Legislature has the power vested in them to put forth ballot initiatives and to change the current laws making marijuana illegal.
We encourage our friends to actively question and determine which incumbents in our current legislature are our friends or opponents. When we find incumbents as opponents we will work with due diligence to find candidates to challenge them in the primary of their party.
We recognize there are other paths to legalizing marijuana other than a citizen initiative on the ballot. By organizing and working to get the required signatures, it is only natural that our ability to apply political pressure on the legislature will increase.
We welcome political action committees being formed by our friends of the cause to support our efforts and political agenda.
We recognize that there is no limit to how many Political Action Committees can be created and the basic requirements for creating a PAC is two citizens with a common cause. The campaign financing laws put contribution limitations on individual candidates but not on PAC’s. There is no limit to contributions by individuals or corporations can give to a PAC. PAC’s that spend less than five-hundred(500) dollars on a cause do not have to make financial reports to the state. This can be used to our advantage over and over again.
Above all we recognize the useful tool Facebook provides us with as a means of networking and organizing.
At this point in time the draft of the initiative has weathered reading and comments.
The next step is creating a Political Action Committee so the draft of the initiative can be submitted to the Legislative Counsel of the Legislature to point out legal errors in the text but not to modify it’s intent.
Then we act on Legislative Counsel’s advice where it is relevant. They have thirty days to report back to us.
Then we will file the proposed proposition with the Secretary of State. When the Secretary of State issues an initiative number we can start gathering petition signatures.
It looks like this process will be completed about the first week of July.
From that point we have until July 3, 2014 to get the required signatures.
This is the time to find out what legislative district you live in, query your friends and spread the word of what is to come.
I agree 100%. Great job Bob. When and how do we get a Representative to sponsor this Bill ???
jammerk65 wrote:
should follow the prop 203 guide lines 12 plants 2.5 ounces is cool, of course we would like to be able to grow and posess more but if we follow the 203 guide lines that would be cool.........
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AZ Medical Bud, at your service.
Providing top quality medicine along with dependability, integrity and compassion. Serving the north and northwest Phoenix Valley.
You must be a patient in compliance with A.R.S. 36-2801.01 & R9-17-106
WE ARE NOT A DISPENSARY, CO-OPERATIVE OR A COMPASSION CLUB. MY WIFE AND I ARE FELLOW PATIENTS AND DEPENDABLE, HONEST CAREGIVERS. I am a chronic pain patient in possession of a valid, Arizona Department of Health Medical Marijuana card, with cultivation rights. I offer caregiver services for nonprofit, cost of production donations. I also offer patient to patient transfers as allowed by Prop 203. I am not a drug dealer, nor will I consider assisting anyone who does not possess or is in the process of possessing a valid, Arizona Department of Health Medical Marijuana card.
OK anybody who would like to become a Notary to help out, check out this information........cost about $100. to do, but will save thousands of $$$
Requirements: To become an Arizona Notary Public, you must meet the following requirements: • You must be an Arizona resident; • You must be at least 18 years old; and • You must not have been convicted of a felony unless your civil rights have been restored. If you meet these requirements, you may be eligible to become an Arizona Notary Public. When you sign your application form, you are attesting that you meet these requirements. If we find that you do not meet these requirements, we may refuse to issue you a Notary commission or we may revoke your Notary commission. You could be guilty of lying or submitting false information on your application form. Lying on an application form constitutes perjury and is a fraudulent act. (A.R.S. §§ 41-213(E) and 41-330(A)(1))
I really didn't take the time to read all or any of the post. I am looking for a way to get medical marijuana with out paying pot head prices.
As far as a constitutional amendment is concerned I think simple is better.
NO law, rule, regulation. etc... shall be made that limits an individuals right to grow, eat, drink, smoke or otherwise ingest any substance in the privacy of their own home.
We need to go back to what our freedoms are about. It's about freedom to chose. What I do, when I do it, how long I do it, and while whom I do it, is not your business and certainly not the governments business. But they think they have the right to interfere with my private life. Makes me hate republicans who say they believe in freedom, but intentionally attempt to stop me from exercising my God given right to chose..
I may not agree with your choices but will defend your right to make your own choices.