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Related: About this forumTexas and Louisiana consider "softening" marijuana laws
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/01/24/two-states-in-the-deep-south-consider-legislation-to-soften-marijuana-laws/Republican governors in the traditionally conservative states of Louisiana and Texas have issued statements to the effect that they are willing to soften their stance on marijuana.
On Thursday, Texas Governor Rick Perry told an international panel on drug legalization at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland that I have begun to implement policies that start us toward a decriminalization.
Perry did not address the medicinal use of marijuana in his statement, but his Republican compatriot to the east, Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal, told The New Orleans Times-Picayune on Wednesday that he would be open to the idea of legalizing marijuana for medicinal use.
According to his spokesman, Kyle Plotkin, the governor would be open to making medical marijuana available under strict circumstances, but would be opposed to all other forms of legalization. He made his statements in response to a meeting by the Louisiana House Committee on the Administration of Criminal Justice in which they discussed the states harsh penalties for marijuana possession.
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Texas and Louisiana consider "softening" marijuana laws (Original Post)
RainDog
Jan 2014
OP
CFLDem
(2,083 posts)1. The winds, they are a-changin'...
RainDog
(28,784 posts)2. But Republican-controlled states will always be against the wind
and continue to make the lives of their residents more sucky than necessary.
...because that's the Republican reason for being - to make like suck for all but the rich - who, to be sure, will never face a problem from possession or even sale of cannabis, as Mitch Daniels showed when he was a student at Princeton, as Dan Burton's son showed, when he was arrested for carrying LSD across state lines for the purpose of selling...and on and on.
The peasants and the feudal lords - the Republican view of life.
I'm sure it will be hard for conservative states in the south and the midwest to give up their archaic laws because they've been so useful when they want to disenfranchise voters.