Northern California counties revive an old idea for a breakaway state

“Late this month another voice joined the mix: Citing the State of Jefferson movement as inspiration, Silicon Valley venture capitalist Tim Draper launched a state ballot initiative to carve up California — into six states.  Political analysts say congressional Democrats would never go for it. But an elated Baird is working to arrange a meeting with Draper.  But Mark Baird and others are convinced that a ‘more favorable regulatory environment’ could help them boost a region with some of California’s highest poverty and unemployment rates.  They expect they might be ignored in Sacramento. In that event, they plan to take their fight to federal court to try to poke holes in Reynolds vs. Sims.”

http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-rural-secession-20131229,0,1098133,full.story

Scan to Donate Bitcoin to Freedomwat.ch Staff
Did you like this?
Tip Freedomwat.ch Staff with Bitcoin

‘Seasteads’ offer libertarians the vision of floating cities for the future

“The 19th century challenge to ‘Go West, young man’ retains a powerful appeal. But for the current target audience – the free-wheeling capitalist dotcom millionaire in Silicon Valley – going west means getting wet.  Not an issue, according to a new design report investigating the feasibility of ‘seasteads’, communities of like-minded, self-governing individuals established on the high seas, free from what its proponents see as the restrictions of nations, welfare systems and punitive taxes.  The seasteading movement has emerged as a political movement – with nods to climate change and land shortages – to create new water-borne city states.”

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/architecture/superyacht-not-big-enough-seasteads-offer-libertarians-the-vision-of-floating-cities-for-the-future-9026242.html

Scan to Donate Bitcoin to Freedomwat.ch Staff
Did you like this?
Tip Freedomwat.ch Staff with Bitcoin

Native American Activist Wants To Swap The Dollar For Bitcoin

“He wants to start up a cryptocurrency mining operation in Pine Ridge, providing he can raise enough coins to buy a dedicated machine from KnCMiner. He then wants to found digital currency exchanges and encourage local businesses to start carrying out transactions in Bitcoin.  Key to his pitch is the fact Washington regards the native reserves as ‘domestic dependent nations’, reflecting the fact they have a limited sovereignty. He wants to use this independence to sidestep the restrictions on the exchange and transfer of Bitcoin which are currently clogging up the US crypto-economy.”

http://www.forbes.com/sites/jasperhamill/2013/12/19/native-american-activist-wants-to-swap-the-dollar-for-bitcoin/

Scan to Donate Bitcoin to Freedomwat.ch Staff
Did you like this?
Tip Freedomwat.ch Staff with Bitcoin

Oklahoma residents, officials, experts support medical marijuana

“Faced with some of the harshest marijuana laws in the nation, Oklahoma residents overwhelmingly favor its use for medical purposes while also endorsing decriminalization. Recent survey data from SoonerPoll.com shows 71 percent of likely Oklahoma voters support amending the law to allow for physician-authorized patients to consume cannabis for therapeutic reasons. Twenty-one states and the District of Columbia have enacted similar measures since 1996.  Because of Oklahoma’s strict legal stance, more and more state residents are moving to Colorado to receive medical treatment involving marijuana.”

http://www.okgazette.com/oklahoma/article-19651-budding-prospects.html

Scan to Donate Bitcoin to Freedomwat.ch Staff
Did you like this?
Tip Freedomwat.ch Staff with Bitcoin

Few Problems With Cannabis for California

“California’s 17-year experience as the first state to legalize medical marijuana offers surprising lessons, experts say.  Warnings voiced against partial legalization — of civic disorder, increased lawlessness and a drastic rise in other drug use — have proved unfounded.  Instead, research suggests both that marijuana has become an alcohol substitute for younger people here and in other states that have legalized medical marijuana, and that while driving under the influence of any intoxicant is dangerous, driving after smoking marijuana is less dangerous than after drinking alcohol.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/27/us/few-problems-with-cannabis-for-california.html?_r=0&pagewanted=all

Scan to Donate Bitcoin to Freedomwat.ch Staff
Did you like this?
Tip Freedomwat.ch Staff with Bitcoin

The Good News Is That the Bad News about Kansas Was Wrong

“When Kansas cut its taxes, Oklahoma’s tax consumers predicted fiscal collapse or stress for our neighbors. Various Republican policymakers joined the chorus.  But often, he or she who dares, wins.  Kansas and Oklahoma have taken different courses. In the former, liberty is incrementally advancing. In the latter, government is incrementally advancing. It is not hateful or mean-spirited to say this: These are factual statements. As OCPA’s fiscal policy director Jonathan Small told me: ‘Fundamentally, Governor Brownback and many lawmakers in Kansas have determined they truly believe that more dollars left with their citizens is better than any government spending they may choose.'”

http://www.ocpathink.org/articles/2460

Scan to Donate Bitcoin to Freedomwat.ch Staff
Did you like this?
Tip Freedomwat.ch Staff with Bitcoin

Red State? Blue State? Try Green

“Red state? Blue state? When it comes to voters’ opinions on marijuana law reform, virtually all states are green.  According to a slew of recent statewide polls, voters’ support for legalizing marijuana crosses conventional red/blue boundaries. From Arizona (red) to Maryland (blue) and virtually all points in between, a solid majority of voters are in agreement that the time for legalization is now.  Here is a closer look at some of the more recent polls.”

http://www.hightimes.com/read/red-state-blue-state-try-green

Scan to Donate Bitcoin to Freedomwat.ch Staff
Did you like this?
Tip Freedomwat.ch Staff with Bitcoin

Industrial hemp legalized in California

“Farmers in California may finally begin growing industrial hemp under a new law signed Wednesday by Gov. Jerry Brown.  Lawmakers have been discussing the proposal since 1999 to allow approved residents to grow hemp for industrial purposes by reclassifying the plant as a fiber or oilseed crop.  The law defines the crop as the nonpsychoactive types of the Cannabis sativa plant containing no more than 3/10 of 1 percent of THC, the psychoactive chemical in marijuana.  Supporters of the bill say hemp is a $500 million industry in California and is growing by 10 percent annually.”

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/09/30/industrial-hemp-legalized-in-california/

Scan to Donate Bitcoin to Freedomwat.ch Staff
Did you like this?
Tip Freedomwat.ch Staff with Bitcoin

Marijuana Legalization Activists Target States For 2014

“Alaska and Oregon may become the next states to legalize marijuana for recreational use, as early as next year some proponents say.  But the big battle over marijuana prohibition will come in 2016 with the next presidential election. Although a slim majority of Americans support legalization, younger voters may vote for change in higher numbers than older generations, Mason Tvert, a spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, says. That group, and others, plan to target state legislators in five states, including Rhode Island and Hawaii, to legalize the drug by 2017.  UN drug control officials remain alarmed by challenges to marijuana prohibition in America, Germany, and Uruguay.”

http://www.medicaldaily.com/marijuana-legalization-activists-target-states-2014-ahead-presidential-election-257561

Scan to Donate Bitcoin to Freedomwat.ch Staff
Did you like this?
Tip Freedomwat.ch Staff with Bitcoin

Oklahoma poll reveals overwhelming support for marijuana law reform

A new poll conducted by Sooner Poll in Oklahoma reveals near-overwhelming support for both decriminalization of marijuana and legalizing the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes.

The poll, in which 85% of respondents identified as age 45 or older, demonstrated a tiny minority of 18% identifying as strongly opposed to allowing patients to use marijuana for medicinal purposes, while 71% “supported” or “somewhat supported” allowing the use of marijuana pursuant to a doctor’s recommendation.  In a state that had sentenced a father of four to 93 years in prison for growing medical marijuana to treat his rheumatoid arthritis, the poll result indicates that the overwhelming body of research indicating that marijuana is both a safe and effective treatment for a variety of maladies is beginning to resonate with voters.

Likewise, 57% of respondents supported or somewhat supported the idea of decriminalizing the possession of up to one ounce of marijuana for recreational purposes, making such cases subject only to a fine.  Only 39% stood in opposition, either somewhat or strongly.

Privately funded pro-marijuana billboard as seen in Oklahoma.

Privately funded pro-marijuana billboard as seen in Oklahoma.

The poll of likely voters in the reddest of the red states, where 87.9% of respondents identified as either moderate, somewhat conservative, or very conservative, also showed 64% of respondents in favor of a policy of referral to treatment rather than incarceration, while only 27% supported the present incarceration-based marijuana policy.

Perhaps most notably, Oklahomans’ independent streak was in full display as a whopping 82% of voters insisted that marijuana laws should be determined by state governments rather than the federal government.  A mere 17% supported the current regime, wherein marijuana is classified federally as a Schedule I controlled substance and enforced as such on a nationwide basis regardless of local laws or opinion.  The result suggests that the increasingly utilized principle of nullification will feature prominently in charting Oklahoma’s path out of marijuana prohibition.

Oklahoma voters would display fiscal and economic pragmatism in joining their neighbor Colorado, which in a statewide vote recently legalized the sale and consumption of marijuana for adults 21 and over.  The marijuana industry in Colorado is estimated to rake in over $600 million per year in fiscal year 2014-2015, with a corresponding uplifting effect on jobs and tax revenues in the state.

The poll was conducted by Sooner Poll from August 28th to September 9th, 2013 and has a ± 4.9% margin of error.  For more information, contact Norma Sapp with Oklahoma NORML at norma@oknorml.org.

Scan to Donate Bitcoin to Freedomwat.ch Staff
Did you like this?
Tip Freedomwat.ch Staff with Bitcoin