“Tim Draper filed his proposed 2018 ballot initiative on Friday asking voters to split California into three new states: Northern California, California and Southern California. ‘The citizens of the whole state would be better served by three smaller state governments while preserving the historical boundaries of the various counties, cities, and towns,’ Draper wrote in the initiative’s statement of findings.”
Tag Archives: Laboratories Of Democracy
Lemonade Stands Legalized in Utah
“Originally, the bill protecting childhood entrepreneurs sought to guard home-based businesses against state intervention. However, many child-run lemonade stands are not operated solely on privately owned property. Often, these amateur businesses are operated on neighborhood street corners or sidewalks, which are unfortunately considered public property.”
Read more: https://fee.org/articles/lemonade-stands-legalized-in-utah/
Cannabis Set to Cause a World of Pain for Big Pharma
“The study, which was first outlined by the Washington Post, helped stir up the debate over how a legitimate cannabis market might be able to reduce the national opioid problem. That’s because the University of Georgia data shows when medical marijuana is available, pain patients are increasingly choosing pot over powerful — and potentially deadly — prescription narcotics. Specifically, the researchers found that — in the 17 states with a medical-marijuana law in place by 2013 — prescriptions for painkillers and other classes of drugs fell sharply, compared with states that did not have a medical-marijuana law.”
Read more: https://www.moneyandmarkets.com/sector-set-cause-world-pain-big-pharma-86484
U.S. States Protect, Subsidize Bitcoin While Feds Moan About ‘Terrorism’ And ‘Illicit Activity’
The tax-haven U.S. states of Montana and New Hampshire fired first this week ahead of an ominous House hearing.
New Hampshire specifically exempted “convertible virtual currency” (a FinCEN definition from a landmark 2013 regulation) from the state’s money transmission regulations. This means that in New Hampshire, no license, permit or fee will be required to engage in virtual currency transactions for profit. This reversed a 2015 law which had incorporated cryptocurrency into the state’s money transmission law.
Montana has issued a $416K grant to a local Bitcoin mining firm. The grant comes out of an economic development trust that is funded with taxes on coal miners.
Arizona now considers both blockchain records and smart contracts to be legal equivalents of all other records and contracts.
Meanwhile, a committee in the House of Representatives will focus on exploring “terrorists and illicit use of … FinTech, the national security implications of virtual currencies such as bitcoin, and the use of ‘blockchain’ technologies to record transactions and uncover illicit activities”.
In 2017, the contrast between the feds’ paranoia and obstinance and the relative forward thinking of state governments could not be more pronounced.
Trump’s Medical Marijuana Threat Contradicts the Law and His Own Position
“Trump is not only trying to usurp the congressional power to decide how taxpayers’ money will be spent; he is threatening to interfere with the autonomy that states are supposed to have under the 10th Amendment. He is also contradicting his own position both before and after his election.”
Read more: http://reason.com/blog/2017/05/08/trumps-medical-marijuana-threat-contradi
Want to see how America is changing? Property taxes hold the answer
“In 2016, United Van Lines reported, New Jersey was the state with the most ‘outbound’ movers, followed by Illinois, New York and Connecticut. The top ten ‘inbound states’ included some with a higher tax burden, like #5 Vermont, but also Nevada and South Carolina, which rank #43 and #44, respectively.”
Virginia Republican rep introduces bill to end federal marijuana prohibition
“The bill seeks to remove marijuana from the federal Controlled Substances Act and resolve the existing conflict between federal and state laws over medical or recreational use of the drug. It would not legalize the sale and use of marijuana in all 50 states – it would simply allow states to make their own decisions on marijuana policy without the threat of federal interference.”
Read more: http://www.thecannabist.co/2017/03/02/federal-marijuana-prohibition-states-rights-bill/74718/
Lacking More Important Business, Trump Renews War On Pot Smokers
NORML reports that White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer declared war on much of the cannabis community yesterday when he announced the the Trump administration intends to engage in the ‘greater enforcement’ of federal anti-marijuana laws in the eight states that have legalized and regulated its adult use.
In resuming this regressive policy, Trump stands with a shrinking minority. Again, according to NORML, fifty-nine percent of voters say that adults’ use of marijuana should be legal while a whopping 93 percent support the medical use of marijuana. Perhaps most importantly, 71 percent of voters — including strong majorities of Democrats, Republicans, and Independents — say that they ‘oppose the government enforcing federal laws against marijuana in states that have already legalized medical or recreational marijuana.’
At the Mises Institute, Ryan McMaken points out that 81 percent of all drug arrests are for simple possession, defining the renewed war on marijuana as a war on personal choice. Since Trump has sided with the police regarding civil asset forfeiture and praised Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte’s anti-drug death squads, drug-war abolitionists can likely expect little help from the Trump administration over the next several years.
Oklahoma man faces life in prison for selling legal Colorado marijuana
“An Oklahoma man faces a possible life sentence after he allegedly sold 4 grams of marijuana to a pair of confidential informants working with police in the city of Enid, an hour and a half drive north of Oklahoma City. Bourbonais was arraigned last week and faces charges of possession with intent to distribute within 2,000 feet of a school, two counts of distribution of a controlled substance and a misdemeanor count of possession of drug paraphernalia. Because of his rap sheet, he faces 12 years to life in prison — a stunning sentence for an amount of marijuana that would have been legal in Colorado, which shares a border with Oklahoma.”
Vermont Considering Blockchain Tech for State Records, Smart Contracts
“Vermont has recently taken some legislative steps that could see the state using Bitcoin’s technology for state records, smart contracts and other applications in a drive to become ‘a leader in the field.’ Neither the bill nor the amendment reference ‘Bitcoin’ but rather the distributed immutable worldwide ledger database that Bitcoin runs on – the blockchain. Legislation such as that from Vermont seems to follow this same path of burying Bitcoin and at the same time embracing it. This also has to do with the recent Bitcoin 2.0 awakening that the Bitcoin blockchain public ledger is not merely a rail to move virtual currency, but a powerful means to transmit information.”