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WE SUPPORT THE MARIJUANA WINE ACT 2012 link

MarijuanaWineAct2012

 

The Regulate Marijuana Like Wine Act translated from Legalese into plain English.

By David Malmo-Levine

The People of the State of California do enact as follows:

The Regulate Marijuana Like Wine Act of 2012





SECTION 1.  Findings, Declarations, Purpose, Directives, and Orders

New Section 11362.95 is added to the Health and Safety Code: (The Regulate Marijuana Like Wine Act will be called “11362.95” by lawyers and Judges so they can more easily find it in their books.)

11362.95. This section shall be known as and may be cited as the "Regulate Marijuana Like Wine Act of 2012," known hereinafter as the "Act." (Ditto.)

(a) The People of the State of California hereby find and declare: (Everyone here now knows that:)

(1) Outlawing marijuana has not reduced its availability and has actually resulted in making it easier for minors to acquire. . (When parents think about their kids smoking pot they freak out and thus they currently prefer the perils of teen pot prohibition to the perils of responsible teen pot use.)

(2) Marijuana is an untapped revenue source for the State of California, and that the best way to tap into that source for the benefit of all Californians is to tax and regulate it. (California is broke.)

(3) The regulation of marijuana will benefit the People of the State of California by reducing criminal gang activity, promoting agriculture, creating jobs by creating a new hemp industry in the State of California, and reduce the fiscal and overpopulation burdens on the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. (This initiative means less gangsters & jailers and more farmers.)

(b) The purposes of this Act are as follows:

(1) To amend the California Health and Safety Code sections 11357, 11358, 11359, 11360, 11366, 11366.5, 11485, and Vehicle Code section 23222(b), such that persons 21 years of age or older shall no longer be prohibited from the use, possession, trade, gifting, sales, distribution, storage, transportation, production, or cultivation of marijuana. (All the laws having to do with pot in California will be changed. Adults within California are legally totally free and clear, pot-wise.)

(2) Marijuana, THC, and CBD explicitly and/or by inference, shall be removed from Health and Safety Code section 11054, except for those statutes pertaining to:

(A) Operating a motor vehicle; (You’re not allowed to drive impaired on pot.)

(B) Using marijuana or being impaired in the workplace or public nonsmoking areas. (You can’t blow smoke in people’s faces or show up to work wasted.)

(C) Providing, transferring, or selling marijuana to a person under 21 years of age; and (Teens & young adults will have to launch their own initiative if they wish to get high legally.)

(D) The use, possession, cultivation, processing, sales, distribution, transporting, or storing on premises of marijuana by persons under 21 years of age. (Teens & young adults will have to launch their own initiative if they wish to grow or sell pot legally.)

(3) The amendment of statutes that criminalize the use, possession, cultivation, processing, transportation, storage, distribution, gifting and/or selling of marijuana in any form, or method of ingestion by persons 21 years of age or older, to legalize all such for-profit or non-profit activity by those persons, groups, or by approved business entities, and does not subject these persons/entities to search, arrest, prosecution, seizure, asset forfeiture, and/or any criminal or civil penalty or sanction. (Adults within California are totally legally free and clear, pot-wise.)

(4) That these enumerated activities are not punishable herein. (Ditto.)

(5) That all pending court actions under said amended statutes that conflict with the provisions of this Act shall be dismissed with prejudice. (If you’re an adult facing a pot charge and this initiative is approved by voters before your case is decided, you’re off the hook.)

(c) The People of the State of California hereby declare that this Act expressly prohibits the following:

(1) The search, arrest, prosecution, seizure of marijuana, asset forfeiture, or imposition of any criminal or civil penalties or fines for persons 21 years of age or older or entities for acting within the provisions of this Act.  Without limiting any other greater immunity or rights granted herein, these persons/entities are also granted the immunity specified in Health and Safety Code section 11367, subject to its provisions. (If you are an adult, California cops and Federal cops can no longer confiscate your pot, your money or any of your stuff over pot if this thing passes.)

(2) Any and all commercial advertising of the sales, distribution, and use of marijuana, except for medical marijuana and products that contain less than one percent THC. This provision shall be enforced hereafter by penalties to be set forth by the Legislature. (Med pot dispensaries and industrial hemp manufacturers can advertize, but recreational pot cafes can’t.)

(d) The People of the State of California hereby expressly declare that this Act does not repeal, modify, or change any present medical marijuana statutes as set forth in California Proposition 215 and its progeny. (Medical marijuana rights – such as extra-large gardens or use by under 21 year olds – is protected under this initiative.)

(e) The People of the State of California hereby declare:

(1) This Act adopts the definitions of marijuana and THC as they are presently set forth in Health and Safety Code Sections 11018 and 11006.5, but those definitions shall be broadly interpreted to include the species Cannabis Indica, Ruderalis, and Americana, as well as any plant part, derivative, interspecies hybrids or cross-breeds, and all non-genetically-modified strains of the Cannabis genus and plant. (Every kind of pot is legal except GMO pot. GMO pot may be unsafe and is designed to produce seeds that can’t produce more pot … to force people to buy seeds instead of breed and be self-sufficient.)

(2) Existing taxes and regulations for the establishment of the farming, industry, distribution, retail sales, and wholesale transactions of agricultural crops and products shall apply to marijuana, regardless of THC level, using the grape winery industry as a model, so long as the results support these declarations, purposes and goals. (Pot taxes will be minimal, like wine taxes are. For example, combined State and Federal taxes on a bottle of wine equals 25 cents. A bottle of wine gives two people a buzz, as does a gram of pot. Assuming a 25 cent tax on a gram of pot, an ounce would result in seven bucks in taxes, and a pound would result in 112 dollars in taxes. It’s probable that the over-all retail price of most pot would drop much lower than that as a result of reduced production and security costs for growers, more outdoor, and more competition.)

(3) All marijuana or hemp products with a THC level below one percent shall be authorized for normal retail sales.  All marijuana or hemp products with a THC level of one percent or above shall be restricted for normal retail sales to persons 21 years of age or older and regulated in a manner similar to wine, so long as the results support these declarations, purposes and goals. (Hemp is regulated like wheat, and pot is regulated like wine.)

(4) The State of California, and all branches of its government, shall liberally construe the meaning and implementation of this Act to favor and benefit individuals, and qualifying business entities regarding the following:

(A) No taxes, fees, laws, rules, regulations, or local city or county zoning requirements may be adopted or enacted to defeat, deny, or prohibit the purposes of this Act, or to defeat, deny, or prohibit persons 21 years of age or older, associations, organizations commercial, agricultural, or industrial businesses from engaging in the activities protected by this Act, and all civil rights apply as set forth in Civil Code Sections 52.1 et seq., 54, Food and Agricultural Code Sections 54033 through 54035, inclusive. (Cities can’t pull a “Rancho Cordova” anymore – they can no longer set taxes so high that nobody can afford to grow.)

(B) As per the winery regulations of the alcohol industry model that allow for non-commercial home brewing, any person, association, or collective group not producing more than 25 flowering plants or 12 pounds of dried processed marijuana per adult, per year, shall be exempt from any winery regulations of the alcohol industry model, excises, fees, and taxes, except for income taxes and sales taxes, if they apply. (Small-time growers will not be taxed unless they want to sell some.)

(C) No regulations, taxes, or fees shall be enacted or imposed for marijuana for qualifying persons and entities, which are more severe or restrictive than those for comparable and reasonable usage in the commercial wine grape farming and winery regulations of the alcohol industry model, including for farming, planting, cultivating, irrigating, harvesting, processing, brokering, storing, selling, distributing, and establishing of cooperatives or collective associations. (Regulations, taxes and fees will be minimal just like the ones on wine.)

(5) Regardless of jurisdictional arguments, all state, local, elected, appointed, hired employees, officers, and officials shall refuse to and shall not cooperate with or assist federal, state, or local officials or employees who would eradicate marijuana, act for seizure or forfeiture, or defeat any liberally construed purpose of this Act, or to operate under any contract or arrangement to repeal or circumvent this Act directly or indirectly, or to follow or to abide by any federal laws or regulations that are in conflict with this Act.  Further, no such person acting alone, or with any other person or legislative or executive body, may contract or agree to cooperate with or to assist federal officials, employees, agencies or departments to obtain any money, property, gain, or advantage by the arrest, prosecution, conviction, or deprivation or seizure of property of anyone acting within the age provisions of this Act. (California cops will no longer be allowed to help Feder!
 al cops with enforcing Federal pot laws.)

(6) Within 30 days of passage of this Act, the offices of both the state Attorney General and the Department of Public Health shall inform the United States Department of Health and Human Services, the United States Attorney General, Congress, Drug Enforcement Agency, and Food and Drug Administration that in 1996 the state of California recognized the current medical use of marijuana in treatment in the United States, and since 1996 is a state-regulated medical practice. Physicians have evaluated thousands of patients who have used marijuana with no adverse consequences, and for that reason demands or petitions as is appropriate (see 21 CFR 1308.43, 21 USC 811-812) that marijuana and tetrahydrocannabinols as defined in §21 USC 802(16) be removed from Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act, 21 USC 800 et. seq., where it is currently listed as a drug with no accepted medical use. (California politicians will be forced to ask the Feds to reschedule cannabis so that people !
 all over the USA will have easier access to it.)

(7) The State of California is ordered to protect and defend all provisions of this Act from any and all challenges or litigation, whether from individuals, officials, cities, counties, the state or federal governments. (California politicians must spend money to defend the new pot laws in court, should the need arise.)

(f) This Act shall become effective immediately upon passage.

SECTION 2.  Severability

If any of the provisions of this Act, or any part thereof, is for any reason held to be invalid or unconstitutional, the remaining provisions shall not be affected, but shall remain in full force and effect, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable. (If some of this stuff doesn’t fly the rest still can.)

SECTION 3.  Conflicting Measures

If this Act is approved by the voters but superseded by law by any other conflicting ballot measure approved by the voters at the same election, and the conflicting measures are later held invalid, this Act shall be self-executing and given the full force of law. (Other new pot laws can’t screw up these pot laws if those other pot laws turn out to suck.)

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Attachment: http://drugsense.org/temp/PGQL3T2gpN14920.html

 

 

ccStar lite
ccStar D lite
ccStar Full
ccStar Closed Collective
 
each video presentations from left to right.. inherits more options
 
 

           
 

Features
Versions



*

 

6mins

Patient/ Doctor
and more..

 

This is a starter version, get acquainted.  
A patient and doctor information and verification application with extra functions
Lookups, Scan your ID's, Farm Expired patients
Import from, better than Excel
No Switches
Allow New Patient Entries
Patients Import next version
Use a bar code scanner

 
8mins

Both Patient,
POS/ Inventory

 

BOTH LITE OPTIONS.. as each version inherits more options.
..the Patient Doctor Verification application
Includes, the Admin, simple inventory entry process to checking out POS
Date-spanded Daily Journals, summary and reports
 Includes ccStar simple Point of Sale (POS) or..
Use your own POS and Inventory!!
 .. using Dispatch Switch, bypassing our POS and Inventory
 Going directly to Driver Dispatching, managing delivery.
Includes Daily Journal Reports, Scan your data to containers,
 .. Referral system, Vendors list and others..

  • Various scanning patient id's to patient or POS
  • Point of Sale, using Barcode or a Manual simples option
  • Barcode option, includes Gram Scale option, for manual adjustments
  • Enable Dispatcher bypass Inventory and POS (use another POS)

Optional switches
Simplex or (Barcode w/option Gram Scale)
Dispatcher.. bypass POS

 

 

 

*
 

29mins

Does everything

 

Inherits ALL THE PREVIOUS OPTIONS..
|Picture Identification and a.. Membership card system with bar-code Patient Product Usage, within Time and Limits Med Labels, Vendor Consignment and tracking
Inventory Packaging, compete Bar-coding process
And a 3rd inventory, Type 3, is a Package or combo of Types 1 and 2. Dispatching Process at end of POS
Use Dispatch Switch to bypass POS and Inventory to Dispatcher Process.
Community Coop, Drivers List and Cannabis Library
and more..

Optional switches

Simplex or (Barcode w/option Gram Scale)
Dispatcher.. bypass POS
Patient Usage

 

 

15mins

As an organizer,
will this work for
states i.e. Oregon?

 

  • Each Share is made up of multiple patients, caregivers, growers etc.
  • No limit number of  individual close collective shared entities called Shares
  • Post expenses with reports and summaries  between posted dates
  • Each Share has Product inventory assigned to patients shared pool, as Share inventory
  • Dispensary could delegate certain Product to, or as House Inventory
  • Each Share has its own membership agreement and addendum
  • Patient joining or belonging to Share accepts membership agreement option to add addendum
  • Patient is setup with Product belonging to Share, receiving grams, edible and Other counts.
  • Patient can possibly belong to multiple Shares having different member-ID
  • Inventory can be marked as House, possibly dispensed to Patients in shares or not in shares.
  • Patients tracked used Product and optioned to test 30/60/90 gram usage
  • Coloring coding patients vs shares
  • Inventory product dispensed, gifted to patient through similar POS (non monies)

ALL THE ABOVE VERSION OPTIONS

  • Includes patient doctor verification
    Includes Admin inventory
  • Scan patient id to patient or POS
  • POS   use Barcode or manual Simplex option
  • Barcode to Gram Scale function
  • Program Product/Usage/Limits
  • Dispatcher.. bypass POS
  • etc, etc

Optional switches
Simplex or (Barcode w/option Gram Scale)
Dispatcher bypass
Patient Usage

Instead of Point of Sale its, Point of Dispense. Products to patient, Med-gifts.
Document management of individual to no limit shares to Patients and Gifts.
Includes a date spanned tracking Daily Journal as well.

  27mins

Combining both
Full version
and the
Collective
version

 

Includes the Full and the Collective code in the one version Has 2 Daily Journal formats, Standard, Collective
ALL THE ABOVE VERSION OPTIONS INCLUDED

Optional switches
Simplex or (Barcode w/option Gram Scale)
Dispatcher.. bypass POS
Patient Usage

 

 


*

 

OPEN UP A MMJ CALL CENTER
our speciality
25 years

THIS APPLICATION CONFIGURES AS A CALL CENTER or ANSWERING SERVICE SYSTEM.


WE CAN SUPPORT MANY DISPENSARIES IN USA.


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