Thursday, March 25, 2010

Californians to vote on legal weed

Californians to vote on legal weed
By Aaron Smith, CNNMoney.com staff writer, March 25, 2010: 1:25 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- It's official: Californians will decide whether legal marijuana should be used to plug the state's $20 billion budget gap.

California residents are expected to vote this year on whether legalization should be approved to raise nearly $1.4 billion in state revenue. That's based on an estimate from the State Board of Equalization, a tax administration agency.

"It would be another source of revenue for the state," said Anita Gore, spokeswoman for the board. The board has not issued an opinion on legalization as a means of easing the state's budget crisis, she added.

California Secretary Debra Brown confirmed on Wednesday that enough signatures had been collected to put AB 390, a marijuana legalization bill, on the ballot for Nov. 2. A press release from the secretary said that legalization proponents submitted 694,248 petition signatures for the bill, easily surpassing the required 433,791.

Unlike prior legislation that has passed in California and other states, this form of legalization is not restricted to medicinal use of marijuana.

The bill, sponsored by Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, D-San Francisco, proposes that marijuana be regulated and taxed in a similar way to alcohol.

According to the bill, people would have to be 21 years or older "to possess, cultivate, or transport marijuana for personal use." Californians would not be permitted to use the drug in public or within the presence of minors, and would not be allowed to possess it on school grounds.

Most importantly, as far as the budget gap is concerned, the bill stipulates that the drug would be subject to a sales tax. An additional retail fee of $50 would be imposed on every ounce that's sold.

The State Board of Equalization estimates that the state could raise $1.382 billion in annual tax revenues from legal marijuana. The figure is based on estimated revenue of $990 million from the retail fees and $392 million from sales taxes.

"With the state in the midst of an historic economic crisis, the move towards regulating and taxing marijuana is simply common sense," Ammiano said in a press release when he first proposed the bill last year.

Ammiano was not immediately available for comment.
AWESOME! Hopefully this will distract the fundamentalists enough to let me and my fellow deviants sneak in a few civil rights.

I'm really not a marijuana advocate. Yet it seems to me that decriminalization will bring more realistic oversight. It's the first step in responsible monitoring … through real, legal avenues instead of back alleys. If nothing else, it will help the economy. The AP reported this and it's been carried everywhere, but I grabbed CNNMoney's version to illustrate that point.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Adopted

H.R. 3590 passes 219 to 212. On to Reconciliation. Oh boy. I wonder if any Republican's speech will fail to mention abortion.

Please Heed the Gavel

Whoa. Something about me has changed. Just got home after a date with AndrewFashion and the first thing I did was bring up C-SPAN to watch the health care debate. It is exciting though. For instance, Barny Frank (D-Massachusetts) claims the GOP stands for "Grandstand Oppose Postpone." Good stuff.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

The Fountain (2006)

The Fountain (2006) [PG-13] <**/***>

In this sci-fi drama that spans a millennium, a man (Hugh Jackman) searches for a tree believed to grant eternal life in 16th-century Spain; seeks a cure for his wife's (Rachel Weisz) cancer as a present-day scientist; and traverses the universe as a 26th-century astronaut. As he travels through time in an epic struggle to save the woman he loves, he also comes to understand some of life's murkiest mysteries.

Genre: Sci-Fi Dramas, Romantic Dramas
This movie is: Romantic, Mind-bending, Emotional, Cerebral

Netflix has been pretty good about making related suggestions but this was the first big fail. This movie has horrible, horrible. After about an hour I had to stop it to end the pain. For whatever reason, I finished it the next day. It tries to be a lot more than it accomplishes.

Two reasons it isn't a single star. First there was some chemistry between Wolverine and the Weisz chick. Could feel for them. Second was the cinematography and special effects. Despite the boredom and confusion, there were many lush moments to sit back and enjoy. Other than these two redeeming characteristics it was a waste of celluloid.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Falling On My Head Like a Memory

Funny how poorly New Yorkers deal with rain.

I remember being in Trader Joe's one rainy day where the line was one tenth what it normally is. The cashier said that most people stay out of inclement weather. Since I enjoy being out in it I hadn't made the connection. Yet I see it everywhere now.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Vitesse!

The pace of this city still surprises me. Was reading an interview with Renzo Rosso, owner of Diesel, last month where he was talking about shaking things up. The next day I noticed his new ads on bill boards, sides of busses, et cetera. Yet walking around last week they were all gone. The only place I saw them was at the actual store on 14th. Crazy.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

The Internet is More Than Pr0n

My inner geek just exploded:
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