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bluefete
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Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby bluefete » September 13th, 2014, 8:48 pm

Poor Prof. Ken Ramchand almost got murdered by Trinbagonian hypocrites when he suggested that we do this many years ago.


http://news.yahoo.com/jamaica-rastas-re ... 16048.html

In Jamaica, Rastas ready for pot decriminalization

KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — Taking a deep draw on a pipe that glows with burning marijuana, reggae luminary Bunny Wailer gives a satisfied grin through a haze of aromatic smoke in his concrete yard painted in the red, green, gold and black colors identified with his Rastafarian faith.

These days, the baritone singer from the legendary Wailers, the group he formed in 1963 with late superstars Bob Marley and Peter Tosh, has reason to feel good. There is unprecedented traction building in Jamaica to decriminalize pot, meaning the dreadlocked Wailer and other adherents of Rastafari — a homegrown spiritual movement that considers the drug divine — may soon be able to smoke without fear of arrest.

"Rastas have treated marijuana as something legal all along, even though we have been sent to prison for using the herb in our prayer. But this is the time for all these pressures to stop. The world is catching up now," the 67-year-old three-time Grammy winner said at his modest Kingston home.

Jamaica is known internationally for its marijuana. The hardy plant grows easily on the tropical Caribbean island, where its use is culturally entrenched despite being legally banned for 100 years. Cultivation is kept hidden, with small patches tucked into mountainsides, in swamps and between rows of other crops. Wailer, himself, was convicted of possession in 1967 and did more than a year of hard labor.

Previous moves to decriminalize the drug failed to advance mainly because officials feared they would violate international treaties and bring sanctions from Washington. But now, with a number of U.S. states relaxing their marijuana laws — Colorado and Washington even allow recreational use — Jamaica is rethinking its position.

Justice Minister Mark Golding says Jamaica's Cabinet has approved a plan to decriminalize marijuana, including for religious purposes, and legislators are expected to authorize it before the end of the year.

Freedom to use marijuana for religious worship is one of various amendments to Jamaica's Dangerous Drugs Act supported by Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller's administration. Her ministers also have proposed unclogging courts by decriminalizing small amounts of weed for personal use, making possession of 2 ounces or less a ticketable offense. The main hope is that a regulated medical marijuana and scientific research sector could help draw investments to the cash-strapped island, which is laboring under its latest loan program with the International Monetary Fund.

"Ganja," as marijuana is known locally, has a long history on the island. It was introduced to Jamaica in the 19th century by Indian indentured servants and it gained popularity as a medicinal herb. Use spread among the poor in the 1930s with the founding of Rastafari, a spiritual movement that melds Old Testament teachings and Pan-Africanism and whose followers worship the late Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie.

Image
In this Aug. 28, 2014 photo, legalization advocate and reggae legend Bunny Wailer smokes a pipe stuffed with marijuana during a “reasoning” session in a yard in Kingston, Jamaica, decorated with Rastafarian colors and images of former Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie. Wailer, a founder of the iconic Wailers reggae group with late superstars Bob Marley and Peter Tosh, and fellow Rastafarians have long called for legalization of the drug that they smoke as part of their spiritual worship. Now, many Rastas are welcoming plans by the Jamaican government to decriminalize marijuana for religious purposes, among other proposed amendments to the island’s drug laws. (AP Photo/David McFadden)



Rasta adherents say use of the "holy herb" induces a meditative state that brings them closer to the divine. The faithful smoke it as a sacrament in chalice pipes or cigarettes called "spliffs," add it to vegetarian stews, and place it in fires as a burnt offering.

For years, Rastafarians were treated as second-class citizens and looked down upon by many Jamaicans as oddball, even dangerous drug-addled cultists. Police shooting ranges once had images of dreadlocked Rastas as targets. The spiritual movement attracts only a small percentage of the country's mostly Christian population of 2.7 million.

It wasn't until the 1970s, when the Wailers and other Rasta musicians popularized the Rastafarian culture among better-off Jamaicans, that marijuana's popularity began to filter through the island's rigid class structure and gain a wider acceptance. Marley's worldwide popularity has made him Jamaica's most famous and revered son.

While Rastafari followers tend to disdain government initiatives, for many, Jamaica's decriminalization plans signal a crucial victory after decades of struggle.

The momentum building "presents a major step forward for the recognition of the religious rights and expression of Rastafari," said Anta Anthony Merritt, a Rastafarian priest who is a faculty member at San Diego State University.

Image
In this Sept. 2, 2014 photo, Joseph Williams, a former Jamaican soldier who is now the “scribe” for the School of Vision Rastafarian group, is shown taking a break from clearing steep farmland at the their isolated retreat in the Blue Mountains that tower over Kingston, Jamaica. For years, Rastafarians were treated as second-class citizens and looked down upon by many Jamaicans as oddball, even dangerous drug-addled cultists. (AP Photo/David McFadden)




Even if the current proposals fall short of the full legalization Rastas long have sought, they are welcomed by many, said Priest Dermot Fagan, leader of a small sect in an isolated commune in the Blue Mountains that tower over Kingston.

"We are thankful for the coming changes and, yes, some of the pressures will be eased. But we can't forget the destruction, the mayhem that has been caused by the persecution of this divine herb," said Fagan, waving his hands for emphasis on a balcony overlooking the School of Vision retreat, a place where Rasta mysticism brushes against the realities of modern life.

Researchers who study the movement are curious about how decriminalization for Rastafari will play out. For now, there are a lot of unanswered questions. Ennis Edmonds, an associate professor of religious studies at Ohio's Kenyon College whose publications focus on Rastafari, said determining what is religious use in Jamaica will not be easy. There's essentially no formal church, organized conversion process and few places of communal gathering. An individual Rasta's personal relationship with "Jah," or God, is considered central to the faith.

"Most ritual smoking does not take place in official places of worship, but in people's yards and on street corners. Can a single Rasta smoking a spliff in any location claim religious use privileges?" Edmonds asked.

But for Wailer, the time is clearly ripe for change in "Babylon," the unflattering Rasta term for the Western world.

"Rastas have gone through a lot of hassles for years, getting criminalized and locked up for using the herb. But things are changing because ganja is what the world needs now," Wailer said, before taking another appreciative toke from his pipe.

___

David McFadden on Twitter: http://twitter.com/dmcfadd

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby Trini Hookah » September 13th, 2014, 8:49 pm

Marijuana is the leaf of the devil op. Repent.

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby bluefete » September 13th, 2014, 8:52 pm

FROM 14 YEARS AGO!!!!!!!!!!!!!

NARCOTICS-TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO: Lawmaker Calls for Debate on Legalising Pot
By IPS Correspondents Reprint | | Print | Send by email

Peter Richards

PORT OF SPAIN, Sep 8 2000 (IPS) - As a young university student in Jamaica during the 1970s Ken Ramchand used to smoke marijuana. Now as a legislator in Trinidad and Tobago he wants his country’s Parliament to seriously consider debatin g the legalisation of the drug for medicinal purposes.

“I believe the decriminalisation of marijuana is an urgent subject that calls for rational discussion by responsible citizens in our society and I feel it is my duty to encourage such discussion,” he said.

Last month Ramchand raised the issue in the Senate, describing his use of the substance as a “relaxant at the end of a day’s work, illustrating its use for health purposes” and speaking light-heartedly of its use as “a mild flavouring in cookies and soups and other foods.”

“I was at the time supporting the argument that marijuana was not addictive, that it was not harmful to health, and that it had medicinal properties. The incidents to which I referred took place in private in Jamaica 25 years ago. I have not touched marijuana in any form since I left Jamaica in 1975,” he added.

“There has been the suggestion that for someone in my position just to say that they used marijuana 25 years ago sends a wrong signal to young people. I do not believe young people are so stupid or that a fair transmission of my speech could (lead) anyone to smoke marijuana or to think I condone or advocate its use freely in society,” Ramchand said.

Ramchand says he is not advocating the legalisation of marijuana, since it would mean that the drug would become “available and uncontrolled as alcohol and tobacco.”

But he believes the matter should be brought before the country’s Parliament allowing Parliamentarians “the freedom to do their own thinking and research and give their own opinion on the subject”.

“Decriminalisation of marijuana for medicinal purposes may lead to legislation some time in the future and this is one of the reasons why certain hard moralists and certain economic interests resist even decriminalisation,” he said pointing to the ongoing debate on the matter in countries like the United States.

Federal agencies in the United States tend to be resistant towards the medicinal use of marijuana, but Frances Young, the chief administrative law judge of the US Drug Enforcement Administration ruled marijuana has legitimate medicinal applications and should be available to doctors.

A 1998 World Health Organisation (WHO) report found that “cannabis (marijuana) is safer than alcohol or tobacco” leading to less harm to public health than cigarettes or drink.

Another report, published in the journal of Psychoactive Drugs, in 1998 noted that “marijuana and its metabolites hold tremendous promise for the development of novel-acting agents to address a number of chronic diseases”, although calling for more detailed scientific studies.

But Ramchand’s suggestion has come at a time when Trinidad and Tobago has tightened its drug legislation laws, providing the courts with greater powers of confiscation, stiffening jail terms and shifting the onus of proof of guilt from the state to the accused.

It nonetheless has opened a debate here on the issue, although the medical fraternity has so far kept silent.

Attorney General Ramesh Lawrence Maharaj has already dismissed the notion of the government bringing the matter before Parliament for debate. “The present law is the possession of marijuana is a criminal offence and people are entitled to express their views, but the government has no intention of reforming those laws,” Maharaj said.

“We have nothing before us to show that it should not be a criminal offence,” he added.

Maharaj underscored the seriousness of the drug situation in Trinidad and Tobago here on Monday, when he addressed a Caribbean Action Task Force examining drugs and money laundering in the region.

According to Maharaj, on a monthly basis 100 million US dollars’ worth of illegal drugs pass through this country.

But Ramchand said he intends to continue “to campaign for the establishment of a national committee of doctors, scientists, and concerned people to examine the existing research” on marijuana.

Peter Hanoomansingh, a researcher at the University of the West Indies (UWI) says that since 1885, the authorities have been seeking to address the use of marijuana, with farmers during the period being allowed to grow the plant at a license fee of 100 pounds.

Today, legislators here have made the drug part of a series of tough legislation, which states in part that “a person found in possession of more than one kilogram of cannabis (marijuana) is deemed to have the drug for the purpose of trafficking, unless the contrary is proved”.

Hanoomansingh contends that his research on marijuana shows the ill effects to be greatly exaggerated, although he acknowledged it can damage the lungs.

Newspaper columnist and attorney BC Pires advocating support for the decriminalisation of the drug said that future generations would be “staggered” to know that cancer-causing tobacco companies were allowed to sponsor important sports events while medicinal marijuana sent its user to jail.

He suggests that “market forces” will push the legislators to examine and legalise the drug.

But not all are convinced. One newspaper reader wrote that the persons who are calling for the decriminalisation of marijuana “should visit some of these rehab centres and take a good look at what marijuana have done to society”.

“Legalise marijuana today and then what? Cocaine tomorrow?” the reader asked.

J. Marshall, who says he works with recovering addicts, told readers “it’ s not an easy sight to see how drugs mess you up”.

Last year, police figures show that an estimated 15 million marijuana plants and a further 10 million seedlings worth an estimated 500 million US dollars were destroyed by the authorities.

http://www.ipsnews.net/2000/09/narcotic ... ising-pot/

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby bluefete » September 13th, 2014, 8:54 pm

Trini Hookah wrote:Marijuana is the leaf of the devil op. Repent.


What BS from the USA you trolling here?

Let me make it very clear - I am NOT in favour of legalising marijuana - the cigarette.

I am in favour of legalising marijuana the plant!

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby killercow » September 13th, 2014, 8:57 pm

The title of this thread is misleading. Legalisation and decriminalisation are
two very different things.

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby kjaglal76v2 » September 13th, 2014, 9:19 pm

bluefete wrote:Let me make it very clear - I am NOT in favour of legalising marijuana - the cigarette.

I am in favour of legalising marijuana the plant!


lol whut

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby desifemlove » September 13th, 2014, 11:40 pm

Ms. Portia does need de Rasta votes.....

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby Morpheus » September 14th, 2014, 12:03 am


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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby zoom rader » September 14th, 2014, 2:59 am

Jah bless dem indentured hindu indians for bringing the herb over.

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby mero » September 14th, 2014, 7:36 am

Zoom you does blaze?

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby Rainman » September 14th, 2014, 8:05 am

Let the inevitable healing of ths nation begin.

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby SMc » September 14th, 2014, 8:16 am

Morpheus wrote:


ey look cousin Winston...long time I ent hear im.

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby Adrenalinerush » September 14th, 2014, 9:16 am

billit

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby javishm » September 14th, 2014, 9:57 am

Where is jamaice

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby hyperdude » September 14th, 2014, 10:10 am

javishm wrote:Where is jamaice

da is ah bad gyal from Picadilly....lol...

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby fouljuice » January 23rd, 2015, 3:06 am

The Jamaican cabinet has approved a bill that legalises the possession of small amounts of marijuana.

It means that for the first time the country's Rastafarian community, which uses the herb for religious purposes, could be able to smoke it legally.

The bill also envisages a licensing authority for the cultivation, sale and distribution of marijuana for medical and therapeutic purposes.

It goes to the senate this week for approval.

The bill also proposes that the smoking of marijuana will be banned in public spaces.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-30926714

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby Ted_v2 » January 23rd, 2015, 4:51 am

Yesssir.
The day kpb do that. They would be there for a next run

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Re: Jamaice To Legalise Marijuana

Postby uncle sam » January 23rd, 2015, 8:37 am

I aint know if I could stomach a grade soup nah

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Jamaica decriminalises it...

Postby desifemlove » February 25th, 2015, 9:31 am

Robert Nesta lookin' down now at he homeland in joy... 8-)

Like dey selective liberalism....decriminalise pot, but kill/beat gays... :?

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Re: Jamaica decriminalises it...

Postby RBphoto » February 25th, 2015, 9:33 am

They going to be too stoned to beat anything just now and seeing rainbows normal.

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Re: Jamaica decriminalises it...

Postby Slartibartfast » February 25th, 2015, 9:58 am

They say gays must be stoned to death, but joke's on them cuz you can't overdone on it anyway.

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Re: Jamaica decriminalises it...

Postby shogun » February 25th, 2015, 10:01 am


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Re: Jamaica decriminalises it...

Postby DrunkenMaster16 » February 25th, 2015, 3:54 pm

https://news.vice.com/article/new-research-suggests-pot-is-the-least-deadly-recreational-drug?utm_source=vicenewsfb

I voting for who ever actually decriminalizes. PNM, UNC, PP, COP who ever.. alyuh sticking. :mrgreen:

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Re: Jamaica decriminalises it...

Postby DVSTT » February 25th, 2015, 3:56 pm

Yessssss

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Re: Jamaica decriminalises it...

Postby redmanjp » February 25th, 2015, 4:22 pm

DrunkenMaster16 wrote:https://news.vice.com/article/new-research-suggests-pot-is-the-least-deadly-recreational-drug?utm_source=vicenewsfb

I voting for who ever actually decriminalizes. PNM, UNC, PP, COP who ever.. alyuh sticking. :mrgreen:


so PP have a few months to do dat then

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Re: Jamaica decriminalises it...

Postby roadhog » February 25th, 2015, 4:24 pm

Caribbean airlines should up the amount of flights from the states to Jamaica. The high man getaway destination

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Re: Jamaica decriminalises it...

Postby TheOwnerPO » February 25th, 2015, 6:20 pm

Thinking about trying it for the first time but idk :lol: :o

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Re: Jamaica decriminalises it...

Postby ruffneck_12 » February 25th, 2015, 6:28 pm

crystal meth addi realist tho

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Re: Jamaica decriminalises it...

Postby pioneer » February 25th, 2015, 6:35 pm

Time for Kams to push the bill and let rowley object...buss he own throat dey

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Re: Jamaica decriminalises it...

Postby shogun » February 25th, 2015, 6:43 pm

DrunkenMaster16 wrote:https://news.vice.com/article/new-research-suggests-pot-is-the-least-deadly-recreational-drug?utm_source=vicenewsfb

I voting for who ever actually decriminalizes. PNM, UNC, PP, COP who ever.. alyuh sticking. :mrgreen:



:lol:


Even "Molly" that so trendy now and was supposed to be harmless, is proving to be much worse.

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