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Ohio Decides Whether to Legalize Marijuana Today, But Voters are Confused

Ohio voters will decide today if the state is to become the next marijuana market entirely legal in the nation. However, there is also a question about rival the ballot that would prevent the legalization occur even if the majority comes to bear with bad legal herbs.<br>Read more<br>http://www.ganjababy420.com/ohio-decides-whether-to-legalize-marijuana-today-but-voters-are-confused/

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Ohio Decides Whether to Legalize Marijuana Today, But Voters are Confused

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  1. Ohio Decides Whether to Legalize Marijuana Today, But Voters are Confused Ohio voters will decide today if the state is to become the next marijuana market entirely legal in the nation. However, there is also a question about rival the ballot that would prevent the legalization occur even if the majority comes to bear with bad legal herbs.

  2. The measure to make marijuana legal in the Buckeye state is ResponsibleOhio number 3, a proposed constitutional amendment that would allow adults 21 or over to buy weed in a manner similar to beer in a number of retail clinics across the state. It would also legalize the herb for medicinal purposes, allowing physicians to offer recommendations for patients with a wealth of health conditions. If voters back the initiative, Ohio will join Colorado, Washington, Oregon and Alaska to become the fifth state to end both prohibitionists. Although most of statewide efforts to legalize marijuana Recreational have had great success in recent years, number 3 has been dragged through the mud, mostly by advocates of marijuana on the structure the strange shape of the industry that is attached to legalization. In exchange for bad legal herbs, ResponsibleOhio, which consists of a group of wealthy investors and local entrepreneurs, gets exclusive rights to the commercial production and distribution of marijuana. Although the number 3 in the bowels eliminates criminal penalties associated with possession of marijuana, not to mention allowed residents to develop a significant amount of weed at home for personal use, it also eliminates the possibility of someone other than ResponsibleOhio entering the company’s growth and sales of weeds.

  3. In short, number 3 creates a legal framework for the average consumer pot similar to what is currently in Colorado, but establishes a monopoly on the market in the process. For this reason, the General Assembly of Ohio met during the summer and put a competing initiative on the ballot – Issue 2. This measure asks voters to decide whether the state should allow the existence of monopolies. Therefore, whether ResponsibleOhio number 3 wins the election, Number 2, otherwise known as the Anti-Monopoly amendment would need the approval of a majority vote to stop the legalization net in its tracks. “If the two proposed measures are approved, the amendment antitrust highlighted by the legislature would be effective on the first and its monopoly provision prohibiting the inclusion in the Constitution would be an effective barrier to the amendment taking the effect of ResponsibleOhio, “Husted said in a statement. The problem is that all the noise surrounding the two issues has created a shitstorm confusion that convinced even the most loyal supporters of marijuana; those who would likely be unaffected by ResponsibleOhio monopoly, to stand in opposition to the measure.

  4. “It is disgusting to me,” Sri Kavuru, executive director of Ohio to end the ban, told The Cincinnati Enquirer. “The idea that any group or company has the exclusive right to grow marijuana and sell it. It’s not plutonium. It is an agricultural product to be regulated as such.” The impact of the media racket has become a virus that has revealed itself in some recent surveys. Most polls show that Ohio are divided on whether they should legalize weed or support the proposed anti-monopoly, which makes the result of the election of completely unpredictable today. However, one thing is certain, if Ohio managed to get out of the election today having legalized marijuana, each state with an initiative on the ballot in 2016 will be no excuse for failure.

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