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Romney Insists Marijuana Is a Gateway Drug

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Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney on Wednesday lashed out at a reporter who asked him tough questions about same sex marriage, immigration and marijuana.

"Aren't there issues of significance that you'd like to talk about?" Romney quipped to CBS 4 reporter Shaun Boyd. "The economy -- the economy -- the economy, the growth of jobs, the need to put people back to work. The challenges of Iran. We've got enormous issues that we face. But, go ahead. You want to talk about medical marijuana."

"I think marijuana should not be legal in this country," the former Massachusetts governor opined. "I believe it's a gateway drug to other drug violations. The use of illegal drugs in this country is leading to terrible consequences in places like Mexico and actually in our own country. I oppose legalization of marijuana. I oppose legalization of other kinds of drugs."

Research has repeatedly shown that the so-called "gateway effect" of marijuana is negligible.

A 2010 study from the University of New Hampshire found that the use of harder illicit drugs had more to do with life factors like stress and employment status. Young people who had diminished stress over employment were less likely to use marijuana and other illegal drugs.

"Employment in young adulthood can protect people by 'closing' the marijuana gateway, so over-criminalizing youth marijuana use might create more serious problems if it interferes with later employment opportunities," study author Karen Van Gundy explained.

The problem with the "gateway effect" theory is that "correlation isn’t cause," Time's Maia Szalavitz wrote in 2012.

"Hell’s Angels motorcycle gang members are probably more [than] 104 times more likely to have ridden a bicycle as a kid than those who don’t become Hell’s Angels, but that doesn’t mean that riding a two-wheeler is a 'gateway' to joining a motorcycle gang," she noted. "It simply means that most people ride bikes and the kind of people who don’t are highly unlikely to ever ride a motorcycle."

Romney also repeated his position that marriage should only be between a man and a woman.

"My position on gay marriage is the same that it's been, well, from the beginning. And that is marriage is a relationship between a man and a woman," he said. "That the posture I had as governor and I have that today."

"If a civil union is identical to marriage other than with the name, why, I don't support that," he continued. "But I certainly recognize that hospital visitation rights and benefits of that nature may well be appropriate and states are able to make a provision for a determination for those kinds of rights as well as benefits that might accrue to state workers. My position is the same that it's been from the beginning, which is that I don't favor a civil union if it's identical to marriage. And I don't favor marriage between people of the same gender."

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Chris Hayes took a shot at Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia for where he apparently gets his news and for his hypocrisy with basing his rulings on partisan ideology and whether he likes a particular law or not when it comes to his opinion on interstate commerce.

HAYES: We now know that many of the conservative Justices appear to be getting their information from reading right wing blogs. We know Justice Scalia even referenced the infamous “Cornhusker kickback”, a bete noire of Michelle Malkin and Red State, even though the deal cut with Nebraska Sen. Ben Nelson to secure his vote for the ACA, didn't end up in the final legislation.

Most importantly we were reminded that just seven years ago, while voting to uphold a federal law that outlawed marijuana grown for private medicinal consumption, Justice Scalia thought the Constitution's interstate Commerce Clause was so broad that Congress could regulate even non-economic interstate activities, so long as failure to do so could undercut its regulation of interstate commerce.

I just assumed it was from watching Fox, but maybe Chris Hayes is correct as well.



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Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum on Thursday found himself being booed by a group of students after he failed to convince them that legalizing same sex marriage would also mean that polygamy was acceptable.

A young man at New England College's College Convention 2012 asked the candidate how same sex marriage effected him personally.

"I'm surprised I got a gay marriage question at a college crowd," Santorum joked. "You, the one that wants to do this, tell me the justification. What is the public purpose?"

"The reason why you would change the law to begin with is because two people who love each other, who want to legally be able to see each other if they're in the hospital, who want to just have the same right you and your wife do," a male student replied.

Santorum argued that a legal contract would allow partners to see each other in the hospital and marriage was not necessary.

"How about the ideas that all men are created equal?" a young woman asked.

"So anybody can marry anybody else?" Santorum asked as the students agreed. "So anybody can marry several people? ... So if you're not happy unless you're married to five other people, is that OK?"

"That's irrelevant!" someone shouted.

"It's morally right for two men to have the same rights as a man and a woman," the young woman explained.

"OK, well what about three men?" Santorum pressed.

"What I'm asking is how you justify your belief based on this high morals you have about all men being created equal, when two men who want to marry... I'm talking about the basic right you give another woman," the woman said.

"You know it's important that if we're going to have a discussion based on rational, reasoned thought that we employ reason," Santorum objected. "If she reflects the values [of Americans], marriage can be for anybody or any group of people, as many as necessary, any two people, or any three or four. Marriage really means whatever you want it to mean."

For his final question at the event, Santorum was asked if he would work to overturn existing same sex marriage and medical marijuana laws.

"I don't believe we can have 50 definitions of marriage in this country," Santorum opined. "I'll use an extreme example: Because you're 19-years-old and female, you're allowed to live in this state. Because he's 30-years-old and a male, he's not. Well, obviously we're not getting there and that's an absurd example. But it is -- if you're certain amount of gestational age or if you were born and there are some states that advocated for mercy killings, for example, euthanasia, and you can be euthanized if you're in one state but you can't be if you're in another state. Those are things that I think are counter to the Constitution."

"I don't know my medical marijuana laws very well to be honest with you," he added. "I feel that they are a hazardous thing for society and so I would -- well, I formed that opinion from my own life experiences and having experienced that. I went to college too."

That answer earned the former Pennsylvania senator loud and sustained boos as he tried to exit the stage.



"Obama Pot Party" Shutdown By The White House

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March 02, 2010 CNN



Green Gold Rush!

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December 12, 2009 CNN

Colorado has a new cash crop: marijuana. Growing pot for medical use is one of the booming businesses in the state. One family has turned nearly 40 acres in southern Colorado into a money making venture.

Within the plastic walls of a small greenhouse, a business is booming for Jason Irwin, and his mother Diane.

“This is me and my mom's little marijuana farm,” Jason said, motioning to a small group of structures and vehicles.

The second of their two greenhouses sits next to a small motor-home where Diane oversees the operation.

“I sold my salon and moved down to the country,” Diane said.

The pair now grows their crops in La Veta, Colorado southwest of Walsenburg, nearly 200 miles from where Diane used to own a successful Aveda Salon.

"I gave Jason some money when I sold the salon. Just trusted him to do what he thought was best, to invest the money and help us get ahead financially,” she said. They talked again when he came up with a plan. “He said he was going to open a dispensary and I said ‘Go for it!’”

His idea was to buy 37 acres near the Greenhorn Mountains to supply his own, legal, dispensary with medical marijuana. Her son now claims he grosses $5,000 a day as a certified medicine provider, paying city and state taxes since day one. From KKTV



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December 11, 2009 C-SPAN

Ten years ago, D.C. residents overwhelmingly passed a medical marijuana ballot initiative, but the law’s implementation was blocked by Congress. The bill released today — a large omnibus spending bill — lifts the ban on medical marijuana in the nation’s capitol. Read more at MPP Blog



There Are Good Drugs And There Are Bad Drugs...?

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November 19, 2009 CURRENT TV SUPER NEWS



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November 18, 2009 C-SPAN



Move To Legalize Medical Marijuana Dispensaries In California

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November 17, 2009 CNN



Cheech & Chong vs Ann Coulter

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November 15, 2009 FOX News

Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong interview slash debate about the American Medical Association's reversal on Medical Marijuana this week, also included Ann Coulter and Geraldo Rivera.