Message from @Techpriest

Discord ID: 567206610443829249


2019-04-15 04:32:42 UTC  

yet the amendment still got passed

2019-04-15 04:32:46 UTC  

and is technically constitutional

2019-04-15 04:32:52 UTC  

yeah quite unfortunate

2019-04-15 04:33:04 UTC  

so sentencing all those weed smokers to prison for a decade to work feels good man

2019-04-15 04:33:15 UTC  

but thats not what happens

2019-04-15 04:33:24 UTC  

also what the fuck

2019-04-15 04:33:26 UTC  

is washington's sale tax

2019-04-15 04:33:27 UTC  

37%?

2019-04-15 04:33:34 UTC  

37%

2019-04-15 04:33:46 UTC  

That is fucking ridiculous

2019-04-15 04:33:56 UTC  

Is Washington's tax revenue funded on weed

2019-04-15 04:35:02 UTC  

Privately funded prisons are a weird issue, to be fair. Obviously if a company is willing to house inmates then of course the state will do it, it's less of a burden to the state. The argument, however, should be whether any form of non governmental entity should be able to run a correctional institution.

2019-04-15 04:35:33 UTC  

correctional institution never work anyway

2019-04-15 04:35:49 UTC  

As for weed, I think that if state's rights were more respected and important then it wouldn't be an issue. Instead of having a federal law dictating why not let each individual state decide? What works in California may not work in Alabama and vice versa

2019-04-15 04:36:00 UTC  

that's exactly what's happening

2019-04-15 04:36:08 UTC  

^^

2019-04-15 04:36:11 UTC  

The U.S. Federal Government isn't even touching it

2019-04-15 04:36:19 UTC  

so if you somehow see the fbi

2019-04-15 04:36:23 UTC  

ah fuck your weed is now illegal

2019-04-15 04:36:32 UTC  

Yea.

2019-04-15 04:36:34 UTC  

It's like the death penalty

2019-04-15 04:36:45 UTC  

In New York it's illegal, but if the New York Police decides to up your crime to a federal charge where on the federal level it is legal

2019-04-15 04:36:45 UTC  

bye bye

2019-04-15 04:37:29 UTC  

The idea that the federal government can somehow overrule a state's decision and by extension rights involving an issue that is not within the perimeters set by the constitution blatantly proves that the feds have a huge overreach of power

2019-04-15 04:37:52 UTC  

uh

2019-04-15 04:38:00 UTC  

```
is not within the perimeters set by the constitution
```

2019-04-15 04:38:06 UTC  

```
This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.
```

2019-04-15 04:38:18 UTC  

here you go

2019-04-15 04:38:21 UTC  

note the

2019-04-15 04:38:24 UTC  

0$

2019-04-15 04:38:31 UTC  

and the other numbers

2019-04-15 04:38:45 UTC  

not bad

2019-04-15 04:39:10 UTC  

I won't argue against weed on tax recreation then.

2019-04-15 04:43:16 UTC  

Yes, however that largely refers to non internal issues. Treaties, for example, are considered the "supreme law of the land." My view is that it's not the place of the Federal government as Article 6 specifically refers to "any federal laws that are made according to the Constitution"

2019-04-15 04:43:55 UTC  

It's not like the Supremacy Clause is actually used nowadays

2019-04-15 04:44:00 UTC  

The Federal Government has a thing called block grants

2019-04-15 04:44:24 UTC  

Technically alcohol isn't illegal in the U.S. Government level

2019-04-15 04:44:31 UTC  

Any state can set their alcohol age restriction to any age they want

2019-04-15 04:44:44 UTC  

But if you want 1/2 of your transportation spending to be paid for, you'll have to set it to 21 or higher.