RE:RE:RE:RE:The only reason why weed sector is greenWell this dinosaur that you think does not understand the score ? Sad Gomer pumping once again !
Nancy Mace Bill which will get coverage is mere talk without the backing of her fellow Republicans and need other Democrats to vote for her bill to pass and then the ultimate federal passage is getting a Democrat Presidential ink on this bill ????????????????????????????????????????
mace was the " ONLY " Republican but the weed sector is doing cartwheels over MORE SPECULATION ..... better pray because it is a recipe for many to get BURNT ... I see the bill get tied up in RED TAPE like Congress does to Bills that don't have the backing which it is famous for
Mace, who took office earlier this year, was the only Republican lawmaker to support the Marijuana Research bill to conduct clinical trials into the therapeutic potential of marijuana for military veterans. The House Veterans Affairs Committee approved the bill on November 4.
Although Mace has yet to speak publicly about the draft bill, the proposal seems a compromise with other far-reaching Republican draft bills.
According to the information leaked by Marijuana Moment, the draft bill seems to be based on a regulatory scheme meant to foster and protect the single states’ decisions over regulating the marijuana industry.
Like the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement (MORE) Act, the Republican draft bill would aim to end the criminalization of cannabis by removing it from the list of controlled substances.
Both proposals aim to reintegrate to eliminate related criminal penalties and enact several criminal and social justice reforms, including the expungement of prior convictions. However, the Republican proposal has specifically mentioned that only those cannabis-related convictions with no-violent records will be eligible for expungement.
The excise tax on cannabis proposed by the Republican-led draft bill (3.75%) is slightly lighter than the MORE Act’s Proposed Excise Tax Design (start at 5% and increase the tax to 8% over three years).