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Government United States Crime

Denver Becomes First US City To Decriminalize Psychedelic Mushrooms (reason.com) 276

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reason: In a surprise turn of events, a Denver ballot initiative to effectively decriminalize psychedelic mushrooms, previously thought to have failed, now appears to have narrowly passed after all. This would make the Mile High City the first in the U.S. to decriminalize psilocybin. If the unofficial final tally holds, Denver law enforcement will be directed to treat psychedelic mushrooms owned for personal possession as the lowest enforcement priority. The initiative will not legalize commercial sales. "After trailing in results postings Tuesday night and early Wednesday, final unofficial results just posted show a reversal of fortune -- with Initiative 301 set to pass with nearly 50.6 percent of the vote," The Denver Post reports. "The total stands at 89,320 votes in favor and 87,341 against -- a margin of 1,979 votes. Denver Elections expects to continue accepting military and overseas ballots, but typically those numbers are small."

Reason's Jacob Sullem points out that this decriminalization will have only a modest real-world impact, as Denver has only prosecuted a handful of psilocybin cases over the past few years.
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Denver Becomes First US City To Decriminalize Psychedelic Mushrooms

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  • and they of course will crucify upside down anyone found operating motor vehicle under influence?

  • Legalize all drugs (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @07:44PM (#58561514)
    and treat the hard stuff as a medical condition. Hard drugs (like Heroine, Crack, Meth, etc) should be available for free in gov't run clinics where addicts can safely get high and then immediately go into rehab. This has been shown to work, it just requires seeing addicts as people who should be helped.

    As an added bonus it's much, much cheaper than any other method of control short of forced labor camps and/or instant death.
    • It is not a medical condition. It is a self-induced injury. Why should I have to pay for someone else's decision to hurt himself?
      • It is not a medical condition. It is a self-induced injury.

        Desire to self-induce injury is a mental medical condition. Treat that.

      • it costs less. You've got two options:

        1. Brutally repress and/or kill drug addicts. This is kind of what we do today, but we don't do it in a cost effective manner because drug addicts retain some human rights.

        2. Treat the underlining cause that turned them into addicts. Ask yourself why some people become addicts and some don't. This costs less than our current hodge podge system.

        So you can start either killing or enslaving people caught with a bit of pot or a gram of cocaine and yeah, you'll com
  • by Major_Disorder ( 5019363 ) on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @07:52PM (#58561556)
    Why does the Government make a person a criminal for choosing to put something into their own body. This has never made sense to me. Why do they get a say?
    For the record I am not now nor have I ever been part of the drug culture, I live in a place where pot is legal, and still have no interest.
    I say take the money currently used for drug enforcement, and move it to education, and treatment. I expect there would be a huge financial upside.
    • For the same reason we mandate education - the long term survival of the society.
      • Society falls down because someone becomes a dopehead?

        Do you really think that suddenly everyone is going to think "hey, let's try heroin, the junkies at the train station all look so happy!"?

    • Because the rest of us have to put up with their fucking druggie nonsense.

      • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Thursday May 09, 2019 @02:36AM (#58562588) Journal

        Because the rest of us have to put up with their fucking druggie nonsense

        The rest of us have to put up with their fucking druggie nonsense either way.

        Having it leagal means that their fucking druggie nonsense pays taxes much like my recreation is taxed and it doesn't waste money on trying ineffectively to stop their fucking druggie nonsense.

        An and further they'll be able to engage in their fucking druggie nonsense with safe, legal drugs rather than illegal often contaminated ones, further reducing problems.

        Thing is I'm not purtianical about it. Much like the GP, I have no intention of starting: pot isnt legal here but to say it's easy to get is something of an understatement. However, I am pro liberty and practical about it.

        Also, IIRC you're a republican, right? I thought that was the party of liberty and small government...

      • What fucking druggie nonsense?

        Trust me, it's trivial to outwalk, let alone outrun, someone who is high on psychodelics. If everything fails, tell him Jesus sits over there in the corner and asked for him, and he'll bother the dust bunnies sitting there instead of you.

    • Why does the Government make a person a criminal for choosing to put something into their own body. This has never made sense to me. Why do they get a say?

      Can't speak for psychedelic mushrooms, but addictive substances violate your free will. The fundamental premise of democracy and a market economy is the assumption that people have free will to decide what they want and don't want. Addiction takes some of that free will away from you - you're no longer able to rationally decide to stop spending your re

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        Needing food, clothing, and shelter violates free will too. I'm sure you've probably met more than one person who would sincerely like to tell their boss to shove it up his ass, but their free will is violated by needing to pay the rent next week.

        Of course, what really destroys your argument is the fact that the penalty is taking away more of the person's free will by locking them up in a cage. Given free will, most of them would choose to go live somewhere else without guards ordering them around.

      • by epine ( 68316 )

        So if a person gets themselves addicted to something, then a democratic society has a responsibility to free them of the addiction.

        That was a big leap all of a sudden.

        You need to read Robert Sapolsky's Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst (2017). One of the best biology books of the last decade, if not longer.

        Robert makes it abundantly clear from the biochemistry on up that there are no hard and fast lines between behaviour, habit, and addiction. These are just different shades and degrees of

      • 100% pure bullshit.

        but thanks for playing. you did type a lot of stuff there. too bad its all nonsense.

        The fundamental premise of democracy and a market economy is the assumption that people have free will to decide what they want and don't want. Addiction takes some of that free will away from you

        can I hire you as a comedian for parties? but only if you have funnier material than that, of course.

      • by yes-but-no ( 4133651 ) on Thursday May 09, 2019 @12:44AM (#58562388)
        When you are high, you are not easy to be tamed. You can't be easily brainwashed with ads/social conditioning to turn you into a wage slave. You will be wild like a small child - a rebel. And you will see the pointlessness of most things that society says is great. So to self-preserve its current form, the society will fight against those practices which threaten the status-quo.
        • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Thursday May 09, 2019 @02:37AM (#58562592) Journal

          When you are high, you are not easy to be tamed. You can't be easily brainwashed with ads/social conditioning to turn you into a wage slave. You will be wild like a small child - a rebel. And you will see the pointlessness of most things that society says is great. So to self-preserve its current form, the society will fight against those practices which threaten the status-quo.

          Either that or you'll act like an insufferable twat while claiming to be a "rebel". Seriously, high people are super tedious to non high people.

          • Either that or you'll act like an insufferable twat while claiming to be a "rebel". Seriously, high people are super tedious to non high people.

            Being an insufferable twat does not mean that you are wrong. Don't get me wrong - the list of stupid "revelations" from high people is a long one. At the same time, drugs can alter your perceptions of the world and can provide insights that you might not normally see.

            I've taken a number of psychedelics in a number of different settings, and there were definit

      • A fair comment, except the government does allow the only drug that subverts the will, directly kills body cells, is very addictive and causes violence, alcohol.
        There are no greater hypocrites than those who drink alcohol, then tell others which drugs they can take.
        All drugs can be used or abused. Addictive personalities will tend towards addiction and abuse, particularly when they see no decent future in their lives, and others will be able to control their use.
        Ive used nearly all the illegal drugs over t

    • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @09:29PM (#58561890)

      government is highly influenced by Big Religion(tm). at least in the US, it is.

      the religious nutjobs have a problem with people enjoying themselves. (yeah, seriously.)

      nothing more to it than that. "stop enjoying things I don't enjoy!" summarizes it, nicely.

      this is why religion should have ZERO say in laws. haven't we gotton beyond imaginary sky friends? this is 2019, right? (sigh).

      • government is highly influenced by Big Religion(tm). at least in the US, it is. the religious nutjobs have a problem with people enjoying themselves. (yeah, seriously.) nothing more to it than that. "stop enjoying things I don't enjoy!" summarizes it, nicely. this is why religion should have ZERO say in laws. haven't we gotton beyond imaginary sky friends? this is 2019, right? (sigh).

        Yes, which explains why secular and atheist regimes across the globe also implement strict drug laws, sometimes even harsher than those in the United States. Drugs, particularly the nasty and addictive Schedule II stuff, have very real social consequences. We can have healthy debates about whether current policy approaches are the right way to address the issue (drug war, legalization, decriminalization, etc.), but to simply sweep the negative impacts under the rug as an overly simplified "they're denying

      • I'm sure drug policy also has racial and socioeconomic drivers. Finding something, anything, that criminalizes "them" disproportionate to "us".
    • by rmdingler ( 1955220 ) on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @09:30PM (#58561894) Journal

      Why does the Government make a person a criminal for choosing to put something into their own body. This has never made sense to me. Why do they get a say?

      Your right to intoxication ceases precisely at the point where that particular freedom of expression impinges on the rights of other citizens entitled to the same.

      • by crtreece ( 59298 )

        Why does the Government make a person a criminal for choosing to put something into their own body. This has never made sense to me. Why do they get a say?

        Your right to intoxication ceases precisely at the point where that particular freedom of expression impinges on the rights of other citizens entitled to the same.

        So what you're saying is, what someone does in their own home is none of the governments business, right? They should be able to produce and consume what ever substance they choose, as they aren't impinging on anyone else's freedoms.

    • Why do they get a say?

      A few reasons. There are costs associated with other people (e.g. DUIs, ERs). There are addiction issues, and we prevent some forms of irrevocable decision making (e.g. a coin flip where you become a slave for life or get $1 million). There are issues with making it harder for children to find (it's easier for them to get cigarettes then booze than heroin). There are also issues with helping people who are trying to quit be less tempted to relapse.

      take the money currently used fo

    • Because drugs are more fun than alcohol/tobacco. So if you let drugs easily, profits will plunge for the alcohol industry.
    • Because you are part of society and your usage of said items often directly impacts others or imposes costs on society. Yes they are excessive with what they ban (especially considering some of the shit that is legal), but there does need to be a balance.
    • Puritanism still runs strong in our collective psyche, and authoritarianism is a component.

      Authoritarians can't authoritize without a 'target' to marginalize.

      Religious folk value faith over science and data (per definition), and 'common sense' is something of a faith.

      Puritanism is ingrained and as such, 'common sense,' to these folk.

      Therefore, additional data, studies and statistics will not sway these folks' opinions. And further, anyone partaking in these targeted activities are sinners and deserve
  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @08:01PM (#58561592) Journal
    We should NOT decriminalize. Either legalize it (including sales through legal channels) OR keep it illegal. Decriminalizing it will only encourage drug lords to import here and encourage gang fights.
    • For the sorts of things they've been decriminalizing it seems like a hobbyist would just grow their own, I doubt kingpins are going to be selling mushrooms when they still have the more illicit market cornered.
  • Anybody ask Alice?
  • I'm all for it.

    Not that I partake in any of it ( what can I say, I'm boring ) but my opinion is simple: If it is a naturally occurring substance, do with it as you will as long as you do nothing to modify or refine it. Once you start any modification process to turn it into something else, that's where the government should step in and at least regulate it ( for safety purposes at the very least ).

    You want to eat coca leaves, have at it. You want to turn them into cocaine, get Big Brothers blessings firs

    • You might want to rethink that, a lot of food for example is only healthy or even safe for consumption because we refine, i.e. cook, it.

  • Can't wait. (Score:4, Informative)

    by Truekaiser ( 724672 ) on Wednesday May 08, 2019 @10:26PM (#58562066)

    For it to end up like Seattle. https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
    if that's that legalization leads to, well I've changed my mind.

    • by Max_W ( 812974 )
      It is a very interesting film. Thank you for the link. I live thousands of miles from Seattle, a different climate, different substances, but about the same problems.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      For it to end up like Seattle. https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
      if that's that legalization leads to, well I've changed my mind.

      Concerning legalization... I don't know the situation in Seattle and I'm not going to spend an hour watching that to figure out because it may not even be discussed in that video. However, I do know of countries that have at the very least decriminalized drug consumption and the results are not the catastrophe you assume. Once you decriminalize drug use, you can look for solutions to the problem and treat these people as if they had a disease. If you put them in jail, you just use the strategy of assuming j

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Continuing my previous comment (I had an issue and submitted before ending my answer). The examples of Portugal and Switzerland show that some things do work. Not everything will work, but some things may. I don't know what Seattle did besides not sending people to jail and what Seattle could have done more (based on what federal and state laws govern the city). And this may very well be part of the problem. Maybe Seattle can't get more than a half-assed implementation of what needs to be done. Both Portuga

  • I'm conflicted on this.

    As some one who has very safely taken mushrooms maybe around a dozen times in my life and will probably do them a few more times, I do think treating possession or consumption of them as major criminal activity is pretty dumb

    On the other hand, people can't even take pot edibles correctly and I firmly believe that there are people who, by nature, are just super likely to freak out when they're on psychedelics (the mental state you take into a trip often significantly effects what you g

  • Seriously though, as someone who has spent a legitimate amount of time on psychedelics in that area,I have to recommend Boulder instead. Denver has a city feels that will harsh your vibe.
  • Can you imagine living in Denver and having to face reality at the same time?

  • They have just given groups against the legalization of pot major ammunition. Every future attempt to make pot legal will be met with "Just look at Denver. They legalized pot, then they started legalizing shrooms. Next, they will start to legalize heroine and other opioids. Do you want your child exposed to people out of their minds on shrooms and shooting up in parks?"

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