Well, that cart was rolling down the hill with velocity.
The wheels are nowehere to be seen now.
Does anybody anticipate in a logical time based sense Cannabis being even decriminalised here in UK now?
Are people even still campaigning and being heard?
It surely has been ushered fully under the Covid carpet. I've not heard a whisper of it since myself but haven't looked, but we didn't need to before.
Talk about convenient hey? A multitasking multipurposed multitalented Trojan Horse killing more than two birds with more than two stones though in a ridiculously unfair fight and solving the nuisance in process too of these annoying humans who wish to see cannabis legalised.
Just how it seems things went down here.
No Covid, my money says we'd almost surely have some degree of decriminalisation already, at least on cusp, maybe more, and it would be hot tooic how and when to more fully implement.
But unless there is ongoing and impactful campaigning lurking in the shadows it appears to have fallen right to the wayside realistically and probably now.
@Alexis This is how I saw things too, I felt I had my ear to the tracks for a while, and I thought the train was just rumbling in soon!
The issue always seems to get put on the back burner over more important concerns, before covid it was another thing (global recession, or recovery maybe?), and every time a government goes on holidays or wraps up business for the year, another proposal gets overlooked and binned.
I think the last article I read about any movement or campaign in UK was the following, originally posted in January, about a drug charity called Reach who tried to present a case.
Drug policy experts said the government’s new drug strategy simply regurgitates a ‘tough on drugs’ rhetoric amid indications drug use is increasing, not decreasing
inews.co.uk
But the same article has jogged my memory about the launch of a major UK clampdown on crime and drugs at all levels, where they stated:
In July 2021, Boris Johnson launched his ‘Beating Crime Plan’ in which he said that ‘recreational drug use’ is not harmless.
.......the Government announced its Beating Crime Plan, a 52-page “shared vision of fewer victims, peaceful neighbourhoods and a safer country”.
It described drugs as a “scourge on society” and set out to “address both the supply and demand — coming down harder on drug dealers, dismantling
county lines gangs, making clear that ‘recreational use’ is not harmless and supporting drug and alcohol addicts to access the treatment services they need to turn their lives around”.
The term “county lines” describes the transportation of illegal drugs from cities and towns to suburban and rural areas. Drug gangs, keen to avoid detection, will groom and coerce vulnerable young people — often males aged 15 to 17 — to ferry the drugs and collect the money.
When the county line, the mobile phone used to facilitate drug orders, is closed by police, the contacts are sent messages warned about drug use. They are also encouraged to seek support.
A similar thing happened where I live, and around the same time, and it's intensity here appears to have disrupted what might have already been a frail network for some people even pre-covid.
Where I am it would almost make more sense to give it up, its not very nice.
Sure, if you live in some areas or grow your own it might not affect you.
I don't want to undermine the reality of real wars, but recent situations in the world seem to make me more aware that something my leaders persist with is depressing or oppressing me, and goes against my own wishes and I would like it to stop.
It makes me wish for some of the freedoms that other nations can already enjoy.
Maybe it is a war? They do call it that.
So it makes sense that a lot of UK cannabis news I see now are just busts of
huge grow ops like a jungle where people got a strong smell, some info, or there's been a fire etc.
(I read that they then send in their CDT, or Cannabis Dismantling Team!)
And the stories of arrests of sellers/gang members.
Besides the odd slightly wacky story here and there where even police or army members themselves have their hands in the cookie jars also!
Like this:
The Royal Marines were caught in an investigation that also snared Walton dealer 'HeroicFox'
www.liverpoolecho.co.uk
(And there was another "What to do if you smell weed from your neighbours place" campaign recently.)
When you see the authorities getting mixed up with it in that way though, surely that's when they have to change direction, or question prohibition?
Is this clampdown similar to how some States and Countries clamped down not long before imminent legalisation, like one last big hoorah while they still can!?
I wish the best weed laws for everyone here, regardless of country.
All in all it's just another brick in the wall!