You are looking at this from one point of view only: that of a consumer. You don't realize how absurdly tight the profit margins are for indoor flowers right now and how totally devastating this measure will be for the small grower population that has been producing significant portions of the market supply you enjoy as well as making significant contributions to strain development which you also enjoy. You are looking forward to possible minor convenience coming your way; the small grower sees ruin. You see this as a gain with not much loss; it is difficult to be so sanguine from other angles.
I do feel for the small growers, some of whom may get caught not transitioning well in the fall-out after legalization. But the carbon footprint of indoor grows is just not sustainable in the future anyway when an outdoor plant can deliver 2-3-5 pounds. I agree with
@MinnBobber, as I said the same thing in a previous post: there will be room for high-end, mid grade and budget cannabis in the coming market, just as in the wine industry and beer industry. Boutique wineries and small-scale craft beer. Personally I purchase outdoor grown cannabis that has been tested for contaminants and cannabinoid profile. I usually don't purchase anything else because a) it's more expensive, and b) potentially unsafe and of unknown potency. But I purchase outdoor grown from places like Happy Day Farms and GangaMa Gardens through FlowKana for example, which reinforces the farm direct to consumer model where farmers get significantly more of the proceeds by comparison to what the big dispensaries pay them. On the other hand I've just harvested a large plant I grew in my own backyard that will provide me with 1-1/2 pounds of dry herb to go with the several ounces of autoflowers I grew earlier in the year so I doubt I'll be purchasing much at all in the next year.
But both MCRSA and Prop 64 protect the small grower for at least 5 years after the Jan 2018 commercial license implementation before larger grows MAY be licensed. AND the good benefits of 64 become effective immediately on Nov 9 this year. Those include
1. Possession, transport, sharing of cannabis becomes completely legal for all adults immediately
2. Growing becomes legal immediately
3. Police can't stop and harass the public because they detect the smell on a person
4. Those in jail and those out of jail for cannabis-related offenses can petition to be released from jail and have their records expunged.
An estimated $1billion in tax dollars will be SAVED, primarily by law enforcement resources.
$10mill is earmarked for research on the public health effects of legalization
$2mill to UCSD Center for Medical Cannabis Research
http://www.cmcr.ucsd.edu/
$10mill up to $50mill go to Community Grants for those most negatively impacted by the Drug Wars
Banking for the industry on the Federal level will now have the economic weight of Calif added to Colorado, Wash, Oregon and Alaska to force change
So, on balance, there are so many good reasons to vote FOR 64. And we will have all of 2017 legislative session to put pressure on the state senate and assembly to fix some of the problems with 64. It's not the end, it's just the beginning.
Luz and others complain that somehow the meaning of the words "attending physician" now requires that your primary MD must be the one to write your recommendation. That is just
false. That language already exists in other pertinent legislation and simply means as quoted from Prop 64:
“Attending physician means an individual who possesses a license in good standing to practice medicine or osteopathy issued by the Medical Board of California or the Osteopathic Medical Board of California and who has taken responsibility for an aspect of the medical care, treatment, diagnosis, counseling, or referral of a patient and who has conducted a medical examination of that patient before recording in the patient’s medical record the physician’s assessment of whether the patient has a serious medical condition and whether the medical use of marijuana is appropriate.”
In addition offenses by minors that now have the same penalties as for adults will change to "Counseling, community service, drug education" that can be expunged from their record when they turn 18. And the maximum penalty for possessing publicly more than ounce, or excess concentrates, or transport and giving away more than an ounce, or sell without a license, or possess with intent to sell, all currently have penalties of from 16 months to 2,3 or 4 years plus $500 fines will be reduced to just a 6 month and/or $500 fine. Is this perfect? Of course not. Is it way better than the law today? Absolutely.