I don't this this is the intended outcome of the war on drugs. Drugs out here just posting W's.
CanadaPolitics
Placeholder for any r/CanadaPolitics refugees
Rules:
All of Lemmy.ca's rules apply
- No bigotry - including racism, sexism, ableism, homophobia, transphobia, or xenophobia.
- Be respectful. Everyone should feel welcome here.
- No porn.
- No Ads / Spamming.
Same thing happened here in Winnipeg recently. I applaud the balls on these folks, knowing full well what will happen, but continuing their activism regardless of the consequences. The fact that our tax money is being spent on busting mushroom shops is ridiculous.
I'm not sure we should go down the path of letting police decide which laws should be applied or not. I'm all for legalization of psychedelics and I'm happy to see activists pushing back, but bottom line is that police is doing exactly what they should.
Police no, but municipalities yes IMO. If Montreal / Winnipeg choose to turn a blind eye to victimless crimes, they should be able to do so and order their police to ignore offenses. Much like how here in SK the provincial government passed laws requiring provincial oversight and handling of any federal firearms appropriation, making it so the feds couldn't simply demand we turn over our guns after Trudeau's gun grab.
If the federal government wants to enforce their drug laws they can send the RCMP to enforce them, like the DEA does in the USA. It shouldn't fall on local police departments to enforce unpopular federal laws.
That was fast.
Post behind a paywall so i couldn’t read it. But that looks like a Fun Guyz “medicinal mushroom dispensary” (which is funny because to my knowledge zoomers aren’t legal for any type of use). There’s been one open about 2 blocks from me here in east toronto for about 4 months now, and I’ve seen a few pop up in a couple different cities in Ontario. I would love to know the how and why of both the business and the seeming inability to shut them down in a timely fashion.
I mean, the intent behind these kinds of businesses is activism, really. They're definitely taking a page out of the Marc Emery playbook with their business model, forcing law enforcement to sort of play wack-a-mole with multiple locations but being super duper obvious with their presence as a business, and using that to really highlight the disproportionate investment of resources in the enforcement of some rather archaic drug laws.
Also to make fat stacks of cash
lol you do realize they'll have fines to pay at the very least, right? This isn't black market dealing, this is a push for decriminalization knowing full well that civil disobedience has some expensive and unavoidable consequences.
Cops on the payroll maybe?