



CLASSY (left) SIZE S M L XL XXL COLOR Natural Black



SASSY (right) SIZE S M L XL XXL COLOR Natural Black

DECLARATION OF PRINCIPLES

1. We are convinced that de facto prohibition of the Cannabis sativa L. plant species is fundamentally wrong,

a) Because it conflicts with the basic American principles of local home rule and destroys the balance, established by the framers of our government, between powers delegated to the Federal authority and those reserved to the sovereign states or to the people themselves,

b) And because its attempt to impose total abstinence by national governmental flat ignores the truth that no law will be respected or can be enforced unless supported by the moral sense and the common consciousness of the communities affected by it.

2. We are convinced that de facto prohibition, wrong in principle, has been equally disastrous in consequences in the hypocrisy, the corruption, the tragic loss of life and the appalling increase of crime which have attended the abortive attempt to enforce it; in the checking of the steady growth of temperance which had preceded it; in the shocking effect it has had upon the youth of the nation; in the impairment of constitutional guarantees of individual rights; in the weakening of the sense of solidarity between the citizen and the government which is the only sure basis of a country’s strength.

The Gramma’s FOR Ganja Organization records these convictions and declares:

That this de facto prohibition of the Cannabis sativa L. species of plants has demonstrated its adoption to be a grievous mistake, persistence in which will constitute a continuing threat to our country’s well being.

That in the removal from the Federal laws of provisions, which should never have been put into it, lies the only reasonable hope of relief from conditions, which have become intolerable.

That in our judgment the return to each state of its former power to allow the growth, sale and transportation of the Cannabis sativa L. species, within its own limits should be accompanied by adequate state regulatory enactment’s and responsive to the sentiments of the people and therefore capable of enforcement.

That such enactment’s would drive the crime breeding trafficking of the present day to the same extinction that has already met other prohibitive legislation.

That the Federal government, exercising its power to regulate interstate and foreign commerce should protect each state in the enforcement of its state laws according to its true function.

That the people of the United States who have never had the opportunity to pass judgment upon this question should be given such an opportunity and that therefore, that this may be accomplished in an orderly way and in accord with legal procedure, we urge the Congress to submit to conventions of the people in the several states rather than to the legislatures thereof, a resolution for the repeal of this de facto prohibition.