Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
May 10, 2019
Well. This is better than decriminalizing marijuana, I guess.
At least someone can theoretically learn something by taking magic mushrooms.
Voters in Denver, Colorado decided on Tuesday to decriminalize psilocybin, or “magic mushrooms,” by a thin margin, making it the first city in the U.S. to do so.
The initiative, led by Decriminalize Denver, passed by 1,979 votes when the voting tallies for Initiated Ordinate 301 were released on Wednesday.
According to online results from the Denver Elections Division, 89,320 people voted in favor of decriminalizing, while 87,341 others voted against it. Election officials said on Twitter that the “results remain unofficial” until they are certified on May 16.
The measure makes the personal use and possession of psilocybin mushrooms by those 21 years of age or older Denver’s “lowest law-enforcement priority,” according to the measure’s language. It does not legalize psilocybin or permit its sale by Denver’s cannabis businesses.
What none of the governments are going to do is legalize cocaine. I can tell you that. Because instead of being a drug that limits and suppresses motivation and creativity, cocaine actually increases motivation and creativity.
And that is the last thing they want for the goyim.
They will probably eventually completely legalize heroin, while throwing people in prison for cocaine possession.
No one is even talking about legalizing cocaine. It is totally off the table. Even though it is a known fact that no one has ever achieved anything while high on marijuana, while most people who ever achieved anything great were high on cocaine.
I don’t know what the reasoning for decriminalizing magic mushrooms could possibly be.
Like, why?
If you legalized cocaine you could be like “look, we know this kills people and causes problems, but we’ve got to get things going here – the economy and society need a jump start, we have to compete with the Chinese and so on, and we don’t have any other choice but to start passing out cocaine – we gotta get things moving here, folks.”
You could also make an argument about how the entire city of Washington, DC is on cocaine, and you need to level out the playing field so people can oppose the government.
“The end will justify the means.”
And people could be like “okay, yeah, I follow you, makes sense.”
I’m not saying I support legalizing cocaine, per se – just that you could make a rational argument for doing so.
But why would you give people other drugs?
NOTE: I am not attempting to justify cocaine use, and certainly not encouraging it. Cocaine actually does kill you eventually and it can also cause various personal problems. I am simply making a point about the absurdity of legalizing drugs, and the fact that this could only be done to purposefully harm society.