Legalize It, but Don't Advertise It: High Times Fights Colorado's Restrictions on Marijuana-Related Speech

The 40th-anniversary issue of High Times, which hits newsstands next week, includes ads for two Colorado-based marijuana businesses. As I explain in my latest Forbes column, those ads may violate Colorado's onerous restrictions on pot-related speech, which the magazine is challenging in federal court. Here is how the piece begins:
High Times, the flagship publication of a cannabis counterculture that is rapidly going mainstream, celebrates its 40th anniversary this year. "We have been steadfast soldiers in this so-called War on Drugs," writes Editor in Chief Chris Simunek in a special issue that will appear on newsstands next week, "with truth as our sword and the First Amendment as our shield."
The First Amendment has protected High Times, and High Timeshas tried to return the favor. Last year the magazine was the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit challenging a Colorado law that required merchants to keep marijuana-focused publications behind the counter. The sponsor of that provision, a Republican representative from Colorado Springs named Bob Gardner, likened such periodicals to pornography. The law was so clearly unconstitutional that Colorado Attorney General John Suthers decided not to enforce it. Now High Times is seeking to overturn Colorado's onerous restrictions on marijuana advertising, which ostensibly are aimed at protecting impressionable children but probably have more to do with protecting disapproving adults.
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+1 Peter Tosh
Still have Legalize It on vinyl.
I don't know how heavily this is being enforced. I'm in western Colorado right now and a number of dispensaries have banner signs out front & I'm pretty sure there is a billboard somewhere.
What makes it dumber is that there are a number of high circulation free papers in the area all of which run plenty of marijuana store ads.
Scattershot enforcement is arguably worse that strict enforcement. It lulls people into doing things for which they can be charged at the whim of law enforcement.
That's the plan exactly. In such a system they can reward their cronies and punish their enemies. Its perfect.
'
I can't fucking believe there has been a magazine dedicated to marijuana for 40 years.
I know. The constitutional clause that enabled the nation's war on drugs should have trumped the free speech amendment long ago and SHUT THEM DOWN.
Well besides that of course, I'm just curious about how they get enough material. Is it a yearly or something?
They have a lot of millenial related material to pad out the volume.
Joking, right?
Course not. I see like one pot story on here every week or so, and Reason prints them all. If you can only get four stories a month, how do you fill a magazine?
how do you fill a magazine?
Go check it out.
http://www.hightimes.com/
My work blocked it! Thank God for smartphones 🙂
And holy shit that magazine is boring!
You just, like, don't get it, man.
That magazine really tied the room together...
And holy shit that magazine is boring!
Have no idea, I just googled it to give you the link.
Wikipedia entry for High Times.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Times
The magazine does have a broader appeal beyond weed. It was founded by a pretty talented dude named Tom Forcade.
And here is their website: http://www.hightimes.com/
The more you know.
I just went to their website. One of the articles was about Bob Dylan smoking pot with the Beatles 50 years ago, another was congratulating the magazine on 40 years, and another was about making pot guacamole. I rest my case.
It is remarkable the way different people can be interested in different things.
Yes, but I feel compelled to express my opinions as if they were fact! I thought that's what comment boards were for.
Well, that's fine, but you should know that my personal preferences and tastes are the correct ones.
BAAAAAAAHHHH!!! MINE!!!!
Have you ever read a magazine? There are magazines about everything, most of which you would find boring, I imagine. High Times is no different from wine or cigar magazines and there are a number of each of those.
I find that magazines just recycle the same old shit. Sometimes if I'm new to a subject I'll read a few magazines about it, but it's not too long before I'm not seeing anything new.
That's just, like, your opinion, man.
I can't believe National Geographic is still in print.
It is!?!?!?
They keep on writing about the same stupid old planet.
I think the Redskins should change their name to "My Indians".
Reid should be OK with that name as he used it to describe tribes in Nevada.
But if you drop bombs on people you CAN advertise to kids.
See? = Rights! Duties!!! VICTORY!!