Deputy leader of the New Zealand National Party Paula Bennett
set parliament ablaze (figuratively speaking) when she produced what
appeared to be a 14-gram baggie of weed during a debate on legalization.
Ceres (growing, herbs, horticulture, plants, caring, issues of taking care of people) square Makemake (interested in invoking insight and inspiration with speech). Mercury (reason, speaking) quincunx Eris (disputes).
“Does she think it
promotes the wellbeing of New Zealanders when under her government’s
legislation people will be able to purchase up to 14 grams a day of
weed,” Bennett asked Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, holding up what
later emerged to be a bag of dried oregano, to audible mocking laughter
from her fellow MPs.
The
proposed 14-gram-a-day cannabis purchase limit is a hot topic ahead of
the referendum being held alongside the country’s 2020 general
election.
“I think it’s far too much,” Minister for Children Tracey Martin said.
“I’ve
heard it’s about 40-odd [joints], it’s huge… it’s an enormous number,”
National MP Brett Hudson estimated, while Labour MP Kiri Allen guessed
the quantity was closer to 20 joints.
After
MPs continuously shouted over the prime minister during her response,
Speaker Trevor Mallard told the erupting house floor to “chill out,” sparking yet more giddy laughter.
Ardern
eventually responded to Bennett’s criticisms of the proposed limit by
arguing that it would constitute half the daily limit for Canadians and
Americans who can legally purchase cannabis in their own countries.
Minister
of Justice Andrew Little, who proposed the bill, asked for members of
the opposition to find him a single person who has “smoked 42 joints in a
day” and only then would he take the criticism seriously.
Comments
online ranged from derision to outright disgust at both Bennett and her
stunt, with some describing her as “an openly cruel freak who hates
poor people,” and accusing her of "concern trolling.”
She
was also fiercely criticized for her stance, which many argued helped
to fund criminal gangs through criminalization of weed.
Minor planet keywords developed by Philip Sedgwick, used with permission http://philipsedgwick.com/
Source: rt.com
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