@GarrettSmithTX@RichOToole N - Nathan Hamilton
O - Owen Temple
P - Paige Lewis
Q -
R - Rich O'Toole
S - Susan Gibson
T - Terry Allen
U - Uncle Lucius
V - Vanessa Lynn Bird
W - Willie Nelson
X -
Y -
Z - ZZ Top
@GarrettSmithTX@RichOToole A- Adam Carroll (and Chris)
B - Bri Bagwell
C - Chuck Hawthorne / Charlie Harrison
D - Dale Watson / Drew Kennedy
E -
F - Flatland Cavalry
G - Gabe Wootton
H - Heather Little / Hayes Carll
I -
J - John Evans / Jason Eady
K - Kevin Galloway
L - Libby Koch
M - Matt Harlan
@Txmarine801@jessicafortexas You stated they are two different plants. They are not. The problem is the terminology. Hemp vs. Marijuana. It should all be just called what it is "cannabis". Let the suits argue over the context. https://t.co/Gom0eZHqzT
@JosephLTrahan@Taylor_Kamn Let's see what happens with a real reform bill. HB 195 filed by Jessica Gonzalez actually addresses the criteria set out by Abbott for the special session.
@Txmarine801@jessicafortexas If you meant "hemp" there's no difference. Hemp and marijuana are both Cannabis sativa L. which encompasses both hemp and marijuana.
@jessicafortexas Hope it makes it to committee for a fair public hearing unlike the kangaroo court that was the Senate State Affairs Committee! Thanks for putting forward a bill that actually meets the criteria Gov. Abbott requested and not a re-hash of SB3 from the regular session.
@brianeharrison Further confirmation that "we the people" aka the real constituents have no voice against PACS and lobbyists. Maybe Texas should be renamed Tehran II since Perry and Patrick feel they are ordained to make decisions for adults regarding their own health choices.
@brianeharrison The House State Affairs version was not perfect but more reasonable. If voters spent less time bitching & more looking at campaign finance reports on https://t.co/6IxJ60LCld they can find which reps are bought by alcohol and big pharma. This issue will cost elections
@brianeharrison Why has no one put forward a bill based on the House State Affairs version from the regular session? That was at least somewhat reasonable and addressed age limits, locations, labeling, etc.
@todd_harrison The issue is the Feds. Even if with a hands off approach towards states that have legalized it, until it is removed from Schedule 1 we will have this mixed bag of confusion and Feds can pick and choose how to enforce it. Remove it from Schedule 1 and let the states decide.
@TomOliverson@GregAbbott_TX@GregAbbott_TX can read the tea leaves. Medical legal, 40 states, 4 territories & D.C. Recreational legal, 24 states, 3 territories & D.C. Now, get sensible regulations to truly "protect the children" and let adults be adults. #nonannystate#notheocracy