One of the reddest of red states went green on Tuesday (June 26, 2018). Voters in Oklahoma approved a remarkably progressive medical marijuana initiative by a healthy margin of 56% to 43%.

The initiative (in pdf format), State Question 778, allows registered patients to possess up to three ounces of marijuana anywhere and up to eight ounces at home. Patients also have the right to grow up to six mature and six immature plants or have designated caregivers do it for them.

It also creates a system of licensed dispensaries, cultivation, and processing facilities and sets taxes at a relatively low 7%. The initiative also bars localities from using zoning laws to block dispensaries (although they wouldn’t be allowed within 1,000 feet of a school).

But what is most striking about Question 778 is that it does not restrict access to medical marijuana to a list of qualifying conditions. In fact, the initiative language explicitly states that “[T]here are no qualifying conditions” and that the only limitation on a doctor’s recommending medical marijuana is that it must be done “according to the accepted standards a reasonable and prudent physician would follow when recommending or approving any medication.”

Source: Oklahoma Passes Most Progressive Medical Marijuana Initiative Since California’s Prop 215 | StoptheDrugWar.org

summary via R3publicans