Weed in Acapulco

Weed in Acapulco

July 8, 2019 by

Acapulco is located on the Pacific coast of Mexico, it is the home of Mexico’s largest beach and oldest resort. Every year millions of tourists visit the picturesque bay. If you visit, you might want to smoke some weed and take your vacation up a notch. Cannabis is illegal in Mexico, but the laws are not enforced that well, especially in the more touristy places. You should not have much of a problem getting some marijuana during your visit. Read on for our complete guide to cannabis in Acapulco.

Cannabis laws in Mexico

Drugs are a big problem in Mexico and in recent years there has been a movement towards more liberal legislation, and legalization of cannabis. Legalization could have potential economic benefits and also help with the fight against the cartels. Currently, however, weed is illegal. Possession of small amounts of marijuana meant for personal use is decriminalized and all you can get is a recommendation to enter a rehabilitation program, but it is not mandatory. A small amount of weed is considered anything under 5 grams.

Even though you will not get in much trouble for having a couple of grams of weed on you, it is still better to be safe. The Mexican police can be very corrupt and you do not want to get their attention.

Finding weed in Acapulco

Despite weed being illegal, there is a lot of it going around, especially in touristy places like Acapulco. If you walk in the main street there is a good chance you will be approached to buy weed. Otherwise, ask the people working in shops that sell pipes and other stoner things, they will usually be able to hook you up. You should be careful with dealers and always ask to see the weed before you pay. You can expect to pay about 5-6$ per gram


Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto has said that he doesn’t approve of national legalization in his country, but that opinion might be changing.

Manuel Velasquez/Anadolu Agency/Getty

On June 19th, 2017, Mexico legalized medical marijuana, or more specifically, “pharmacological derivatives of cannabis” to be regulated and studied by the Ministry of Health. But, for now, Mexico’s medical cannabis market will look much different than say, California’s, which sells everything from cannabis flower to THC-infused massage oil. Currently, “cannabis derivatives” in Mexico, like oils and pills, must contain less than one percent THC. Although some activists are hopeful and working to change this conservative allotment, many believe that full cannabis legalization is what will help Mexico the most.

“This current law is so limited as to be practically useless. But we’re headed in the right direction and the attitude is changing,” says Laura Carlsen, political analyst and director of the Americas Program at the Center for International Policy in Mexico City. Here, what you need to know about Mexico’s marijuana program, and where it might go from here.

RELATED

Canada’s Legal Weed: What You Need to Know

What’s legal so far? 
Mexico began changing its marijuana policy in 2009 when it decriminalized the possession of up to five grams, as well as small, “personal use” amounts of cocaine, heroin, and other drugs, in an effort to treat addiction as a public health issue rather than a criminal offense. Instead of jail time, those found in possession of substances are encouraged to enter treatment.

But the real change came in 2015, when eight-year-old Graciela Elizalde, who suffers from a severe form of epilepsy known as Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, brought medical cannabis to the public’s attention in Mexico. CBD oil helped to drastically reduce her seizures and improve her quality of life, and so she became the first Mexican medical marijuana patient after a Supreme Court ruling in her favor. 

Since then, a medical cannabis bill has passed through both the Mexican Senate and the Lower House of Congress with an overwhelming majority, and President Enrique Peña Nieto signed the bill into law on June 19th, 2017. Now, Mexico’s Ministry of Health has until mid-December, to write regulations for medical marijuana, half the time the state of California is taking to write their adult-use regulations. If Mexico meets its deadline, products derived from cannabis could be available in Mexican pharmacies in early 2018 to help treat diseases like epilepsy, Parkinson’s, and cancer.

With its new law, Mexico has joined a handful of countries that have federally legalized medicinal marijuana, along with Canada, Israel, Uruguay, Puerto Rico and Germany – though notably not the United States. 

Former Mexican President Vicente Fox gestures while speaking during an interview with AFP at the Fox Center in San Francisco del Rincon, Guanajuato state, Mexico on March 8, 2016.

How popular is cannabis legalization in Mexico?
Mexico is a conservative country with 81 percent of the population self-identifying as Catholic. The Catholic Church has come out against pot, medicinal or otherwise. One of their main arguments against legalization is that it will encourage teenagers to start toking up. Although, as we’ve seen in Colorado, ending prohibition lowers marijuana use among teens instead.

The most popular Catholic newspaper in the country, Desde La Fe (From the Faith), published a couple of op-eds opposing legalization, claiming cannabis has no medicinal benefits and that the government saying so “confuses the public.” A main argument for ending marijuana prohibition in Mexico is to help curb narcotraficante (drug cartel) violence. Yet the Catholic Church believes legalization will do exactly the opposite, and ended a 2017 editorial with the line, “In our sad horizon appears a sick and violent country,” referring to a Mexico with legal weed.

But compared to the U.S., cannabis has less support from the public and is still heavily stigmatized in Mexico. In November 2015, just days after Grace Elizalde’s landmark case, the Center of Social Studies and Public Opinion (CESPO) surveyed Mexicans and found 82 percent were against allowing cannabis sales and distribution in Mexico, 73 percent rejected legalizing it for recreational purposes, yet 76 percent approved legalizing it for medical use.

Up north, Americans have an opposite opinion of ending marijuana prohibition: 60 percent support full legalization according to a 2017 Quinnipiac Poll.

Legalization in the U.S. has had a huge impact on the public perception of cannabis in Mexico. In a recent interview with Cultura Colectiva, President Enrique Peña Nieto, who was previously against legalizing marijuana, said, “I’m not ruling out that in the near future marijuana will be fully legalized in Mexico. It’s already occurring in other countries, particularly the United States.”

Is full legalization in Mexico possible?
The momentum to legalize cannabis in Mexico is there, and no one has been more outspoken about this than former President Vicente Fox Quesada. In the past, Fox believed Mexico could fully legalize marijuana by 2018, but in a recent interview, he admitted Mexico’s upcoming presidential election, scheduled for July 1st, 2018, could stall any progress on this front.

“We’re getting into an electoral process for the presidency of Mexico,” says Fox. “So I think it’s going to be very difficult to advance during this period.”

Fox is also working with Mexican politicians, like Fernando Belaunzaran, on legalization efforts. Belaunzaran, a former congressman, has been a proponent for legalizing cannabis in Mexico since he proposed a bill for full legalization back in 2012.

“I’m working with a couple of congressmen and senators that are very positive about the subject [of legalizing marijuana]. They’ve been pursuing, pushing, and promoting [the issue],” says Fox.

He also met with American activist and dispensary owner, Steve DeAngelo, on the matter during a recent visit to Oakland, California. He was in the Bay Area because he was the keynote speaker at the National Cannabis Industry Association (NCIA) convention where he said that, one day, Mexico could produce up to 60 percent of all the legal weed in the U.S., and that cannabis should be incorporated into NAFTA.

But more than a cash crop, Fox views ending prohibition as the best way to fight cartel violence in Mexico.

“It’s the very first step to start taking away from cartels all the money they get from this illegal activity,” says Fox. “This is a slow process, but I’m sure it will happen one day soon.”

(FILE) Picture taken on on January 25, 2007 of a member of the Mexican Navy guarding the burning of 4 tons of marijuana at a naval base in Topolobambo, Sinaloa State. Mexico is being whipped by a war among drug cartels disputing their place and the trafficking to the United States with unusual ferocity and sophisticated arms on June 11, 2008. Executed, beheaded, tied and tortured bodies with messages against rival bands, or threatened police and street announcements are part of the geography of violence in several states of Mexico. In the course of the year, there were at least 1,378 deaths, 47% more than in the same period in 2007. AFP PHOTO MORE IN IMAGEFORUM (Photo credit should read STR/AFP/Getty Images)

Could legalization hurt cartels?
There is a long history of drug trafficking, political corruption, and violence in Mexico that is all closely intertwined. On December 11th, 2006, then-President Felipe Calderón launched a “war on drugs” that escalated violence and insecurity in Mexico to new heights.

There are many reasons Calderón’s war intensified violence. For one, his “kingpin” strategy to dismantle cartels backfired, destabilizing organizations causing a violent internal power struggle, which also gave life to new, smaller, and reportedly more dangerous gangs.

But another main cause of the spike in violence, especially homicide and “disappeared” people, was his militarization of local law enforcement, and his massive increase to Mexico’s security and military budget.

Corruption seeped into the municipal police and the military, despite efforts to fire corrupt individuals, making Calderón’s militarization dangerous. A 2009 study from the Justice in Mexico organization found that 93.6 percent of municipal police in Mexico depend on corruption to make a living wage. Considering 61 percent of officers made 4,000 pesos or less per month in 2009 (the equivalent of about $300 in 2009), it’s not surprising.

“One of the big problems with prohibition is that it gives corrupt and abusive law enforcement forces a major justification for shakedowns,” says the Center for International Policy’s Carlsen.

Since Mexico’s war on drugs began in 2006, it’s been estimated around 200,000 people have been killed. But even that is a hard number to estimate in a country where 30,000 people have been reported missing, and mass-graves of unidentified people are frequently found in the countryside.

But many believe this violence is a reason to end marijuana prohibition.

“When people have legal, regulated places to buy marijuana, it takes the whole business out of the hands of organized crime,” says Carlsen. “Marijuana is a huge chunk of cartel income. Without that income there is an automatic reduction in their capacity to buy weapons, recruit teens, bribe politicians. Prohibition is the best thing that ever happened to organized crime ­they couldn’t survive a day without it. So as we dial back the disastrous prohibition regime, cartels are forced like any business to downsize. They lose market, lose demand, reduce production and lose power to control territory and communities.”

In This Article: LatinWar on Drugs

Want more Rolling Stone? Sign up for our newsletter.ADVERTISEMENTHow to Watch ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ Online: Will the MCU Film Be on Disney+?OrangeCandyYou do realize this whole article is trying to trick people into signing up for streaming services, none of which have access to the movie until after it is done in the theaters.Top CommentTop Comment26Trump Administration Deliberately Tanked Covid Response for Political Purposes: ReportOliveRocketNY knew this from day 1 & watched it unfold in real time during the first wave where we lost 26k+ lives in a matter of 9 weeks while other parts of the country were busy holding ‘Liberate Michigan’ style protest rallies. Trump told us that our governor should be nicer to him if we wanted help. Kushner said “New Yorkers are going to suffer…” And Republican operatives & funders (looking right at you, Rebekah Mercer) are still actively using Cambridge Analytica/SCL/ Emerdata psyops techniques on us. Every single one of them, but especially, NY01 Rep Lee Zeldin, should go on trial for at the very least 26k (though I think 803k is more appropriate) charges of negligent homicide, 400k charges of assisted suicide & at least 26k charges of fraudTop CommentTop Comment3812 Strategies Businesses Can Use to Show Appreciation for Their CustomersPurpleBoomerang“Pay them a living wage” not one of them.Top CommentTop Comment1Big Thief: Looking for the Next RevelationGoldTagLenker calls the music industry “white supremacist?” Is David Duke running Warner Brothers now? Her words are highly insulting. For someone claiming to be a wordsmith, she has a lot to learn about language.Top CommentTop Comment2These Rapid Covid Tests Are Selling Out Online As People Gather (Cautiously) AgainBlueDuckyI recently purchased Covid test kits from Roman. Sadly, the test arrived and showed an expiration date that was less than three months away. Roman is negligent by not informing purchasers of this shortcoming.Top CommentTop CommentOutlaw Country Artist Nikki Lane Crafts Her Sound with the Innovative, New Gibson Generation Collection Acoustic GuitarRedMagnet“… performing two of her original songs, “Send the Sun” from the album All or Nothin’s,” — quick correction: “Send the Sun” is not from that album, it’s from the Highway Queen albumTop CommentTop CommentBeloved TV Icon Betty White Dead on the Cusp of 100th BirthdayOlivePretzelPeace. She will be missed but held forever in screen and sound.Top CommentTop Comment5

Conversation

Your voice matters. Conversations are moderated for civility. Read our guidelines here.

Commenting as GuestLog inSign up

Powered byTermsPrivacyFeedbackhttps://ea9be23e7d63819020c519eb0b1d662c.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-38/html/container.html?upapi=trueAD

Trending

  1. Olivia Wilde Served With Custody Papers During CinemaCon Presentation
  2. Trump Said Kevin McCarthy’s Tough Talk After Capitol Attack Was the Result of an ‘Inferiority Complex’
  3. Meet the Shitposter Who Started a Right-Wing Moral Panic About the Snickers Dick Vein
  4. Exclusive: MAGA Candidate Evicted from Home After Wife Asks Court for Emergency Order of Protection
  5. Republicans Are Panicking Over the Prospect of Biden Forgiving Student Debt

Journalism That Matters. Music That Inspires.Subscriptions from just $7.99 a month.SEE MY OPTIONS

EDITORS’ PICKS

https://ea9be23e7d63819020c519eb0b1d662c.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-38/html/container.html?upapi=trueADhttps://ea9be23e7d63819020c519eb0b1d662c.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-38/html/container.html?upapi=trueAD

Deja una respuesta

Tu dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada. Los campos obligatorios están marcados con *

*