Marijuana legalization is a hot topic worldwide, with ongoing debates surrounding its medicinal benefits, societal impact, and legal status. Recent years have seen a significant shift towards decriminalization and legalization of marijuana for both medical and recreational use in various countries.
Petitions surrounding marijuana cover a wide range of issues, from expunging criminal records related to marijuana possession to advocating for safe access to medical cannabis for patients in need. Notable petitions include one urging lawmakers to legalize marijuana for recreational use, citing the economic benefits and social justice implications of ending prohibition.
By exploring and supporting these petitions, you can contribute to the ongoing efforts to reform marijuana laws and promote responsible cannabis use. Join the movement to shape the future of marijuana policy and ensure equitable access to this plant for all.
if i can go out after work to get drinks with friends why can’t i hangout with friends to roll up after work? why do i as someone with chronic anxiety have to give up something so natural just to turn into an alcoholic. not allowing people to smoke makes them turn to other more destructive forms of self medication.
This was never a just sentence. To still hold her responsible for completing this sentence for something now legal (and not even a heavy crime at the time committed) is absurd. She deserves freedom. She’s been there long enough.
A life sentence for marijuana is insane. This person has been in prison for 17 years over something that is legal in half the united states! Not a dangerous individual at all. This is completely unjustified. I truly hope they are released asap!
This was never a just sentence. To still hold her responsible for completing this sentence for something now legal (and not even a heavy crime at the time committed) is absurd. She deserves freedom. She’s been there long enough!
I support the release of Tameka Drummer. It is unjust for her to serve a life sentence for possessing a small amount of marijuana, especially now that medical marijuana is legal in Mississippi. While recreational use remains illegal, no one should spend their life behind bars for a non-violent offense—especially under outdated laws. Governor Reeves, please commute her sentence and show that Mississippi believes in fairness, redemption, and progress. Tameka and her family deserve justice.
Twelve years in prison—for less than two ounces of weed? That’s not law and order, that’s legalized cruelty. Tameka Drummer didn’t get justice, she got buried alive by a system that was never designed to protect her.
We’ve watched entire corporations build billion-dollar empires off cannabis while Black women like Tameka rot behind bars for the same thing. Mississippi’s habitual offender laws are modern-day shackles—meant to keep people locked up, not safe.
This ain’t about weed. It’s about race. About poverty. About control. And unless we demand clemency, demand reform, and call this what it is—state-sponsored injustice—Tameka won’t be the last.
Sign the petition. Flood the governor’s inbox. Raise hell.
No one should die in prison over weed.
Free her and legalize it across the board along with freeing everyone else on marijuana charges, the war on drugs is a joke! End it! People’s can choose to do as they please with there own body, don’t need Uncle Sam trying to control everything in the land of the free
Justice must prevail for Tameka Drummer. No people can rise when injustice holds down even one of their own. We stand on the side of righteousness, demanding her freedom, for it is not just her fight — it is ours. Let truth, mercy, and justice be our guide.