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Alaskans can now legally possess up to four ounces of marijuana in
their homes, thanks to a Juneau court's reversal of a 2001 ruling forbidding the practice. Now it's time for the lower 49 states to get with the program. The laudable ruling of the Alaskan state appellate court signals an ongoing change in the way society views the drug and highlights the need for a cohesive federal policy allowing the sale and regulation of pot. If a traditionally conservative state like Alaska can allow private marijuana use, and if it has been decriminalized by the Canadian government, Washington should take a clue and follow suit with its own legislation. Cloudy legal issues can arise when states change their marijuana policies to conflict with the federal government's, as Alaska has done. Since selling pot amounts to a federal misdemeanor, the Alaska law is inherently contradictory - possessing pot is now legal, but selling it remains a crime. The federal government's overly harsh stance makes little sense in the face of a changing society. The American public's concern for marijuana use is ephemeral at best. Alaska Gov. Frank Murkowski called the action "regrettable," and pointed at substance abuse as a harm to the state's young people. Murkowski's stance mirrors that of many government officials whose concerns about the spread of drug abuse are not reflected in contemporary society - especially not on U.S. college campuses, where the stigma surrounding marijuana has evaporated like so much spilled beer. The government's concurrent ad campaign against marijuana use is equally infuriating, since it promotes the antiquated and widely disputed view that marijuana is a gateway drug to ******, coke and the downfall of society. Studies from the RAND research group and the U.S. government's own National Institute of Justice have concluded that the "gateway effect" holds no merit, especially among juvenile offenders. These studies are backed up by a senate report from the Canadian government as well as several other studies from U.S.-based policy research groups. The shift in American values is undeniable, as are the facts, so the shift in policy should be appropriately swift. Though the public stance on the issue should be gauged more accurately, the Alaska ruling gives us an inkling of the coming debate and a sense of what must be done to accommodate it. Pubdate: Tue, 02 Sep 2003 Source: Daily Orange, The (NY Edu) Copyright: 2003 The Daily Orange Corporation Contact: http://dailyorange.com/main.cfm?include=submit Website: http://www.dailyorange.com/ |
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