Changing State Pot Laws, Attitudes

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Forcing notions of proper lifestyle or personal behavior on all of society is usually problematic even when a relatively small minority resists the imposition.

Banning any substance that is in high demand, even by a minority of the population, generates a spectacularly lucrative and corrupting black market that not only thwarts effective enforcement, but effects a transmutation of law enforcement into something resembling a police state.

By abolishing a victimless personal choice, prohibition makes criminals of otherwise decent citizens.

Drug prohibition has distracted American law enforcement from protecting the public from real crime, to focus on a futile war on drugs that does little more than create more police power to appropriate the property of anyone even suspected of being involved in drug trafficking.

America's war on drugs is transmogrifying our police – leading them to overzealously, and too often mistakenly, bust down doors, confiscate property, and injure, kill or incarcerate folks who have hurt no one.

Moreover, prohibition creates violent crime here and abroad. The savage violence plaguing Mexico is a result of America's obstinate, irrational, insistence on continuing drug prohibition.

With Proposition 19, Californians have an opportunity to begin putting an end to this insanity. California has long been the nation's avant-garde exemplar leading the nation into needed change. Passing Prop. 19 would continue that role.

The arguments against Prop. 19 are exemplified in a recent editorial by the Los Angeles Times and in a commentary by Gov. Schwarzenegger. Both warn that legalizing marijuana would endanger public safety.

However, considering the zeal with which law enforcement has conducted the war on drugs, and the savagery of the turf wars among drug gangs, the public is more in danger from prohibition than it is from fellow citizens choosing to use marijuana.

The timid L.A. Times stresses that because legalizing marijuana would put California in direct confrontation with federal law, Prop. 19 should not be passed. But the state's voters have already defied the feds by allowing medical marijuana, and even though the peeved feds descended on the state, California has stood its ground.

This display of perseverance for freedom, common sense and compassion has encouraged other states to follow California's lead.

Both the L.A. Times and Schwarzenegger belittle the financial aspect of Prop. 19, taxing marijuana. They say the expected tax money, $1.4 billion, is insignificant.

If $1.4 billion is insignificant, why are politicians promising to find a billion or so here and a billion or so there? Because it all adds up. Pennies make dollars, and billions make 100 billions.

The L.A. Times fears that because Prop. 19 would allow each local jurisdiction to regulate marijuana, there would be regulatory chaos. Yet, after the nation came to its senses and ended the prohibition on alcohol, many states had dry counties and jurisdictions with varying regulations on alcohol. Those states did not collapse into chaos, and neither will California if Prop. 19 passes.

And since when are local self-determination and self-government a bad thing? Isn't our current Democrat candidate for governor advocating just that – bringing power closer to the people and away from its concentration in Sacramento?

Agreed, Prop. 19 is not perfect, but it doesn't have to be. It is a needed step toward reason, freedom and justice. Ironically, in supporting the federal health-care reform act, the L.A. Times argued that even with its deficiencies the progress the health-reform act provided made it worth passing.

The deficiencies could be addressed later. What was most important was to get the ball rolling. Why isn't that same argument being applied to marijuana legalization under Prop. 19?

Passing Prop. 19 may be more symbolic than effectual, but then so was dumping tea into Boston Harbor. Look where that led.

Freedom, common sense and justice usually don't come easily. There are always powerful forces of ignorance, selfishness and entrenched political privilege arrayed against them. Sometimes you need to stop talking and do something.

Passing Prop. 19 would be a shot heard around the world.

Randy Alcorn is a resident of Santa Barbara County.


NewsHawk: MedicalNeed:420 MAGAZINE
Source:santamariatimes.com
Author: Randy Alcorn
Contact: SantaMariaTimes.com | Contact
Copyright: 2010 Santa Maria Times
Website:Changing state pot laws, attitudes
 
I like this particular article it gives me an additional input in the information a round the world. Thanks a lot and keep going with posting such information.
 
These are the kinds of things we need to tell our non-smoking family and friends the next time there is a ballot opportunity.
 
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