I'd like to thank former police offer Lyndon Lafferty for his ad hominem attack on me on the editorial page of the Times-Herald ("Wrong on marijuana," March 6). The prejudice and hyperbole manifested in your letter makes a far better case for ending marijuana prohibition than I could ever hope to.
The origins for cannabis prohibition were steeped in racial hatred (mostly directed at Mexicans and African Americans), misinformation, and fear mongering. Inflammatory accusations against marijuana and marijuana consumers were typically unsubstantiated, while evidence refuting these claims often went ignored. As evident by Mr. Lafferty's willfully ignorant and culturally bigoted remarks, little has changed.
The criminal prohibition of cannabis is a morally bankrupt policy -- as evident by the fact that its most ardent defenders, like Mr. Lafferty, must resort to personal attacks rather than engaging in the civil exchange of ideas.
Today, the enforcement of marijuana prohibition remains every bit the cynical culture war that it was 70-plus years ago. Those who wage it on the front lines, such as Mr. Lafferty, do little to hide their bias. As he writes, "Our laws are designed to protect people like us from people like you." Apparently, the ideas I've expressed this paper are so threatening to Mr. Lafferty that he feels the need to be legally protected from them. How telling -- and pitiful.
News Hawk- Ganjarden 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: Vallejo Times Herald
Author: Paul Armentano
Contact: Vallejo Times Herald
Copyright: 2009 Vallejo Times Herald
Website: Pitiful Response
The origins for cannabis prohibition were steeped in racial hatred (mostly directed at Mexicans and African Americans), misinformation, and fear mongering. Inflammatory accusations against marijuana and marijuana consumers were typically unsubstantiated, while evidence refuting these claims often went ignored. As evident by Mr. Lafferty's willfully ignorant and culturally bigoted remarks, little has changed.
The criminal prohibition of cannabis is a morally bankrupt policy -- as evident by the fact that its most ardent defenders, like Mr. Lafferty, must resort to personal attacks rather than engaging in the civil exchange of ideas.
Today, the enforcement of marijuana prohibition remains every bit the cynical culture war that it was 70-plus years ago. Those who wage it on the front lines, such as Mr. Lafferty, do little to hide their bias. As he writes, "Our laws are designed to protect people like us from people like you." Apparently, the ideas I've expressed this paper are so threatening to Mr. Lafferty that he feels the need to be legally protected from them. How telling -- and pitiful.
News Hawk- Ganjarden 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: Vallejo Times Herald
Author: Paul Armentano
Contact: Vallejo Times Herald
Copyright: 2009 Vallejo Times Herald
Website: Pitiful Response