Presidential Hopeful: Legalize Marijuana

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
A self-made millionaire Republican is campaigning in Florida on a platform of spending cuts and less government.

It's not Rick Scott, anymore.

This is Gary E. Johnson -- a former New Mexico governor and marijuana-legalization advocate -- who's putting out Florida feelers in a possible bid for the presidency in 2012.

Johnson's campaign-style stops in Tallahassee, Melbourne and Orlando last week reveal that the presidential race is already at a low boil in the nation's largest swing state. Without Florida, Republicans say, they can't recapture the White House.

Johnson shrugs when told he's a long-shot candidate. Johnson has overcome long odds before. As a political newcomer, he beat a three-term incumbent in 1992.

Johnson says his legacy of record vetoes and tax cuts from 1995 to 2003 in New Mexico separate him from the crowd of likely presidential hopefuls.

So do his positions on pot and the drug war.

"The issue of marijuana legalization is obviously an attention-getter," Johnson said. "And you can't shy away from it. I have to defend it. I have to defend the position."

Johnson's reasons: Marijuana is less harmful than alcohol and the cost of locking up pot smokers exacts too much of a toll on civil liberties and on taxpayers.

"I don't drink. I don't smoke pot. But I've drank and I've smoked pot," said Johnson, an accomplished tri-athlete who once scaled Mount Everest. "The big difference between the two is that marijuana is a lot safer than alcohol."

Johnson said it shouldn't be legal to sell marijuana to children, or to operate a car under the influence. He said he also opposes legalizing cocaine, heroine and crystal methamphetamine.


NewsHawk: User: 420 MAGAZINE
Source: Miami Herald (FL)
Copyright: 2010 Miami Herald Media Co.
Contact: heralded@miamiherald.com
Website: MiamiHerald.com - Miami & Ft. Lauderdale News, Weather, Miami Dolphins & More
Details: MapInc
Author: Marc Caputo, Herald/Times Tallahassee Bureau
 
Almost sounds like a real person, not a puppet. Maybe he does have some potential.

a politician a real person :hmmmm:

i'm not a democrat or republican. i'd have a hard time backing a republican based on their stance on Cannabis. maybe if that was the only issue i cared about. i'm gonna wait and see if anything serious develops with the new teapot party. so far i haven't seen anything of substance from them yet, but i hope. its only been a week. i've been hoping for a long time for some way for pro-cannabis people to unite. maybe.

for those who haven't heard of the teapot party just google it.
 
He is going to get some real good numbers by being the first one to come out for legalization. This is going to be a BIG game changer because the others will be forced to try and defend a policy of prohibition that they all know is not working. Good for him, this will get sparks flying.
 
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