Obama Should End Reefer Madness

Ms. RedEye

Well-Known Member
For all of the keen intellect that President Barack Obama showed in his online town hall meeting, he didn't seem to know much about reefer economics.

When asked whether legalizing marijuana might be a stimulus for the economy and job creation, he played the question for laughs. "I don't know what this says about the online audience," he quipped as his studio audience chuckled and groaned. "But ... this was a fairly popular question. We want to make sure that it was answered," he said.

Sure. So you could knock it.

"The answer is, no, I don't think that is a good strategy to grow our economy."

No stimulus? Hey, more than a few blinged-out, Escalade-driving pot dealers would dispute that notion. You want "green" industry? Free the weed, dude.

Such is the call of pro-pot politicians like California Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, who has proposed to legalize the weed, tax it and regulate it like booze. He estimates the move would generate $1 billion in revenue for the state's troubled budget and save $150 million in enforcement costs.

It's hard to argue with Ammiano's logic, but it's easy to make light of lighting up. Marijuana is, after all, funny. Few subjects inspire more bad puns from headline writers than those that, well, step on grass. A quick sample:

"Obama: Nope to dope." (Russia Today)

"Obama's Marijuana Buzz Kill." (The Daily Beast online)

"Marijuana issue suddenly smoking hot." (Politico)

Like sex and sobriety, marijuana is funny because it is surrounded by so much hypocrisy. So is politics.

To listen to Obama's chortles, for example, you'd never guess that he is our third president in a row to have admitted to using marijuana back in his years of youthful indiscretion.

Bill Clinton says he tried it but "didn't inhale." Oh, sure. George W. Bush admitted to early pot use in a taped interview with a friend, but refuses to discuss it in public. Obama described his own teen drug use in poignant detail in his first memoir, but like countless other boomer dads now shies shyly away from the subject.

Yet you would not guess from his snarky town-hall attitude that only a week earlier his Attorney General Eric Holder announced that the federal Drug Enforcement Administration would stop raiding and arresting users or dispensers of medicinal marijuana unless they violated both state law and federal law.

That means you, California, and a dozen other states that allow marijuana sales and possession for medicinal purposes with a doctor's recommendation.

Holder sensibly announced that DEA resources are too valuable in the war against dangerous drug lords to be raiding residents who otherwise are in compliance with state and local laws and standards. That would reverse the Bush administration's ridiculous scorched-earth pursuit that ignored the right of states to govern themselves in such matters.

Yet convenient inconsistency is not limited to any one party or administration. A week after Holder's notice – and the day before Obama laughed off the notion of legal reefers – DEA agents raided Emmalyn's California Cannabis Clinic, a licensed medical marijuana collective in San Francisco.

DEA spokesmen claimed that Emmalyn's had violated local as well as federal law, but they didn't say how. Local officials said they didn't have a clue what DEA was talking about.

Not laughing is Charles Lynch, a celebrated cause since his Morro Bay, Calif., medical marijuana dispensary was raided by the DEA in 2007. Two days before Obama's town hall, a federal judge postponed Lynch's sentencing to await clarification of Team Obama's new hands-off approach.

Lynch, who has no criminal record and was welcomed by the local mayor and business community, should be set free. Instead he's in legal limbo, with both sides trying to make him a test case for their competing crusades.

Also not laughing are lawmakers in at least 10 states, including Obama's home state of Illinois, who currently are debating whether and how they might join the 13 states where medical marijuana is legal.

If he really cares, Obama could end this reefer madness in much the same way that Franklin Roosevelt ended the disastrous run of liquor prohibition in 1933. Prohibition had to go. It was too costly to enforce. It demoralized a public already beaten down by the Depression. It wasted a potential tax revenue-producing commodity by intruding unnecessarily into private lives of otherwise law-abiding Americans. Sounds familiar.

Unlike Roosevelt, President Obama does not have to amend the Constitution to end our current marijuana confusion. He only has to get out of the way and allow the states to enforce their own drug laws. That's not a laughable notion. It's only sensible.


News Hawk: MsRedEye: 420 Magazine
Source: The State Journal Register
Author: Clarence Page
Copyright: 2009 GateHouse Media, Inc.
Contact: The State Journal-Register - Springfield, IL - The State Journal-Register
Website: Clarence Page: Obama should end reefer madness - Springfield, IL - The State Journal-Register
 
He doesn't realize it, but by laughing at the people who take this issue so serious, he marginalizes us and makes us easier to be hated and be laughed at.

Works the same whenever a society wants to make it easier to hate a minority.

I just want to be treated as the responsible, tax paying, family loving, law respecting person that I am.

When marijuana is legal then you can laugh at me if you want. In fact then we can laugh together.
 
It's really strange, I've never once in my life met any law enforcement official that thinks marijuana is more dangerous than alcohol and the only opposition I've heard from law enforcement is the simple fact that it is illegal. Every one in a position of authority would rather deal with someone intoxicated on marijuana rather than alcohol.

And to say that it wouldn't be good for the economy is simply ignorant and ridiculous. Look at the revenue alcohol and tobacco bring in! If marijuana projects half that much income and half as many jobs as either of those it would create a large boost in the economy. Personally I'm willing to bet that the potential money from legalization and taxation of marijuana will create more revinue than both tobacco and alcohol put together. Not to mention the lives it will save, the money it will save on enforcement and incarceration alone would be millions if not billions. Sounds like a no brainer to me, I just don't understand the other side of the debate at all.
 
You're preaching to the choir.:rollit:
 
I was also concerned after seeing Obama's reaction to the question of marijuana, so I wrote him an email of support for his economic stimulus package and his administration and added my opinion that Marijuana should be legalized and it would bring billions in revenue and reduced costs. I was initially concerned about Attny. Gen. Holder's appointment because of his negative stance on marijuana and other drugs.
I was under the impression that California already received $100 Million and the Fed. Govt. nearly $500 million in tax revenue from marijuana sales in CA. Some friends recently went to LA from NY and got certified, joined clubs and got served within a couple of hours. Some years ago, the present (and accidental) governor of New York, David Patterson, was arrested protesting the Rockefeller Drug Laws. He's on our side on the marijuana issue. This past Friday, the New York State Legislature finally voted to "reform" those draconian laws and return sentencing to judges, along with other measures to undo some of the damage. Thousands of prisoners will begin steps to be released and returned to their communities and families. Just the beginning, but an important start. If we keep contacting the lawmakers, we can get it done. I was surprised at the response I got by signing a petition by DPA thanking the lawmakers who voted "Yea" on marijuana. Some Senators even invited me to meet with them. I hope lots of folks join DPA or MPP and get active! Contact your Senator, Congressperson, and/or Assemblyperson. DPA says it's coming sooner then we think!
 
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