iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Marijuana Legalization: Momentum Building For Broad Debate: AP

DAVID CRARY   06/15/09 03:23 PM ET   AP

Marijuana

NEW YORK — The savage drug war in Mexico. Crumbling state budgets. Weariness with current drug policy. The election of a president who said, "Yes _ I inhaled."

These developments and others are kindling unprecedented optimism among the many Americans who want to see marijuana legalized.

Doing so, they contend to an ever-more-receptive audience, could weaken the Mexican cartels now profiting from U.S. pot sales, save billions in law enforcement costs, and generate billions more in tax revenue from one of the nation's biggest cash crops.

Said a veteran of the movement, Ethan Nadelmann of the Drug Policy Alliance: "This is the first time I feel like the wind is at my back and not in my face."

Foes of legalization argue that already-rampant pot use by adolescents would worsen if adults could smoke at will.

Even the most hopeful marijuana activists doubt nationwide decriminalization is imminent, but they see the debate evolving dramatically and anticipate fast-paced change on the state level.

"For the most part, what we've seen over the past 20 years has been incremental," said Norm Stamper, a former Seattle police chief now active with Law Enforcement Against Prohibition. "What we've seen in the past six months is an explosion of activity, fresh thinking, bold statements and penetrating questions."

Some examples:

_Numerous prominent political leaders, including California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and former Mexican presidents, have suggested it is time for open debate on legalization.

_Lawmakers in at least three states are considering joining the 13 states that have legalized pot for medical purposes. Massachusetts voters last fall decided to decriminalize possession of an ounce or less of pot; there are now a dozen states that have taken such steps.

_In Congress, Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, and Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., are among several lawmakers contending that marijuana decriminalization should be studied in re-examining what they deem to be failed U.S. drug policy. "Nothing should be off the table," Webb said.

_National polls show close to half of American adults are now open to legalizing pot _ a constituency encompassing today's college students and the 60-something baby boomers who popularized the drug in their own youth. In California last month, a statewide Field Poll for the first time found 56 percent of voters supporting legalization.

That poll pleased California Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, a San Francisco Democrat who introduced a bill in February to legalize marijuana in a manner similar to alcohol _ taxing sales to adults while barring possession by anyone under 21. Ammiano hopes for a vote by early next year and contends the bill would generate up to $1.3 billion in revenue for his deficit-plagued state.

Ammiano, 67, said he has been heartened by cross-generational and bipartisan support.

"People who initially were very skeptical _ as the polls come in, as the budget situation gets worse _ are having a second look," he said. "Maybe these issues that have been treated as wedge issues aren't anymore. People know the drug war has failed."

A new tone on drug reform also has sounded more frequently in Congress.

At a House hearing last month, Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., challenged FBI Director Robert Mueller when Mueller spoke of parents losing their lives to drugs.

"Name me a couple of parents who have lost their lives to marijuana," Cohen said.

"Can't," Mueller replied.

"Exactly. You can't, because that hasn't happened," Cohen said. "Is there some time we're going to see that we ought to prioritize meth, crack, cocaine and heroin, and deal with the drugs that the American culture is really being affected by?"

In a telephone interview, Kucinich noted that both Obama and former President Bill Clinton acknowledged trying marijuana.

"Apparently that didn't stop them from achieving their goals in life," Kucinich said. "We need to come at this from a point of science and research and not from mythologies or fears."

Gil Kerlikowske, chief of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, has not endorsed the idea of an all-options review of drug policy, but he has suggested scrapping the "war on drugs" label and placing more emphasis on treatment and prevention. Attorney General Eric Holder has said federal authorities will no longer raid medical marijuana facilities in California.

Nonetheless, many opponents of pot legalization remain firm in their convictions.

"We're opposed to legalization or decriminalization of marijuana. We think it's the wrong message to send our youth," said Russell Laine, police chief in Algonquin, Ill., and president of the International Association of Chiefs of Police.

Marijuana _ though considered one of the least harmful illegal drugs _ consumes a vast amount of time and money on the part of law enforcement, accounting for more than 40 percent of drug arrests nationally even though relatively few pot-only offenders go to prison.

According to estimates by Harvard University economist Jeffrey Miron, legalization of marijuana could save the country at least $7.7 billion in law enforcement costs and generate more than $6 billion in revenue if it were taxed like cigarettes and alcohol.

Pot usage is pervasive. The latest federal survey indicates that more than 100 million Americans have tried it at some point and more than 14 million used it in the previous month.

Testifying recently before Congress, Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard said U.S. demand for pot is a key factor in the Mexican drug war.

"The violence that we see in Mexico is fueled 65 percent to 70 percent by the trade in one drug: marijuana," he said. "I've called for at least a rational discussion as to what our country can do to take the profit out of that."

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency remains on record against legalization and medical marijuana, which it contends has no scientific justification.

"Legalization of marijuana, no matter how it begins, will come at the expense of our children and public safety," says a DEA document. "It will create dependency and treatment issues, and open the door to use of other drugs, impaired health, delinquent behavior, and drugged drivers."

The DEA also says marijuana is now at its most potent, in part because of refinements in cultivation.

Even in liberal Vermont, with the nation's highest rates of marijuana usage, many substance-abuse specialists are wary of legalization.

Annie Ramniceanu, clinical director at Spectrum Youth and Family Services in Burlington, Vt., said her agency deals with scores of youths each year whose social development has been hurt by early and frequent pot smoking.

"They don't deal with anything," she said. "They never learned how to have fun without smoking pot, never learned how to deal with conflict."

Legalization proponents acknowledge that pot use by adolescents is a major problem, but contend that decriminalizing and regulating the drug would improve matters by shifting efforts away from criminal gangs.

"The notion that we have to keep something completely banned for adults to keep it away from kids doesn't hold up," said Bruce Mirken, communications director of the Marijuana Policy Project.

As for Obama, the activists don't expect him to embrace the cause at this point.

"Obama's got two wars, an economic disaster. We have to realize they're not going to put this on the front burner right now," said Allen St. Pierre, executive director of NORML, or the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. "But every measurable metric out there is swinging our way."

___

On the Net:

Marijuana Policy Project: http://www.mpp.org

Drug Enforcement Agency: http://www.usdoj.gov/dea

FOLLOW HUFFPOST POLITICS

NEW YORK — The savage drug war in Mexico. Crumbling state budgets. Weariness with current drug policy. The election of a president who said, "Yes _ I inhaled." These developments and others are...
NEW YORK — The savage drug war in Mexico. Crumbling state budgets. Weariness with current drug policy. The election of a president who said, "Yes _ I inhaled." These developments and others are...
Filed by Nick Graham  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 684
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (15 total)
09:15 AM on 06/21/2009
If you think the Obama administration have the courage to take this on think again.
05:19 AM on 06/24/2009
E
X
A
C T L Y !
04:38 PM on 06/29/2009
if he gets just the right kind of pressure I think he might change his tune.
09:58 AM on 06/19/2009
Is there any worse argument than the one that we shouldn't be allowed to smoke marijuana because it's bad for kids?

Why stop there? Alcohol in any amount is bad for kids. So is coffee. And driving cars. And using fire. And having sex. And rated R movies. And HBO programming. Should we ban all these things too?

It's frankly not my problem if parents are so inept and have such a poor relationship with their children that they are unable to explain to them that some things are for kids, and some things are for grown ups, like alcohol and weed.

I used to live in the Netherlands, and their rate of marijuana use by minors is significantly less than the U.S. and Britain. And that's according to the British Journal of Medicine.

Oh, the NL also has one of the lowest violent crime rates in the world, one of the lowest unemployment rates in the world, and has one of the world's most productive workforce. They have the LOWEST teen pregnancy rate in the world (including aborted pregnancy), one of the lowest rates of STDs in the world, and their use of hard drugs is 1/3 that of the U.S.

So much for the argument that marijuna legalization will lead to a crime ridden, drug fueled society.
04:40 PM on 06/29/2009
exactly... those fears can only be realized through 70 years of prohibition and missinformation
06:01 PM on 06/30/2009
I am pro legalization of pot... but realistically the USA is a vastly different (and more addictive) culture than The Netherlands.
10:51 AM on 06/18/2009
The Vermont lady mentioned that Marijuana has hurt some youth who use it as a cloak to cope or have fun and therefore have their brain development altered because of Marijuana.... EXACTLY!!!!!!!

Legalize Marijuana and it will be regulated and a lot tougher to obtain for teenagers. Every teenager in America would have a easier time getting Marijuana then alcohol. Legalize Marijuana and teenage use will plumet.

There is no rational or valid argument against legalizing Marijuana. The only reason it's still illegal is because of massive campaigns of misinformation and heavy lobbying from Big Alcohol companies, ANHEISER BUSH!!!!, and Big Pharmaceutical companies who would see their profits effected by it's legalization. Do you want to tell a cancer patient to take 15 pills a day and spend over 100$ for them instead of smoking a couple of puffs from a vaporizer or joint? Anyone against legalizing Marijuana is either misinformed OR has a agenda to promote that they FINANCIALLY!!! benefit from. Basically it's just blowing smoke.
05:49 PM on 06/17/2009
Legalization makes too much sense I guess. The only reason I can think of for not doing it.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kelley Smith
Mother, Veteran, IT Geek
10:01 PM on 06/16/2009
It would awfully difficult to smoke weed for two hours then go rape or kill someone. Has this ever happened?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RevRayGreen
Here to make cannabis legal worldwide again
01:47 AM on 06/17/2009
no, just like the number of people who died from marijuana consumption.
08:03 PM on 06/16/2009
End this war on americans that puts thousands of our people in prison at a cost of $48K a year for each prisoner X the years of the sentence. I just want the goods taxed, since the drug war on the 'erb has been a total failure.....

paul
08:46 PM on 06/16/2009
Totally agree.

This 'Drug War' was, is, and will always be an exercise in futility.

Call/email your representative and senator and let them know you want it legalized and taxed.
07:52 PM on 06/16/2009
Legalize...and then tax the s**t out of it. Hello, new revenue stream... ;-)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
drumz
The less you know the more you believe.
08:05 PM on 06/16/2009
I will grow my own, no taxes. But lots will still by from commercial companies.

They will probably outlaw seeds so the big corps can keep control. You know, to protect the free market.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
susierr
09:46 PM on 06/16/2009
I agree, most people will buy it.
07:31 PM on 06/16/2009
Just legalize the damned stuff, already. The wholesale price will drop and then they could tax it to the street price level and fix every damned financial woe this country has.

Plus everyone will be grinnin' like a Cheshire Cat.

But I guarantee ya' that speeding ticket revenues are gonna' tank.
08:56 PM on 06/17/2009
Screw the financial woes, it would help people chill out and de-stress. Maybe with that we can stop worrying so much, and so stop scaring ourselves into health problems, and stop overworking our doctors, and end our obsession with pills, taking money out of the hands of the health care and pharmaceutical industries, and put it back into people's pockets where it belongs.

Well, a man can dream, anyway.
photo
SparkyGump
Obey the Beagle!
06:57 PM on 06/16/2009
I have rheaumatiod arthritis in my spine. Just moving around is a challenge. I never drive while under the influence of anything. Heck, I don't even speed. I resent the fact it is illegal for me to take something that gives me some relief without the side effects of the other drugs I have to take just to be able to live. I'd love for those puritanical types to get a good case of anklyosing spondylitis so perhaps they might end up with a good case of empathy.
06:42 PM on 06/16/2009
AAAHHHH..........life is good over here in "socialist Europe."
06:06 PM on 06/16/2009
The reason it's not legalized is our Corrupt lawmakers in Washington. They take bribe money from the Neo Con owned conglomerates specializing in alcohol, pharmaceutical and plastics industries. Conflict of Interest and Collusion. The whole bunch accept for Kucinich should be sent packing!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dwight5
06:02 PM on 06/16/2009
To that woman in Vermont who said she sees a lot of kids whose social development has been hurt by early and frequent pot smoking, EXACTLY! You just made an excellent argument for legalization and regulation.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
fumes
Midnight Toker
05:47 PM on 06/16/2009
prediction:

with ca cut off from fedaid, ahnuld will have to legalize to make ends meet.. ya think?
04:36 PM on 06/16/2009
A shrubber like myself could make a decent living if they legalized marijuana.
photo
Z-Liberator
Republicans are scared men of narrow vision,
04:36 PM on 06/16/2009
What kind of free society sends a person to a longer life sentence for having a joint then Raping a women? This is absolutely absurd Prisons are for criminals who violate other peoples rights or property not for people who chose to exercise there god given right to do as they please with there bodies such as drinking alcohol or smoking marijuana argue with that!