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Paul Armentano

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Elections Have Consequences: It's Time for the Obama Administration to Acknowledge That Marijuana Prohibition Doesn't Work

Posted: 01/26/2013 12:20 pm

Never in modern history has there existed greater public support for ending the nation's nearly century-long experiment with pot prohibition and replacing it with regulation. The historic votes on Election Day in Colorado and Washington, where, for the first time ever, a majority of voters decided at the ballot box to abolish cannabis prohibition, underscore this political reality. But is the Obama administration listening? It ought to be. In Washington legalizing marijuana got the same percentage of the vote as Obama did, and in Colorado cannabis got more votes than Obama -- by a wide margin.

Americans are turning their backs on marijuana prohibition in record numbers for a variety of reasons. The ongoing enforcement of cannabis prohibition financially burdens taxpayers, encroaches upon civil liberties, engenders disrespect for the law, impedes legitimate scientific research into the plant's medicinal properties and disproportionately affects communities of color. Furthermore, the criminalization of cannabis simply doesn't work.

Despite more than 70 years of federal pot prohibition, Americans' consumption of and demand for cannabis is here to stay. Voters' passage of Amendment 64 in Colorado and Initiative 502 in Washington acknowledges this reality. These measures seek to stop ceding control of the marijuana market to untaxed criminal enterprises, and to impose new, common-sense regulations governing cannabis' personal use by adults and licensing its production. Unlike the federal government, which continues to define cannabis as an illegal commodity that is as dangerous as heroin, most voters recognize that a pragmatic regulatory framework that allows for limited, licensed production and sale of cannabis to adults but restricts use among young people best reduces the risks associated with its use or abuse.

Yet to date, the president and the Attorney General have remained largely silent regarding whether they intend to respect the will of the voters and allow these nascent laws to move forward unimpeded by federal interference. Speaking with ABC's Barbara Walters, Obama stated, "It would not make sense for us to see a top priority as going after recreational users in states that have determined that it's legal. ... We've got bigger fish to fry." But the federal government never has prioritized targeting and prosecuting minor marijuana offenders, a fact that largely renders Obama's pledge meaningless.

The far bigger issue, which remains unaddressed by the administration, is whether the federal government will take action, either legal or prosecutorial, against those engaged in broader, state-sanctioned efforts to regulate the commercial cultivation and sale of cannabis to adults. Regarding this latter question, Obama has been far more coy, stating only, "[W]hat we're going to need to have is a conversation about, how do you reconcile a federal law that still says marijuana is a federal offense and state laws that say that it's legal?"

Some congressional lawmakers are actively trying to reconcile this conflict. In the weeks following the 2012 election, a bipartisan coalition of U.S. representatives, led by Rep. Diana Degette (D-Colo.), introduced H.R. 6606, the Respect States' and Citizens' Rights Act, to prevent federal officials from interfering in Colorado's and Washington's newly enacted laws. A House Republican-sponsored effort is also anticipated. Several House members are also considering separate federal legislation to provide a blueprint for the eventual legalization and taxation of cannabis.

In the other chamber of Congress, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) recently announced his intent to hold hearings in the 113th Congress to discuss legislative options to ensure that the federal government does not disregard the will of Colorado and Washington voters. "One option would be to amend the Federal Controlled Substances Act to allow possession of up to one ounce of marijuana, at least in jurisdictions where it is legal under state law," Leahy recently wrote in a letter to drug "czar" Gil Kerlowske. "In order to give these options full consideration, the Committee needs to understand how the administration intends to respond to the decision of the voters in Colorado and Washington."

While it's not yet apparent whether President Obama will support some or any of these options, it's clear how the public wishes the administration would respond. Most Americans believe that the feds ought to do nothing at all. According to the most recent Gallup poll, a near supermajority of citizens believes that the federal government should respect state laws in Colorado and Washington. Sixty-four percent of respondents do not believe that the Obama administration "should take steps to enforce federal anti-marijuana laws in those states." In addition, more than four out of 10 respondents who personally acknowledge opposing cannabis legalization nonetheless believe that the administration should respect state laws allowing for its legal possession, use and sale.

With public opinion solidly behind legalization, is it realistic to think that Obama's Justice Department will take action to try to nullify Colorado's and Washington's laws? Ideally the answer is "no." That said, none of the president's actions during his first term -- in particular the ongoing crackdown against medical cannabis dispensaries in various states, namely California, and the administration's rejection of an administrative petition to reschedule the substance under federal law -- indicate that he or his administration possess the political will to move forward with substantive marijuana law reform. This needs to change. Americans' dissatisfaction with the criminalization of cannabis has reached a tipping point. Calling for an end to marijuana prohibition is no longer a political liability; it is a political opportunity. The administration would be wise to seize it.

To read the companion article by HuffPost's Ryan Grim and Ryan J. Reilly, click here. To read the companion blog post by William Chambliss of the George Washington University, click here.

 
 
 
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Never in modern history has there existed greater public support for ending the nation's nearly century-long experiment with pot prohibition and replacing it with regulation. The historic votes on Ele...
Never in modern history has there existed greater public support for ending the nation's nearly century-long experiment with pot prohibition and replacing it with regulation. The historic votes on Ele...
 
 
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07:11 PM on 03/17/2013
One of the biggest arguments I've heard about the economic jump legalization would cause is, if marijuana is legal, people could just grow it and there would be no financial gain to the gov't. But just think, how many people do you know that grow their own tobacco? Or do most think it's easier to go down to the corner store and buy?
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YvonneH
be kind to each other
08:44 AM on 02/21/2013
To stick people in prisons for long periods of time, or any time at all for a so called crime that hurts nobody is the most ridiculous thing EVER. Time for this war on a plant to stop. Time for all lies and propaganda about it to end.
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YvonneH
be kind to each other
08:41 AM on 02/21/2013
Listed as a schedule 1 drug with no medical benefits, the US government holds the patent on the medical benefits of marijuana (cannabinoids).
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MariJman
life is scary, there are no guarantees
11:03 PM on 02/03/2013
PROHIBITION FAILED
01:38 AM on 01/30/2013
Based on the evidence that I have seen, Marijuana doesn't deserve to be a category 1 drug,. Saying all drugs should be legal also doesn't work for me, methamphetamine definitely should be a category 1 drug. We need "real" rules around drugs... regarding medical benefit, regarding physical addiction and regarding measurable impairment (we've done the tests with alchohol, we should do public ones with marijuana and see what the effects really are) and regarding medical harm/lethality. Rather than saying this drug is legal and this one isn't I want a set of rules that say "the benefit/cost ratio of the drug is something we as a society accept, or it isn't based on scientific studies". We shouldn't have an ATF, we should have just the FDA and they should have a set of rules ... if the benefit minus the impairment minus the addictiveness minus the lethality is greater than a factor of 5 or 10, we should make the drug illegal. If it's more than 0 it should be unscheduled.
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wayoutleft
my nano-bio coded in a period: .
09:16 AM on 01/29/2013
The best thing by far is simply to cease enforcement and leave it at that. Lots of legalizers have proven a lot more interested in regulation than pot. Legal for me is lighting a spliff and actually walking up any main street in the country. That's legal. Everying else is a bureaucratic-Democratic party lawyers' game.
Remember this with misdemeanor-illegal pot, your in public fine will be a couple hundred at most...
However, with legal, medicinal pot- your in-public restrictions will be fined astronomically. See, the tough restrictions are the trade off for legalization. So just know what kind of pot environment you're going to get. I have just left a "legal" state, glad to be back in my illegal but unenforced state where I can toke throughout the town. (But a top shelf kush is coming VERY soon that is panavision/technicolor. Watch for it.)
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Milton Findley
MSG, USA, Ret.
08:32 AM on 01/29/2013
It might be time for NORML to recognize that prohibition actually is working to some extent. Unless it is their belief that removing the restrictions will not result in an increase in marijuana use. They are looking to remove the inconveniences of the prohibition.
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09:30 AM on 01/29/2013
Yeah, right. Prohibition is working as well as it was in the 20s. Do more people drink now that it's legal?
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Milton Findley
MSG, USA, Ret.
02:43 PM on 01/29/2013
Yes, without doubt, they do, and to their detriment.
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11:13 AM on 01/29/2013
There will be an initial small spike, but countries that have reduced or eliminated penalties for marijuana consumption have less use than the U.S. The Netherlands has HALF the rate of consumption we do. Forbidden fruit is a strong attraction.

90 percent of the people who will consume marijuana after re-legalization already do. Most of any increase will come from people who switch from alcohol or other drug to marijuana. That's a good thing, of course. Every person who switches from Budweiser to buds, improves their health and life tremendously - as well as that of their family and community.

Of course prohibition doesn't work. In all its miserable seven decades, it has never accomplished even one positive thing. It has ONLY caused vast amounts of crime, violence, corruption, death and the severe diminishment of EVERYONE'S freedom.

It's WAY past time to end what future historians will call the American Inquisition!
08:05 AM on 01/29/2013
Elections have consequences just as the flight of an Amazonian butterfly has consequences. One cannot control either set.
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splashy
Really?!?!!!
05:39 AM on 01/29/2013
Congress just needs to repeal the laws against cannabis. Takes the whole issue out of the hands of the White House.

Legalize it, tax it, regulate it.
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tnflower423
put brain in gear before running mouth
11:39 AM on 01/29/2013
Amen to that,splashy.
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Watchman56
02:36 AM on 01/29/2013
The Whole Drug War is a Joke. If you want to help people with Drug Addiction You Build Clinics, Not Prisons. The War on Drugs is really a War on the Poor. Until People Stand Up and Demand a Change. This Will Continue. I've Never taken drugs in my life. But the War on Drugs is B.S. And Needs to be Stopped. You're never going to stop people from taking drugs. The ONLY thing you can do his Help Treat Them Medically.
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Curtis Echols
PawPaw
01:22 AM on 01/29/2013
You could use some brownie points Obama,here is a good way to earn some.
09:23 AM on 01/29/2013
Some 'special' brownie points???
12:48 AM on 01/29/2013
Legalization of marijuana would be a win-win situation. A win for the feds with tax revenue and a win for the people with decriminalization.
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Lidkey
Moderate at least in my own mind
12:30 AM on 01/29/2013
"the federal government, which continues to define cannabis as an illegal commodity that is as dangerous as heroin" what were you smoking when you wrote this? I have searched the CDC and NIH web sites for health studies and found absolutely nothing of the sort. The Fed Gov is just enforcing the current law, write congress to change the law like they do in civilized countries.
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splashy
Really?!?!!!
05:51 AM on 01/29/2013
You are right in that it's Congress that needs to change the law. The executive branch just carries out the law.
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Lidkey
Moderate at least in my own mind
01:36 PM on 01/29/2013
Obama put more $ and effort into securing the border before seriously attempting immigration reform, hopefully he and congress will work on serious reform of the drug issue. From what i found there is not much research about it. More kids try mj than tobacco and kids in correctional HS try mj more than alcohol, about 98% of white boys have tried it, while at traditional HS it was about 47% mj and about 80% alcohol. White boys typically use the most of both, i assume it is access.
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09:35 AM on 01/29/2013
That is the definition used by the DEA and the FBI. It is, indeed, in the same classification as herion in terms of possession and traffiking.--while NIH is saying it can be useful. In fact, the federal government holds a patent on one version of pot.
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Lidkey
Moderate at least in my own mind
01:23 PM on 01/29/2013
If i understand your point it is a good one DEA, FBI and other law enforcement should focus on the most serious crime. Write your gov representatives and get it changed. I have taught classes in local county jails, lots of pathetic "kids" there.
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Lidkey
Moderate at least in my own mind
05:49 PM on 01/29/2013
http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RL30722.pdf

max 5 years in jail for up to 10kg of cannabis
max 20 yrs for only 100grams of Heroin

Seems that the DEA and Federal Law considers Heroin to be a more serious drug, i'm not sure what this "herion" is you are referring to is? Heroin is listed as Narcotic while Cannabis/marijuana is not.
If there were dispenseries in WA and CO selling Opioids/Heroin the DEA would shut them down quickly regardless of state law, they are far more addictive etc.
www.crs.gov
11:25 PM on 01/28/2013
The thing that just kills me the most, is the fact that the country is broke, but we have a huge potential source of new tax revenue. And we're leaving it just sitting on the table, unused.
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11:11 PM on 01/28/2013
never happen in your lifetime Paul. there are too few people making way too much money for this cash cow to go away