Pubdate: Thu, 09 Jun 2005
Source: Sacramento Bee (CA)
http://www.sacbee.com/content/politics/columns/weintraub/story/ 
13033638p-13879660c.html
Copyright: 2005 The Sacramento Bee
Contact:  http://www.sacbee.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376
Note: Does not publish letters from outside its circulation area.
Author: Daniel Weintraub, Bee Columnist
Cited: Gonzales v. Raich ( www.angeljustice.org/ )
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John)

MEDICAL MARIJUANA CASE IS MORE FEDERAL OVERKILL

Like the old parable about the frog not noticing as it slowly boils 
in a pot of water, Americans are losing more and more of their rights 
everyday to an overweening federal government, yet we hardly seem to 
care. This week's ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court on California's 
medical marijuana law is the latest example.

The court has been backing the right of Congress to intervene in our 
lives for so long now that it's hardly news anymore. States rights, 
while abused to defend the institution of slavery, once were thought 
to be the individual's best defense against the feds. But that 
doctrine has long since been rendered ineffective, and it was 
worthless in the marijuana case.

So as the federal government grows in size and reach, the question 
arises: Is there any aspect of our lives left that Congress cannot 
regulate? Monday's ruling suggests that the answer is probably not.

The case involved two California women - Angel McClary Raich of 
Oakland and Diane Monson of Butte County - who suffer from serious 
illness and use marijuana to relieve their pain, and who sought an 
injunction to stop the federal government from enforcing drug laws 
against those who grow, possess or use medical marijuana. They use 
their pot under the auspices of California's Compassionate Use Act, 
enacted by voters in 1996.

Raich gets her marijuana from caregivers who grow it for her. Monson 
grows her own. In 2002, agents from the Drug Enforcement Agency 
raided Monson's home and destroyed her six plants.

In its decision, the court did not strike down California's statute, 
but upheld the right of U.S. agents to enforce the federal Controlled 
Substances Act even on Californians who follow state law.

The court ruling rested largely on the Interstate Commerce Clause of 
the Constitution. Although the women were engaged in no commerce and 
neither they nor their marijuana was crossing state lines, the court 
found that Congress has an interest in regulating intrastate activity 
which might indirectly subvert the federal government's legitimate 
right to control interstate commerce. Since it is impossible to tell 
whether marijuana in the possession of an individual was grown at 
home or purchased on the market, the court reasoned, personal use, 
even for medicinal purposes, falls within the federal government's purview.

The 6-3 decision did not come as a surprise to lawyers and scholars 
who follow the court, since it tracked closely with decades of 
precedent. And even though the court in recent years has dabbled with 
the idea of reinvigorating federalism, it hasn't been willing to 
follow through on that impulse with any gusto. At least four members 
of the current court are considered to be openly hostile to states 
rights and comfortable with an expansive federal government. The five 
others support federalism in different ways at different times and 
thus are difficult to corral into a working majority.

The decision in the marijuana case was written by Justice John Paul 
Stevens and supported by Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, 
David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsberg and Stephen Breyer.

The main dissent was written by Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and 
joined by Justice Clarence Thomas and Chief Justice William Rehnquist.

Thomas, in his separate dissent, succinctly summarized the ruling's 
import for those who believe Congress and the federal government are 
overstepping their constitutional bounds.

"Diane Monson and Angel Raich use marijuana that has never been 
bought or sold, that has never crossed state lines and that has had 
no demonstrable effect on the national market for marijuana," Thomas 
wrote. "If Congress can regulate this under the Commerce Clause, then 
it can regulate virtually anything and the federal government is no 
longer one of limited and enumerated powers."

A statement from John Walters, President Bush's director of national 
drug policy, demonstrated Thomas' point perfectly. Walters' 
paternalistic attitude toward American citizens fairly dripped off the page.

"Smoking illegal drugs may make some people 'feel better'," Walters 
said. "However, civilized societies and modern-day medical practices 
differentiate between inebriation and the safe, supervised delivery 
of proven medicine by legitimate doctors."

Unfortunately, too many Americans who would be shocked and offended 
if their next-door neighbor said he knew what was best for them 
acquiesce when the government, which is really just millions of 
neighbors acting in concert, does exactly the same thing.

But if states rights are dead, perhaps a better and even more 
fundamental concept - the sanctity of the individual - can someday 
rise in their place. Indeed, the lawyers in the marijuana case say 
they plan to return to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and this 
time focus on the basic right of individuals to live their lives 
without government interference.

It's hard to believe that the founders really meant to give the 
federal government the power to raid the home of a sick woman growing 
an herb for herself to relieve the pain from a chronic illness. To 
say that such enforcement is within the realm of regulating 
interstate commerce may be consistent with the court's precedents in 
this part of the law, but it is not consistent with either common 
sense or human dignity.