Pubdate: Sun, 26 Jun 2011
Source: Aspen Times, The  (CO)
Copyright: 2011 Aspen Times
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/zKpMPhQ7
Website: http://www.aspentimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3784
Author: John Colson, Aspen Times Weekly

HIT AND RUN.

Even Congressmen Know It's The Right Course

Well, well.

I never thought I'd admit this, but U.S. Rep. Ron Paul and I agree on
something.

It's not often that I find myself in this position - finding common
cause with a virulently reactionary Texas Republican.

But on June 23, 2011, Paul joined his fellow representatives Jared
Polis, Barney Frank, Steve Cohen, John Conyers and Barbara Lee, all
Democrats, to propose a bill in the U.S. House of Representatives to
end the federal war on marijuana and leave the matter to the states.

Mark that date, folks, because it's a big one.

As far as I can recall, it's the first time the members of that august
house have publicly stated what many of us have known for years - the
federal government has no business prosecuting adults for smoking pot.

Frank noted that, in its overly zealous pursuit of potheads, the
federal government is wasting resources and intruding on people's
private lives - two lines of thought that must have played a big part
in bringing Ron Paul into the fold.

The bill is not, to be clear, about urging people to go out and toke
up.

It is about the federal government waging an ill-conceived war on its
own citizens, and spending vast amounts of money to do so. A 2007
study by researcher Jon Gettmen revealed that this country wastes at
least $42 billion every year to stamp out pot and pot users - $10
billion on direct law enforcement costs, and $30 billion in lost tax
revenues.

It is about some 850,000 citizens, many of whom were otherwise
law-abiding people, who were arrested on pot-related charges in 2009
alone.

It is about the total of more than 22 million who reportedly have been
arrested and prosecuted since the 1960s on marijuana-related charges,
many of them sent to prison.

It is about the most egregious evidence that we are living in a police
state, when the cops can bust in your door based on what you are
smoking in your own living room.

It is about common sense, and the fact that 16 states have legalized
marijuana for medicinal use, and 14 states have decriminalized
possession of the weed.

I suppose I should declare, right here, that unlike a certain former
president, I did inhale. I therefore know whereof I write.

Pot is a drug, no question about that, but arguably it is the most
benign mind-altering substance we've ever used, speaking globally. And
we've been using it for millenia as a medicine and a source of relief
from the rigors of life, probably for a lot longer than we've been
making and drinking alcohol.

Prescription drugs, alcohol, tobacco and a number of other drugs
annually kill untold numbers of people. But pot, in and of itself, has
never killed anyone.

The move to outlaw marijuana, way back in the 1930s, was racist in its
origins, and drug enforcement today largely remains so. Back then, pot
was "known" to be the drug of choice for black Americans and jazz
musicians, and those who used drug intolerance to advance their
political careers were not shy about claiming that smoking pot made
black men horny for white women.

Today, blacks or Hispanics are up to five times more likely to be
arrested for drug use than whites.

Despite all that, it seems that some modicum of common sense is
working its way up to the halls of Washington, D.C., at least in the
legislature.

Granted, even the bill's sponsors admit that there is little
likelihood that their proposal will get through Congress.

Already another Texan, U.S. Rep. Lamar Smith, chair of the House
Judiciary Committee, reportedly announced he would not put it on his
committee's calendar, thereby killing the bill just as it got started.

But Barney Frank has said he has another bill ready to go, this one
aimed at permitting states to decide for themselves what their
policies will be concerning marijuana, effectively taking the feds out
of it.

That, too, undoubtedly will face the same kind of ignorant and
hysterical outcry that has kept pot at the top of the illegal drugs
list for decades.

But, as Barney Frank has said, it's all about education at this point.
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.