Pubdate: Tue, 06 Sep 2011
Source: Orange County Register, The (CA)
Copyright: 2011 The Orange County Register
Contact:  http://www.ocregister.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/321
Author: Frank Mickadeit
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

BILL WOULD REGULATE POT LIKE WINE

I had two invitations for Thursday.

At South Coast Plaza, Sandy Segerstrom Daniels was hosting the 
opening-night party for her 10th annual Festival of Children, a 
monthlong endeavor to promote the general betterment of the lives of 
children. In years past, her gala has been themed like an 
old-fashioned ice-cream social, with the happy sounds of a carousel 
and children laughing. Always an event as lovely and wholesome as the 
Lennon sisters. ADVERTISEMENT

A few miles away on Thursday, her dear cousin, Richard Moriarty, was 
hosting a fundraiser to legalize pot.

My schedule was such that I could only attend one.

As I pulled up to Moriarty's estate, I could hear a throaty 
Lamborghini engine roaring to life from the vicinity of his garage, 
so I wandered up that way. While the sound of a Lamborghini is not 
unusual in Newport, this is: the body of Moriarty's black Lambo is 
literally mounted on the wall of his living room like a Mondrian, 
while its engine has been turned into a coffee table in his 
downstairs man cave. He likes to fire it up to amuse visitors, and 
sure enough, I found cousin Richard with a gaggle of first-timers, 
among them retired Judge Jim Gray and Congressman Dana Rohrabacher.

Gray is the chief signatory and proponent of the Regulate Marijuana 
Like Wine Act of 2012. Lest you think I indiscriminately bailed on 
the Festival of Children for the Festival of Pot, there was actual 
news value in my choice. (Plus, as you'll see tomorrow, I more than 
made it up to the Festival of Children the next night.) The pot 
initiative was submitted to the attorney general on Friday, which 
sets in motion the process to put it on the state ballot.

The initiative is very similar to the failed Proposition 19 of 2010, 
but with one major difference: It would allow employers to fire 
workers who test positive for marijuana. Prop. 19 lost one major 
natural constituency  libertarian-leaning business owners who feared 
their hands would be tied  and lost 53.5 percent to 46.5 percent. If 
the new, more business-friendly initiative can pick up that crowd, it 
might win.

Moriarty's estate includes an actual winery, which is why an Orange 
County pot-brownie baker who goes by the name Pati Cakes asked him to 
host the event. The initiative would tax and regulate marijuana like 
wine and, as with wine, anyone 21 or older could possess or use it. 
In fact, it generally would be illegal to impose on commercial 
marijuana activity any regulations greater than those imposed on 
winemaking and sales. See regulatemarijuanalikewine.com for details.

Of course, the initiative must make the ballot first, which is going 
to take about $1million to get three-quarters of a million valid 
signatures. That was the purpose of the event Thursday, which raised 
about $10,000. I saw about 50 people there, among them Anaheim high 
school board trustee Katherine Smith, former county treasurer 
candidate Keith Rodenhuis and Fullerton City Councilman Bruce 
Whitaker, who was representing his boss, Assemblyman Chris Norby.

Rohrabacher, who admitted years ago he smoked pot as a young man, 
spoke briefly, repeating for everyone's amusement his oft-quoted 
response to the question about whether he inhaled: "I did everything 
but drink the bong water."

If Pati Cakes represented the medical-marijuana crowd and Rohrabacher 
the don't-tread-on-me crowd, speaker Steve Downing, along with Gray, 
represented the drug-war-didn't-work crowd. (I could not find an 
overt member of the 
let's-just-get-stoned-and-watch-the-dog-for-three-hours crowd.)

Downing, a former Los Angeles Police Department deputy chief, said, 
"I was one of the original drug warriors," and all it did was lead to 
the rise of the Bloods and Crips. (His group's site, leap.cc, 
outlines why some cops support legalizing pot.) "I've never smoked a 
joint in my life," Downing said, "and if this passes, I'm not going to start."

Downing and Gray and their ilk, therefore, would contend there's 
nothing inconsistent with the goals of the Festival of Children and 
the Regulate Marijuana Like Wine initiative. In fact, the pro-pot 
crowd would argue the two are complementary. So, here's hoping that 
next year, the cousins can get on the same page and host a, um, joint 
event in early September.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom