Pubdate: Thu, 03 Nov 2011
Source: Sacramento News & Review (CA)
Contact:  2011 Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
Website: http://newsreview.com/sacto/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/540
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

NO ON PROHIBITION

In their recent effort to shut down dispensaries in the state, the 
U.S. attorneys in California seem to want to drive the marijuana 
industry back underground. In choosing to assert the primacy of 
federal law, they ignore the fact that the voters of California 
approved Proposition 215 and deny the state the right to determine 
its own destiny. They also willfully ignore the fact that prohibition 
simply does not work.

Let's state this clearly: The people who would benefit most from 
reinstating prohibition are, of course, the Mexican cartel bosses 
whose laborers grow huge illicit gardens in the forests.

So now what? We seem to be at a tipping point. Either we go backward 
to prohibition, with its reliance on police and prisons and its 
corrupting black market, or we move forward toward a better system of 
distributing marijuana.

A few weeks ago, the trustees of the California Medical Association, 
which represents 35,000 physicians, called for the nationwide 
legalization of marijuana. The organization proposed that marijuana 
be regulated along the lines of alcohol and tobacco. As Dr. Donald 
Lyman, the physician who wrote the new policy, told the Los Angeles 
Times, current laws have "proven to be a failed public health policy."

Then, on Monday, the Gallup Co. released a poll showing that 50 
percent of Americans think it's time that marijuana become legal in 
the United States-up from 46 percent last year, and just 12 percent in 1969.

The ball is now in the Legislature's court. It can try to create 
clear, consistent and fair regulations and oversight, or it can 
simply legalize marijuana. Arguments can be made for both. Neither 
would eliminate the conflict between federal and state law unless 
marijuana was legalized nationwide.

Pot is now California's No. 1 cash crop, estimated to bring in $15 
billion annually. Lawmakers should be looking for ways to regulate 
and tax the herb-thereby creating jobs and generating revenues-not 
drive its production and distribution underground.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom