Pubdate: Sun, 16 Dec 2012
Source: Odessa American (TX)
Copyright: 2012 Odessa American
Contact:  http://www.oaoa.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/708
Author: Ron Hart
Note: A syndicated op-ed humorist, award winning author and TV/radio
commentator.

JOBS - AND HOW TO AVOID THEM

Elections have consequences. Mitt Romney was poised to be President of
the United States. He lost the election and ended up on the Marriott
hotel chain's Board of Directors. He went from nearly being the next
leader of the free world to trying to keep hotel guests from stealing
from their hotel room mini-bars.

Overlooked in the long race for president (won, as most marathons are,
by a Kenyan) were some state votes on social issues.

Washington State was the first to legalize the possession of marijuana
without a doctor's prescription; Colorado followed this week. In a
related story, Twinkies maker Hostess quickly emerged from bankruptcy.

Those 21 and older can now legally possess one ounce of weed, or
roughly the residue in Snoop Dogg's couch cushions. Yet smoking pot in
public is against the law. Since no laws have been passed on growing
and distributing marijuana in the state, those who indulged must have
bought their weed illegally from a pot dealer. And, oh yeah, smoking
pot is still a federal offense. Oh, the complexity of laws upon laws.

This week, Colorado joined Washington State in legalizing the
possession of marijuana; those voting in favor (I think they marked
"righteous" on the ballot) outnumbered those who voted for Obama. I
guess some elements of the GOP test positive for THC as well as
freedom. Denver might now change the name of the Broncos' stadium from
INVESCO Field back to "Mile High Stadium." Perhaps its NBA team could
become the "Drive-thru Denver McNuggets."

Now these states will draft regulations on pot sales that are tied to
their liquor laws. And by "laws," I mean taxes. Washington State will
impose a 25 percent excise tax on growers when they sell to processors
and another 25 percent when processors sell to retailers. Then, when
individuals buy from retailers, you guessed it: another 25 percent,
plus sales tax on the total purchase.

This is all VAT and a bag of chips.

When California legalized having pot with a fake doctor's
prescription, the real winners (aside from glaucoma diagnosis) were
the state tax collectors. Doctors suddenly could spot glaucoma in
"patients" as soon as their credit cards cleared. These liberal states
have taxed and spent themselves to death. And what does a desperate
person do when he is out of money? He resorts to selling drugs.

Under federal laws, pot smoking is illegal. In California it is
mandatory. Left unregulated by liberal politicians, the true
free-market trade in marijuana was the only business that grew in
California. Only Jerry ("Governor Moonbeam") Brown could rationalize
legalizing pot while outlawing plastic grocery bags.

Wars are always easier to start than to end. Nixon started the War on
Drugs and, like so many wars, it has been a costly disaster. It has
eroded freedoms and created intractable bureaucracies. Nixon's premise
was that pot caused crime, so it went underground where drug cartels
and gangs can assure that we get more crime and violence. Prisons are
filled with victimless, drug crime-related prisoners, and we are no
safer.

Our government totally ignored the lesson of Prohibition. Americans
still drank, but Prohibition gave rise to organized crime. History has
a way of repeating itself if no one is paying attention. Tellingly,
Mexico opposed Washington State and Colorado legalizing pot.

I would like to see decriminalization without taxation. Like
everything else government does, it is not about morality or freedom,
it is about money.

Obama will not do anything about states legalizing marijuana for two
reasons. First, 64 percent of respondents in a recent Gallup Poll said
the states should decide for themselves. Second, Obama likes laws -
thus his powers - that he can selectively enforce when they benefit
him politically. It is a simple fact that Washington never divests
itself of any power.

The American Medical Association asked the feds not to classify pot as
a "dangerous" drug. Sarah Palin and Bill Clinton admitted that they
tried it but didn't like it. 210 million Americans have smoked pot; it
seems only politicians say they don't like it.

Pot smoking has always been a cryptic, wink-and-a-nod endeavor with
politicians. Toker-in-Chief Obama continues to send very mixed
messages: He says that the feds will still prosecute pot, and then he
ends his speech with an Al Green song. 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D