Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jan 2013
Source: Tulsa World (OK)
Copyright: 2013 Miami Herald
Contact:  http://www.tulsaworld.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/463
Author: Carl Hiaasen
Note: Carl Hiaasen writes for the Miami Herald.
Page: G3

WAR ON POT HAS GONE UP IN SMOKE

The war on marijuana is going up in smoke, and it's about time. There 
is no bigger waste of money and resources in all law enforcement.

Failure is too polite a description for the long campaign to 
eliminate the pot trade in the United States. A colossal flop is what 
it is. After four decades and billions spent, marijuana is easier to 
get, and more potent, than ever.

More than 40 percent of all Americans over 12 have tried it, and at 
least 30 million people smoke it every year. The most recent national 
drug survey found that 18.1 million Americans had used it during the 
previous month.

Pot is now medically dispensed in 18 states and Washington, D.C. It's 
the largest cash crop in the nation's largest agricultural state, California.

A legitimate pain reliever for cancer victims, "medicinal" marijuana 
is now available for an assortment of other symptoms, some of them 
conveniently vague and impossible to discount. It's not terribly hard 
to get a prescription.

In November, voters in Colorado and Washington dropped the pretense 
and approved the adult recreational use of weed. Other states will 
follow in coming years.

Absurdly, the government still classifies pot as a Schedule I 
Controlled Substance, the same as heroin and cocaine. Federal law 
prohibits medical marijuana use, and the Obama administration has 
taken action against dispensaries in California.

It's a lost cause, and an expensive one. Any true fiscal conservative 
should be outraged by the waste and futility.

Ton of money

States are rewriting their marijuana laws because that's what makes 
sense. Regulate it, tax it, and make a ton of money from it.

Another benefit of decriminalization is liberating overworked police 
and prosecutors, whose talents are being misspent on dumb, dead-end 
pot cases - 50 plants in a grow house tended by some hapless bozo who 
doesn't even know where the seeds came from.

Most Americans would prefer to see drug agents shutting down meth 
labs and pill mills, which actually kill people.

Like it or not, marijuana is so deeply imbedded in our culture that 
it will never go away. You can find it on Wall Street, Main Street or 
K Street, on any college campus or military base.

Some drug experts fear that more lenient laws will increase 
consumption and abuse. Others believe a lawful marketplace will prove 
safer. Regardless, the saturation level of reefer is already high.

In 2011, according to FBI statistics, a marijuana-related arrest 
occurred every 42 seconds in the United States. That's how abundant 
the stuff is.

Some of those who got busted were career criminals who happened to be 
caught with a joint in their pockets, but many were casual users or 
small-time sellers.

Those who get prosecuted on minor pot charges disproportionately tend 
to be Hispanics and African- Americans, not the white college kids 
who are toking up a storm. Cannabis laws have always been selectively 
enforced, and lots of people are sitting in jail who shouldn't be there.

The current useless Congress is unlikely to tackle marijuana reform, 
but the Justice Department could do all taxpayers a favor by letting 
each state decide for itself.

Making pot legally available to adults will require caution. Colorado 
and Washington are wrestling with the logistics of sales and 
supervision. Tough penalties are planned for driving while stoned, or 
providing the drug to minors.

Easing laws

Inevitably, though, more states will ease their marijuana laws. Money 
is why; potential revenues from taxing pot cultivation and sales are 
too substantial to forego. Even the boneheads in state capitals will 
one day figure that out.

Watching America's legalization movement with gloom are the Mexican 
drug cartels, whose vast profits from grass smuggling will wither 
with the loss of their most lucrative market.

Pot smokers would just as soon buy it from a licensed dispensary, but 
they will definitely keep buying it, no matter what the government does.

I recall sitting in an unmarked car with a DEA agent at a motel 
parking lot in Homestead, Fla. Other agents were positioned nearby.

They were all waiting to arrest a guy who was supposedly coming to 
deliver three bales of Colombian weed. An undercover team had set up the deal.

Time dragged on. Radios crackled. Everybody grew restless and bored.

A barefoot teenager happened to roll up on a bicycle. If he saw us - 
and I don't know how he didn't - it didn't seem to matter.

The kid pulled out a joint and lit up. Broad daylight, people all 
over the place.

If the windows hadn't been rolled up, the smoke would have filled the 
DEA car. The agent looked over at me and shook his head. All we could 
do was laugh.

The boy rode off on his bike. The guy with the bales showed up 
empty-handed, so the deal didn't go down.

That was 30 years ago. Nothing has changed.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom