URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v15/n013/a08.html
Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Tue, 06 Jan 2015
Source: Spokesman-Review (Spokane, WA)
Copyright: 2015 The Spokesman-Review
Contact:
Website: http://www.spokesman.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/417
OUTDATED POT LAW AGAIN STIRS COSTLY TROUBLE
The outdated Controlled Substances Act of 1970 continues to act as a
gateway to lunacy, with the latest example being a lawsuit filed by
the states of Oklahoma and Nebraska against neighboring Colorado over
the legalization of recreational marijuana.
The offended attorneys general fought hard for federalism in warding
off the Affordable Care Act's bid to widen Medicaid eligibility in
the two states. Butt out, said Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt
and Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning, and the U.S. Supreme Court
ultimately agreed. Now, they want the same court to intervene in
Colorado and throttle its legal pot industry.
They filed suit last month, claiming the spillover from Colorado's
legal market is causing the cops in their states to go to great time
and expense ( both unspecified ) to bust people in possession of pot
purchased across their borders.
Of course, they have the option of not chasing down pot tourists, but
they've bought into the notion that marijuana is a serious threat.
Oklahoma is also considering a ban on hooded sweatshirts, which
offers a glimpse into how fraught with fear and casual with liberty
the state has become.
Allaying fears - real or imagined - can be expensive, and the two
states say Colorado's legal market is "draining their treasuries."
But even if Pruitt and Bruning got their way, the black market would
remain. The two states would prefer the feds crack down on Colorado,
but the Justice Department, in a nod to the 23 states that have
legalized marijuana in some form, has backed off.
Washington has been granted the same leeway as Colorado, but we've
been spared the paranoid neighbors. Washington Attorney General Bob
Ferguson says his office will support Colorado, if necessary.
The problem, as we have stated many times, is that the federal law
that Oklahoma and Nebraska cite is ridiculous. It suggests marijuana
is as dangerous as heroin, more dangerous than cocaine and meth, and
has no medicinal value. In the five decades since its passage, we've
learned that these judgments are false.
In fact, research published in the August edition of the journal JAMA
Internal Medicine shows that the occurrence of fatal opiate overdoses
declined in 13 states after they legalized medical marijuana. It
appears that marijuana enhances the effects of painkillers, which
means lower doses may be prescribed.
Science, not fear, ought to drive this debate.
If marijuana were rescheduled as equivalent to prescription drugs,
banks could begin accepting pot proceeds. That would be safer than
cash-and-carry commerce. More states would legalize or decriminalize
the drug, and law enforcement could redirect their energies to more
important matters. And purported federalists could drop their
nuisance lawsuits and return to backing states' rights.
Constitutional scholar Randy Barnett, a foe of federal overreach, has
called Pruitt and Bruning "fair weather federalists," but hypocrisy
is the least of it. The federal law continues to enable costly and
counterproductive activity.
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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