Pubdate: Thu, 26 Feb 2015
Source: Trentonian, The (NJ)
Copyright: 2015 The Trentonian
Contact:  http://www.trentonian.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1006
Author: Edward Forchion, NJWeedman.com For The Trentonian

THE BUTTHURT IS HIGH OVER BEING SNUBBED BY NEW COALITION

Late last Wednesday night I was asked if I was "going to the press 
conference tomorrow, aren't you part of the new coalition to legalize 
marijuana?" I said "no" because I didn't know what they were talking 
about, and I went on Facebook and was shocked to learn of this new 
group  New Jersey United for Marijuana Reform (NJUMR). They held a 
Press Conference at 11 a.m. on Thursday 2/18.

Based on the video I watched, this new group is advocating 
Legalization in the Garden State and uniting activists. Well, in my 
opinion they started off wrong in the UNITING department because 
apparently they deliberately excluded some long-time 
green-collar-type activists, the "radical contingent" of the 
marijuana movement and no victims groups or medical groups were 
invited. Actions speak louder than words.

I admit I was personally butthurt to learn I was excluded. Apparently 
my image and in-your-face activism is seen as a negative by a leader 
of this new intellectual coalition. I guess this coalition prefers 
different paths to the same destination and isn't really about 
uniting. Actions to me mean more than words at a press conference.

A couple decades ago I tried to join several other groups (NORML, 
MPP) that claimed to be fighting for legalization only to find their 
glass ceilings were impregnable, forcing me to be solo  a unfunded 
one-man gang. Because of that exclusion I'm now known nationwide as 
the NJWeedman, a guy who's 100% down with legalization and has gone 
toe-to-toe against the State of NJ for a couple decades - alone. Now 
this new alphabet organization forms NJUMR and I wasn't invited  so 
yeah, I'm butthurt.

Members of this new coalition include LEAP, ACLU-New Jersey, NAACP 
State Conference of New Jersey, and the New Jersey Prosecutors 
Association. At this press conference the new coalition argued that 
legalizing marijuana would increase taxes to the state and free up 
resources for police departments and prosecutors. I 100% agree!

LEAP: Law Enforcement Against Prohibition - great way to clean your karma!

For clarity: I love the ACLU. In 2002 the ACLU did help me win my 
free speech case, where I was jailed for making pro-marijuana ads, 
and they did help me win my DNA refusal case in 2004.

But since I wasn't invited or included in this Coalition I'll say 
this in my Column: Udi Ofer, there is a major case before the NJ 
Appeals Court, #A-004052; if this appeal is successful, it could de 
facto legalize marijuana in NJ. You were asked to enjoin or file an 
amicus brief. So far no response, so again, actions speak louder than 
words. I'm still waiting on your action.

"It is time to take marijuana out of our parks and off of our street 
corners and put it behind the counter," ACLU Executive Director Udi 
Ofer said during the conference. "It is time to stop turning 
otherwise law-abiding citizens into criminals." I agree 100%.

But only if legalization means the true victims of prohibition would 
also be allowed to work behind those counters. Currently no one with 
a marijuana arrest can work in the NJ medical marijuana program, and 
I feel these intellectual types won't care to include us in future 
legislation regarding the billion-dollar legalized marijuana industry 
that will form. It's a fact that some of us have been 
disproportionately victimized by the racist prohibition, and now as 
legalization approaches we find we are barred from inclusion in this 
new billion-dollar industry based on our acknowledged past 
discriminatory pot arrests.

The coalition said the arrests disproportionately target black residents.

"The war on marijuana has failed, and this failure [has] had a 
devastating impact on black families," NAACP-NJ President Richard 
Smith said at the conference. "We will work to ensure that a portion 
of the revenue generated [by the legalization of marijuana]...will be 
reinvested into our communities that have been most impacted by the 
enforcement." I 100% agree.

To Mr. Smith: it's about time  finally. I'm glad you're on the 
legalization bandwagon. Please argue against re-victimizing us by 
legislative exclusion and fight for a weed laws victim affirmative action.

NJUMR cited statistics that NJ police officers arrest about 21,000 
marijuana-using citizens and argued that the time spent processing 
these potheads could be focused on other "more serious" crimes. I 100% agree.

"As a municipal prosecutor, I have had to waste countless taxpayer 
dollars and hours of police officers' time to prosecute New 
Jerseyans," said JonHenry Barr, the President of the N.J. Municipal 
Prosecutors Association. "The savings that will be realized will 
dwarf any drawbacks." I 100% agree, but, Mr. Bar, this is my message to you.

To me this dog-and-pony show of a press conference seemed to be a 
bunch of words with no action. If I were there I would've said this: 
"If the Prosecutors Association really wanted to legalize marijuana, 
they could  just by refusing to prosecute those charged with 
marijuana offenses." I'm serious, I would to call a spade a 
spade  maybe that's why I wasn't invited. If I were in JonHenry 
Barr's position I'd call a statewide vote for all municipal 
prosecutors to agree to end criminal prosecutions of all 2C:35 
marijuana and paraphernalia charges.

Action: You see, prosecutors have the ability to use prosecutorial 
discretion regarding which cases they prosecute, and it's a fact 
during the alcohol prohibition of the last century there were 
jurisdictions where prosecutors refused to prosecute alcohol charges. 
The NJ Prosecutors Association could just as easily refuse to 
prosecute marijuana offenses today if they really wanted to, Mr. Barr.

Now I'm 100% down with "NJUMR" ideologically. I think we have the 
same goal of legalization, but once again the intellectual 
suit-and-tie types are exposed by their elitist mentally of erroneous 
selfrighteous superiority and weren't inclusive of the everyday 
"green collar type pothead" I represent. The true victims of cannabis 
prohibition weren't represented by this coalition, and when Ari 
Rosemarin of the ACLU was handed a flier advertising a March 21st 
protest being held in Trenton by "The NJ victims of cannabis 
prohibition" he balled it up and had negative opinions. To this I say 
that was action - prude.
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