Time for America To Get Realistic About Marijuana

Discussion in 'Cannabis News & Industry Updates' started by IndianaToker, Jan 9, 2005.

  1. By Alice Collinsworth, The Edmond Sun
    Source: Edmond Sun

    Americans are strangely ambivalent in their feelings about marijuana. Nearly 100 million Americans over age 12 admit to smoking pot at least once in their lives, and it's estimated that at least 5 percent of our citizens use marijuana on a regular basis. And these aren't just scruffy-looking teenagers, either - many professional “older adults” admit to having a dime bag or two lying around the condo.

    I grew up in the pot-smoking days of the 60s and 70s, so I've heard my share of arguments about marijuana usage. I never smoked myself, but I knew plenty of people who did. Marijuana offenses are still common; an estimated 700,000 arrests for possession are made in the U.S each year. Yet a 2003 study says that 40 percent of Americans now believe that marijuana should be treated the same as alcohol: regulated, controlled, taxed, and kept out of the hands of children, but decriminalized.


    No other law is enforced so widely and yet deemed unnecessary by so many people. Two upcoming cases in the U.S. Supreme Court illustrate this double standard.

    On one hand, the justices are considering how to regulate the use of marijuana for certain medical conditions. Although there is no federal guideline approving the use of cannabis in medical cases, at least 10 states have instituted laws protecting the rights of certain patients to use it. Yet questions remain about growing and using marijuana for these purposes, and what role the federal government should play, if any, in the standardization of these laws.

    On another front, the Supreme Court is also debating whether drug-sniffing dogs can be used in routine traffic stops. The original case involves a man who was stopped in Illinois for a minor traffic violation, when a police drug dog alerted to his car trunk. Officers found $250,000 worth of marijuana stashed inside. The man claims that the use of dogs to sniff out an automobile amounts to illegal search and seizure, since a car is presumed to be private property.

    The Supreme Court justices will soon decide whether one's vehicle is protected equally with one's home. If the court does rule that drug dogs can't be used in traffic stops, law enforcement officials say that there will likely be a major increase in the amount of marijuana and other controlled substances being transported.

    So after the justices do their deliberating, they might end up deciding that it's okay to carry a few bales of pot around in your car trunk, because that's your private property. But if a person is dying of cancer or suffering from a debilitating disease, and they're caught with a few joints in their pocket, they could be arrested. As Spock would say to Captain Kirk, that's highly illogical.

    It's time that we Americans make up our minds about marijuana, and how we want it to be used and regulated in the future. Some European countries have totally legalized cannabis, making it available in public “coffee shops,” and neither usage nor social problems have increased. While U.S. citizens are not likely to favor total legalization of the drug, some compromise should probably be outlined - perhaps the decriminalization of minor possession charges, at least, with standard enforcement in all 50 states. And, of course, we should regulate the use of cannabis for medical conditions.

    Some people fear that decriminalizing marijuana, or even approving its medicinal use, would send a mixed message to young people about drugs. Yet prescription painkillers, much more harmful and deadly, are readily available on the street. Should we outlaw the legitimate use of narcotic pain pills because some people abuse them, too? We also need to consider what message we're sending by condoning the use of alcohol and tobacco - both of which cause far more problems, health-wise and societally, than cannabis.

    Deciding what to do with marijuana in our country is a complicated issue, but taking the drug away from chronically-ill patients - or allowing huge amounts of it to remain “private” in a suspected drug dealer's car trunk - surely isn't the answer.

    Do we want Uncle Sam in our doctors' offices, interfering with private medical decisions made by patient and physician? It seems to me we'd be better off to have him standing by the roadside, enabling our law enforcement officers, both canine and human, to detain drug traffickers. I hope our Supreme Court justices can find a way to sort through the questions and begin to take a consistent and logical stance on this issue. Source: Edmond Sun, The (OK)
    Author: Alice Collinsworth, The Edmond Sun
    Published: January 7, 2005
    Copyright: 2005 The Edmond Sun
    Contact: rcollins@edmondsun.com
    Website: http://www.edmondsun.com/

     
  2. There were 2 articles I read recently. One was of a 23 year old father who was sentenced to 55 years in jail for possession. The other was of an man who killed an innocent from drinking and driving. He got 4 years in jail. Something is seriously wrong here.
     

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