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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Web: What Will Obama Do About Marijuana?
Title:US: Web: What Will Obama Do About Marijuana?
Published On:2008-12-25
Source:CounterPunch (US Web)
Fetched On:2008-12-25 17:32:44
The True Green Economy

WHAT WILL OBAMA DO ABOUT MARIJUANA?

"I inhaled frequently, that was the point."

. Barack Obama, November 2006

He picked for Vice President one of the major architects of the Drug War.

He picked for Chief of Staff one of the chief opponents of medical marijuana.

He is talking about picking for the Drug Czar spot a conservative
candidate who has been a congressional leader fighting drug reform.

He has promised to put an end to raids on medical dispensaries in
California, but he has not said he will broadly support the
Hinchey-Rohrbacher Amendment which would let states decide the issue.

He has moved from once supporting marijuana decriminalization to
publishing comments that he cannot overuse 'political capital' on the issue.

He has now appointed for Attorney General a candidate who has a long
history of opposing drug policy reforms and who has in court
supported mandatory minimum sentencing and civil forfeiture.

Allen St. Pierre, the Executive Director of NORML, summed it up best
about Mr. Obama's appointments thus far: "So Far, Not So Good:" His
thought-provoking article appears on the NORML.com website at its blog.

From summarizing why the selection of Joe Biden as Vice President
caused him 'digestive tumult' to tracing Rahm Emanuel's anti-drug
policies for the past decade, the article captures a snapshot of what
was routine politics as usual for the players soon to be in power.

When it comes to our 44th President, some of his positions on
marijuana were once encouraging. But as Mr. Obama has moved towards
the national limelight, there is a new found frustration for
reformers. It seems the President to be is moving from the left to
the middle. And as Loudon Wainwright once wrote in a popular song,
the only things you see in the middle of the road are dead skunks and
yellow lines. Still, I am not alarmed yet. It is way too early, and
there is still room and reason for optimism.

Commencing your administration in the face of a national economic
crisis at home while American soldiers are at war abroad can focus
your priorities on other issues outside the need for weed. We have
seen what happened to Bill Clinton when he tried, too early in his
administration, to advance the cause of gay rights by banning
discrimination against homosexuals in the military. He started a
firestorm which burnt up valuable first months of his presidency.

We do know this though, and it is a challenging start. Rather
decisively, on the official administration website, at
www.change.gov, the following statement appears: President-elect
Obama is not in favor of the legalization of marijuana.

What can we then expect of Mr. Obama once he becomes President?

I think there are many encouraging things.

First, in his past he has acknowledged the broad failures of the drug
war, declaring in 2004 that it was an "utter failure" which needs to
be rethought.

Second, as an African-American in an urban community, few people will
be as sensitive as Mr. Obama to the exhaustive legal toll this drug
war exacts on minority communities. The arrests come quicker, the
prosecutions are more frequent, and the sentences are longer. Drug
arrests have been tools to deny poor people driver's licenses,
scholarships and federal welfare benefits, causing innocuous conduct
to endure catastrophic consequences for otherwise decent people.

Third, the President is 'with it'. His telling comments to a group of
students when asked whether he 'inhaled' marijuana were "Of course, I
thought that was the whole purpose."

Those remarks are a reflection of the candor and commitment of Mr.
Obama to address the issue in a new light. He did not play a game of
Clintonian holier-than-thou cover-up. With the same self-deprecating
qualities that he shared with the nation when he called himself a
'mutt,' Mr. Obama implied in tone and substance that marijuana may
not be as bad as we have been hearing from the government for too many decades.

Last week, the website Change.gov asked the public to provide them
with a list of the top public policy questions facing America.
Visitors to the site were then asked to vote on which questions
should take priority for the incoming administration.

After receiving nearly 100,000 total votes on more than 10,000
separate public policy issues, the most widely voted on question for Obama is:

"Will you consider legalizing marijuana so that the government can
regulate it, tax it, put age limits on it, and create millions of new
jobs and create a billion dollar industry right here in the U.S."

Maybe Rahm Emanuel has turned a corner as well. Rahm is politically
smart if nothing else, so I hope that he'll follow his boss' lead in
the area of criminal justice reforms. Also, to his credit, after
voting years against Hinchey-Rohrbacher Amendment in 2007, as member
of Congress from Illinois, Rahm voted in favor of holding back
federal funding from law enforcement (read DEA) to raid or harass
medical marijuana cultivators and dispensaries.

I know I have been unsuccessful in getting my own liberal
Congresswoman from South Florida, Debbie Wasserman-Schulz, to even
support this effort. Maybe Mr. Emanuel will influence her and dozens
of others. It will take leadership from the oval office. That can
only happen when the people in office are looked upon as enlightened
reformers rather than being weak on crime.

Politically, I know such polls as the one the administration
inaugurated here are instrumental in turning mindsets. If we can show
politicians that it is 'safe' to support drug reform, even popular,
we can suddenly find them on our side. To their credit, outstanding
philanthropists like Peter Lewis and George Soros have been national
leaders in helping bring public opinion out of the closet. These are
men whose voices may be heard by the new administration. And I am
here for them too if they need me. My number is listed. So too is
Barney Frank, the influential Massachusetts congressman who has long
supported decriminalization legislation.

The truth is that people who support decriminalization have always
been a silent majority afraid to speak out. But give them a secret
ballot box, and in state after state, you see massive support for
medical marijuana and a more enlightened approach to marijuana
reform. Perhaps the President, in his own unique disarming way, can
lead a new path. He has surrounded himself with educated leaders who
also have been willing to speak candidly in favor of
decriminalization including new Cabinet nominee Bill Richardson.

We do not need a new Drug Czar, either. This is America. Czars are
for Russia. What we need is the appointment of an educator, a
scientist, a doctor, a constitutional rights lawyer to pave the way
to a new era of drug enlightenment.

At the last NORML Board of Directors meeting, one issue we raised was
one many of us within the drug reform movement can support. It has
been three decades since the Shafer Commission released its national
study on marijuana, which Nixon immediately trashed. Perhaps a new
Blue Ribbon Commission, with decades more research behind it, and
years of medical marijuana evidence, can look into new
recommendations for the 21st century.

On one hand, such a Presidential panel would buy time for the new
administration to get settled in with more pressing priorities. But
it would also give drug reformers a national platform to address so
many issues that have been, forgive me, cultivated-since the Shafer
Commission, from forfeiture laws to raids on dispensaries, from the
THC content of marijuana to medicinal initiatives. It is time to look
again at marijuana with a scholarly and clinical eye instead of with
SWAT teams and law enforcement raids.

Correspondingly, it is also time for the national drug reform
organizations to speak with a singular voice and work together for a
common purpose. There needs to be a unity of purpose, and leaders
from the Marijuana Policy Project, the National Organization for the
Reform of Marijuana Laws, the Drug Policy Alliance, Students for a
Sensible Drug Policy, and a host of other respected reform
organizations, too many to mention here, should hold their own
meeting to develop a common theme with a collective initiative. We
need to work together to send a message that is enlightened and
progressive, convincing legislators and the executive branch that we
are responsible and right..

The drug reform movement needs to act in a way that President-elect
Obama has asked all of us to move towards: not to be tied to the
politics of the past and the way things have always been done, but to
engage hope by broadening our constituency and reaching out to
others. Within the drug reform movement, fratricide must come to an
end. We must bury the hatchet on our own rivalries, and move forward
with a common purpose. We defeat ourselves by ourselves when we do not.

Our cause is just, and our goals have always been righteous. We may
have only ourselves to blame if we cannot achieve now what we have
fought so long for. I would say our time is now, but I thought that
in 1976 when the Attorney General of the United States, then Ramsey
Clark, said we should see an end to unjust marijuana laws before the
end of the decade. I think we are overdue. Together, let us do better
than we have already done.

We have a President who is willing to listen, a Congress that is
willing to learn, and a public that is salivating for a better solution.
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