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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: High Time for Change
Title:US: High Time for Change
Published On:2010-01-07
Source:Dallas Observer (TX)
Fetched On:2010-01-25 23:37:16
HIGH TIME FOR CHANGE

With Shifting Attitudes and a Burgeoning Medical Marijuana Movement,
the Future Looks Rosy for Legalized Weed

These are not your run-of-the-mill potheads jammed into the long,
narrow classroom at Oaksterdam University, a tiny campus with no sign
to betray its location on busy San Vicente Boulevard south of the
Beverly Center in Los Angeles. A serious vibe fills the loft-like
space, where rows of desks are arranged like church pews under exposed
ducts. No one clowns around or even smiles much. Instead, eyes fix
intently on a screen at the front of the darkened room.

Projected there is a photograph of a healthy marijuana plant under an
array of lights. Tonight's subject, Cannabis 101: growing the weed in
indoor gardens. It's delicate alchemy, as most of these students, who
range in age from their early 20s to nearly 60, already know. During
the 13-week semester, many tend and keep notes on their own
clandestine nurseries in bedrooms and garages scattered around the
city.

Encouraged by instructors, and by the prospects of staking out
ground-floor positions in the emerging world of "cannabusinesses,"
they cultivate popular varieties of bud while experimenting with
soils, temperatures and light sources.

From the rear of the room, a baritone voice pipes up--a student
remarking on the crystalline texture of the leaves when the plants are
raised under light-emitting diodes.

"With the LEDs, it just looks way frostier than anything under the
high-pressure sodium," he says.

Details get technical, as in any science class, but the larger lesson
is clear to see. Here, as in many other places across America, the
future of cannabis is being sown--and, make no mistake, it is a future
high on promise.

Oaksterdam takes its name from a bastardization of Oakland, where the
university began, and pot-friendly Amsterdam. Here, new growers and
dispensary operators are being trained like whole legions of Johnny
Appleseeds, soon to spread pot's blessings from one coastline to the
other. Not that anywhere is truly virgin ground, but consider: The
pro-marijuana movement has never had an army so large, politically
sophisticated and well-funded, even if supporters downplay the
millions that roll in. Nor has it enjoyed such a frenzied period of
media exposure, a startling amount of it positive.

Never has there been such a concerted thrust to legalize the drug
nationwide--for medical purposes, for the plain old joy of getting
stoned and for a goldmine in profits to be reaped by those who control
the multipronged industry. Together with a rapidly shifting public
attitude toward pot and a White House willing to accept state
medical-marijuana laws, legalization seems as inevitable today as it
was unthinkable a generation ago.

"We're almost at a zeitgeist," says one of the high-profile lobbyists
who is making it happen, Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the
National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) in
Washington, D.C.

Zeitgeist has become one of the buzzwords of the campaign--meaning, in
context, a sort of coming together of favorable forces. St. Pierre,
who can call on advisory-board input from the likes of Willie Nelson
and Woody Harrelson, is a glib 44-year-old former altar boy and preppy
from Massachusetts who likes to wear a marijuana-leaf lapel pin. He
says this year NORML has seen an unprecedented escalation of Web page
hits, podcast downloads, new memberships and media calls.

"We monitor [newspaper] columns, and editors have swung in favor of
reform," he says. "I will go give a lecture in Des Moines, Iowa. The
questions people are asking come right out of watching Weeds on
Showtime. It's quite remarkable."

Badgering newspapers and television programs to pay attention to the
subject used to be one of the critical challenges for people like St.
Pierre. Getting a meaningful dialogue started was half the battle.

Now the buzz is self-sustaining, indicating a willingness of America,
as a whole, to engage the subject.

"The first time, nearly eight years ago, I attempted to pitch a
marijuana-related story to CNN, they literally laughed at me,"
remembers Bruce Mirken, a San Francisco-based spokesman for the
Marijuana Policy Project. "The person who answered the phone burst out
laughing. Now they're calling us. We've been on various broadcasts and
cable network shows 21 times [in 2009]--at least a couple on CNN.
We've also been on the Today show, ABC World News, really all over."

CNBC has run and rerun its recent documentary Marijuana, Inc.: Inside
America's Pot Industry, exposing the booming pot trade and the sordid
side of California's largest cash crop--the shootings, thefts and
arson fires; the homes in Humboldt and Mendocino counties gutted to
make room for illegal indoor nurseries; and the secluded parcels of
national forest planted with pot by Mexican cartels intent on
cornering metropolitan markets like Los Angeles.

In September, Fortune magazine ran the headline, "How Marijuana Became
Legal," as if the outcome of the fight were a fait accompli. "We're
referring to a cultural phenomenon that has been evolving for 15
years," observed author Roger Parloff, who suggested that the
critical, sea-changing climax might turn out to be a "policy reversal
that was quietly instituted [this year] by President Barack Obama."

Ah, Obama. Many attribute a good share of the present impetus to
Obama, the third president in a row to acknowledge smoking weed. Bill
Clinton famously claimed he never inhaled. George W. Bush 'fessed up
only after a private admission was secretly recorded and leaked to ABC
News. Obama won the everlasting affection of the pro-pot crowd when he
addressed the matter of inhaling and asked, "Isn't that the point?"

He also elicited joyous whoops when he jettisoned existing Bush-era
policy last fall and instructed Attorney General Eric Holder and the
vast federal anti-drug apparatus to stand down in the protracted war
with states over medical marijuana. No longer would the private holder
of a medical-marijuana card have to fear being busted by federal
agents after picking up a supply of kush from the corner dispensary.
Nor would the dispensary owner have to worry about the feds.

For the marijuana lobby and its broader aims, the win was gigantic. It
removed--for the current presidential term, at least--the daunting
specter of federal interference and turned virtually the entire
continental United States into one big, wide-open game board. Pot
advocates divide that game board state by state, believing that the
surest way to overcome conservative inertia that keeps pot outlawed is
to spread legalization keyed to states' rights to craft their own statutes.

Medical marijuana has been on the move since 1996 and is now legal in
14 states, including California, with at least a dozen more to debate
it soon. Proponents predict it will continue to hopscotch from state
to state much the way legalized gambling expanded along the
Mississippi River and throughout a lot of the country in the 1980s and
1990s.

The Texas Legislature has grappled with the issue of medical marijuana
for four sessions, but legislation failed to gain much traction
because of the incendiary nature of the issue in this state. These
bills would not have prevented law enforcement from arresting and
prosecuting those who possess pot, but rather would have provided
users with an affirmative defense if they could prove they possessed
marijuana for a serious medical problem. For the last two sessions,
State Representative Elliott Naishtat, a Democrat from Austin, has
sponsored legislation that would have provided this affirmative
defense if an accused could prove in court that they possessed pot
"for a bona fide medical condition like cancer, AIDS or multiple
sclerosis, and a doctor had recommended marijuana to help ameliorate
the symptoms of that debilitating condition," Naishtat says. "Nothing
would be legalized by the bill that I introduced." But his bill died
in committee in the 2007 and 2009 sessions after being denied public
hearings by conservative committee chairs.

Naishtat plans on reintroducing the legislation in the 2011 session.
"I am much more optimistic about the bill in light of the Obama
administration's telling states who have adopted medical marijuana
laws that the Justice Department wouldn't prosecute users and wouldn't
use federal resources to enforce the federal laws on marijuana in
those states," he says. "That sends a signal that the feds are willing
to defer to the states with respect to authorizing use of medicinal
marijuana."

Naishtat says that his legislation is fairly benign, "the minimum you
could enact--it's nothing like California, where they are trying to
legalize it." Although he acknowledges that some might feel his bill
would be a "major first step toward legalization," he maintains that's
not what his bill is about. "It's about helping sick people"--not
about gaining acceptance for recreational use.

Attorney Sean T. McAllister might disagree. He led a successful
crusade this past fall to get small amounts of pot legalized--less
than an ounce for private possession and use--in the small ski-resort
town of Breckenridge, Colorado, in a vote that was largely symbolic,
given that possession remains a misdemeanor under Colorado law.
McAllister acknowledges that medicinal use of weed is a wedge to help
pro-pot activists gain leverage in advancing recreational use of the
drug. "Medical marijuana is really leading the way, letting us see
what a taxed and regulated market for marijuana would look like,"
McAllister says.

As Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance in
New York, put it, "The face of marijuana isn't some 17-year-old,
pimply-faced kid; it's an older person needing help."

The widening perception that cannabis is a godsend for sufferers of
cancer, AIDS, glaucoma and other afflictions has partially erased its
own entrenched stigmas, including a reputation for dulling the
intellect. One Web site, CannabisCenters.com, boasts more than 240
maladies that respond to marijuana, from writers' cramp to cystic
fibrosis. For prostate cancer, Huntington's disease, ulcerative
colitis, lupus and grand mal seizures, pot promises at least a whiff
of relief.

To be sure, the purported benefits of marijuana--so vital to its
broadening acceptance--are not without controversy. The drug, when
smoked, is also a source of carcinogens. According to the federal
National Institutes of Health, "Marijuana smoke contains some of the
same, and sometimes even more, of the cancer-causing chemicals found
in tobacco smoke. Studies show that someone who smokes five joints per
day may be taking in as many cancer-causing chemicals as someone who
smokes a full pack of cigarettes every day." (On the other hand,
someone smoking five joints a day probably has bigger problems than
the risk of cancer.)

The multimillion-dollar pot lobby has used the drug's analgesic
properties to press a more challenging agenda: to remove the barriers
to recreational use, either through outright legalization or, at
minimum, decriminalization, which, in most cases, means that being
caught with less than an ounce is only a legal infraction comparable
to a parking ticket.

On maps where activists track their progress nationally, they can
already block out 10 states--among them, California, Colorado,
Massachusetts and New York--where the first offense involving simple
possession no longer carries jail time.

In 2007, Texas legislators gave Texas law enforcement a choice in
misdemeanor possession cases of less than four ounces: Police could
continue to arrest, jail and process those who possess small amounts
of pot, or they could simply cite them with a ticket and send them on
their way, based on their promise to appear in court. Few police
departments took up the Legislature on its offer, resisting the change
despite its savings in time and money. Dallas Police Chief David
Kunkle recalls speaking with the Dallas City Council's Public Safety
Committee and getting a negative reaction to ticketing misdemeanor pot
cases. "It's a public policy issue. I don't have a preference either
way if we're directed not to make arrests in certain marijuana-type
situations."

The image makeover from medical marijuana may shift that public
reaction, including in Texas where polls have shown strong support for
medical marijuana in cases of serious illness. And there are other
important factors propelling the legalization movement: the violence
and obscene profits of the drug cartels. Those problems have given
rise to the Al Capone argument: If you make it legal, criminal dealers
can't command exorbitant sums from customers desperate for a
high--cash that would later be spent on bribes, machine guns and
smuggling. Licensed, fully vetted growers, operating just down the
street, would render the bloody drug kingpin as irrelevant as the
Chicago bootlegger.

In the words of Mirken, "You don't need Al Capone to ship alcohol when
you have Anheuser Busch."

As with many things in the United States, a good idea can become a
great one if it involves making money--and doubly so if it generates
new forms of tax revenue. Thus at a time of housing foreclosures and
bank failures, when California's state government faces a whopping $21
billion projected budget deficit and the city of Los Angeles is
sinking under $983 million in red ink, licensing and taxing marijuana
suddenly make sense even to some who might have abhorred the idea.

Lawful growers and retailers could cough up, say, $50 an ounce in
taxes or fees and still charge less to consumers than the prices
common on the black market. Governments would rake it in--and also
save a fantastic amount on arresting, prosecuting and imprisoning pot
offenders.

Harvard economist Jeffrey A. Miron, author of the 2004 book Drug War
Crimes: The Consequences of Prohibition, makes a case that legalizing
all banned drugs would benefit taxpayers nationwide by $77 billion a
year, in both generating new tax income and eliminating the costs of
arresting, prosecuting and imprisoning offenders. Since marijuana
represents about a third of the illicit drug economy, legalizing pot
would make a difference of roughly $25 billion, he says.

Miron's estimate is generally in line with figures compiled by
pot-advocacy organizations, although getting firm numbers is
notoriously difficult given the vastly different ways in which
law-enforcement agencies catalog arrests and report marijuana data.

Jon Gettman, a former NORML president who operates a public data bank
at drugscience.org, claims that legalizing marijuana would enrich the
public by $42 billion a year. In breaking down that sum, Gettman puts
the current cost of legal enforcement at nearly $11 billion. He also
claims that federal, state and local governments lose out on $31
billion annually in taxes and charges that could be gleaned from the
massive industry, based on an overall estimate of a marijuana trade
that totals $113 billion a year.

Mirken, the Marijuana Policy Project spokesman, concedes that squishy
numbers invite attacks from critics. But he adds, "No doubt it's a big
hunk of money."

Watching that money flow to criminals and cartel bosses has added
impetus to the push for change.

Pro-marijuana forces, well-financed and increasingly centralized in
New York and Washington, D.C., are often directly involved in helping
to craft reform legislation because of their deep knowledge about a
subject murky to many in power.

The New York-based Drug Policy Alliance, for example, employs 45
people and operates satellite offices in Washington, D.C., and in the
states of New Mexico and California. Its annual budget of $8 million
comes in part from George Soros' Open Policy Institute and also from
about 25,000 small donors and a number of very wealthy businessmen,
most notably tech guru John Gilmore of Cygnus Solutions, Peter B.
Lewis of Progressive Insurance, John Glen Sperling of the University
of Phoenix and George Zimmer of the Men's Wearhouse.

Nadelmann, the organization's 52-year-old top executive, says he
spends about half of his time on the road, engaging in debates, giving
speeches and conferring with pot advocates to draft voter initiatives
and to map out strategies.

Close contact with local groups enables him to marshal resources where
they are needed and also to bring hot spots to nationwide media
attention. Nadelmann can rattle off lists of issues and locales--the
drive that brought medical pot this year to Maine, the statewide
decriminalization approved in Massachusetts, the ballot tussles ahead
in Arizona, Nevada and Oregon. He claims significant credit for
Proposition 215, California's landmark 1996 state ballot measure that
authorized medical cannabis.

"The 215 campaign was being run by local activists," Nadelmann says.
"I got involved, put together major funders and campaign managers, and
turned it into a professional campaign and won that thing." During a
recent stretch, Nadelmann was flying from Santa Barbara to Houston,
then to San Diego, then back to New York, then returning to Los
Angeles--all to preach pot, all in a span of a few weeks.

As advocates step up the pressure, public opinions are shifting. The
Gallup Poll showed 23 percent support for legalization in 1983. This
year, the finding was 44 percent, with more than half of the voters in
California in favor.

The number of highly placed government officials and jurists who have
joined the public call for marijuana reform would have been hard to
imagine even a decade ago. One example is retired Orange County,
California, Superior Court Judge James P. Gray, author of the 2001
book Why Our Drug Laws Have Failed and What We Can Do About It.

Gray argues that drug prohibitions are a "golden goose" for terrorist
organizations, a view that has gained traction with the public.

"We truly are seeing the most rapid gains in public support for making
marijuana legal that I've ever seen," Nadelmann says. "It really feels
like a new age."

In Nadelmann's view, the changing attitudes largely stem from the
efforts of the Drug Policy Alliance--formed by a merger of two smaller
groups in 2000--and similar organizations, such as NORML and the
Marijuana Policy Project.

While activists know there may be a limited time to seize the chance
offered by today's market conditions and Obama's laissez-faire
policies, they are also buoyed by fundamental changes going on in
America. The biggest of these is irreversible--the supplanting of
hard-line ideologues with baby boomers who came of age in the time of
Woodstock and flower power.

"A whole generation didn't know the difference between heroin and
marijuana," Nadelmann says. "That generation is mostly dying off. [In
its place] are tens of millions of parents and middle-aged people who
smoked marijuana and didn't become drug addicts."

On the contrary, they now fill elected seats and boardrooms. Is it any
wonder the tide seems unstoppable?

"We're looking at a perfect storm here," says California Assemblyman
Tom Ammiano, who emblemizes that new type of leader. A former standup
comic, Ammiano spent part of the 1960s among the hippies of Haight
Ashbury, grooving to The Grateful Dead. Now 68, the San Francisco
Democrat is one of the most watched figures in the national marijuana
struggle for one compelling reason: Assembly Bill 390, legislation he
introduced in early 2009 that would make California the first state in
the nation to legalize and tax recreational pot.

Considered bold even among marijuana activists, Ammiano's measure
would remove cannabis from the state's banned-substances list, allow
private cultivation, levy fees and sales taxes, and prohibit sales to
minors and driving under the influence. A state analysis projects
annual revenue of $1.4 billion, a number that critics claim is
inflated. That figure does not include the enormous amount of state
and federal income and business taxes that would be paid by growers,
retailers and their employees as part of a fully realized economic
model.

According to the same state budget analysis, the value of today's
annual marijuana harvest in California is $13.8 billion, making weed
one of the state's biggest export crops. The value of the nation's
entire pot harvest is $35.8 billion, according to the analysis. Since
legalized medical cannabis is only a tiny fraction of the market, and
the dispensaries typically operate as nonprofits, virtually no income
tax is collected. Indeed, income-tax projections have rarely played a
role in the debate over legalization, although that, too, appears to
be changing, especially in cash-strapped California.

"Our economic situation is egregious," says Ammiano, who plans to
begin conducting hearings this month. "I think people have begun to
take it seriously."

If Ammiano's bill fails--and many think it's too much, too soon--pot
advocates have a Plan B, a narrower statewide initiative expected to
reach the ballot next November. That measure would rewrite the
criminal drug laws to make an exception for small amounts of
marijuana. Its mastermind and chief bankroller is Richard Lee, the
47-year-old founder of Oaksterdam.

Lee, who opened his first campus in Oakland two years ago, says 6,000
people have taken his courses, which are organized into $250 weekend
seminars and $650 one-semester courses. At any given time, he says,
500 students are enrolled in classes at the three campuses: Los
Angeles, Sebastopol (an hour north of San Francisco) and Oakland,
where Lee just unveiled a three-story teaching facility.

The formidable flow of revenue helps Lee to finance further marijuana
reform. So far, he says, he has invested $1 million of his own money
in the initiative. Faced with a February deadline for submitting
433,000 signatures, he claims he has already gathered well more than
600,000 and is still collecting more, just to be certain that enough
are valid.

"The response has been overwhelming," Lee says.

If Californians light up, the beacon will be visible from sea to
shining sea. Nadelmann says he consulted with both Ammiano and Lee on
the language of their proposals and points out that California has
always been a bellwether of cultural change, especially when it comes
to pot.

"Look what happened with [the passage of] Proposition 215," Nadelmann
says, referring to the 1996 medical-pot act. "We were able to go to
other states and get it on the ballot. It's not as if the dominoes
start falling, but people see that something's possible." Proposition
36, California's 2000 initiative to favor drug treatment over jail
time, was another example. "Once that passed, we started seeing
queries from probably half the states over the following few years,"
Nadelmann says.

After-effects continue to ripple. Support for both medicinal and
recreational pot use has grown demonstrably stronger throughout the
West--especially in Oregon and Washington state. An estimated 200,000
revelers attended the annual Hempfest this past year in Seattle.

In otherwise conservative Colorado, advocates staged a massive
smokers' rally in Boulder, and voters are expected to weigh a
statewide legalization measure in the next few years.

Whether the "devil weed" will ever play in Peoria is open to debate,
but in October the Illinois Senate narrowly approved a
medical-marijuana bill, meaning it could become law in the next few
months, and pockets of support for pot have become evident in Missouri
and elsewhere in the heartland.

California's actions in 2010 may greatly influence the speed of those
campaigns.

Reefer activists readily acknowledge that the quickening pace of
change raises risks of a backlash. Intense concern already centers on
the poorly regulated mess in Los Angeles, where a confused and largely
paralyzed city council has allowed the proliferation of more than 540
medical-marijuana dispensaries without regard to zoning or other
restrictions imposed elsewhere in California.

Law-enforcement was never amenable to legalizing pot, but the
situation in Los Angeles--a black eye to reformers everywhere--can
only galvanize the resistance.

John Lovell, a lobbyist for the 4,000-member California Peace
Officers' Association, fairly bristles when confronted with the
argument that pot should be made legal because it's no worse than
booze. "What good comes of it?" he asks. "Right now we have enormous
social and public-safety problems caused by alcohol abuse...[and] by
pharmaceuticals. What is the good of adding another mind-altering
substance? Look at all the highway fatalities. Why do we want to
create another lawful substance that will add exponentially to that?"

That line of thinking suggests that society today would be more sober
and safe if alcohol or pharmaceuticals were banned--an argument U.S.
history, particularly the era of Prohibition, does not bear out.

Says Lovell, "I think everyone in law enforcement will take on this
fight. I think people concerned about the social consequences of drug
abuse will take on this fight. I think there will be a broad range of
opposition."

Out in the streets, the counterinsurgency is readily apparent.
Marijuana arrests are up in California, despite the rising public
tolerance. Activists theorize it is not just because more people are
smoking the drug.

A similar spike has occurred in New York, even though it was one of
the first states to decriminalize small stashes of marijuana, 34 years
ago. In fact, if there is a world capital for cannabis busts, it is
New York City, where 40,000 people were arrested on pot charges in the
last year.

Queens College sociologist Harry G. Levine is an expert on drug-abuse
patterns who co-wrote (along with Craig Reinarman) the 1997 book
Crack in America: Demon Drugs and Social Justice. "What we have in
New York is what you could call an epidemic of marijuana arrests,"
Levine says. "The No. 1 criminal offense in New York City is
marijuana possession."

How is that possible, when pot has long been decriminalized
there?

Levine explored the question by interviewing veteran and retired
police officers, legal-aid attorneys and jailed smokers, producing a
scathing 100-page review of the NYPD. It became apparent, he says,
that police--who have a vested interest in making as many arrests as
possible--profit from pot and often "trick" their suspects into
violating a specific law against openly displaying the weed in public.

"Technically, [police officers] are not allowed to go into people's
pockets," Levine says. "But they can lie to people. Lying to suspects
is considered good policing. They say...'We're going to have to search
you. If we find anything, it's going to be a mess for you...so take it
out and show it to us now.'" As intimidated young people--most of them
ethnic minorities--empty their pockets of a joint or a nickel bag,
they're charged with a misdemeanor.

Such busts are huge business for the police, Levine points out. Not
only do they sweep more people into the system, generating vast
databases of fingerprints and photographs, but the arrests also beef
up crime statistics. Departments in big cities and small towns alike
use the numbers to secure fortunes in federal funding. Street cops
have an angle too: They like to nab docile pot users--easy to find in
poor pockets of town--at the end of their patrol shifts, when the
extra hours filling out reports at the precinct house get charged as
overtime. In the jargon, the practice is known as "collars for dollars."

New York's example suggests a system deeply invested in
criminalization that is unlikely to back down. When contacted for a
response to Levine's assertions, an NYPD spokesman demanded an e-mail
query and hung up. Three were sent; none was answered.

Levine says his research has pointed to the same pattern in other
American cities. "Atlanta and Baltimore, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh,
Cincinnati, Cleveland, Chicago..." He rattles off a long list. "The
Southwest is really bad. Houston...San Antonio."

El Paso is another place where the ideological battle has flared
dramatically. With cartels committing 1,600 murders in a year's span
just across the border in Juarez, Mexico, El Paso City Councilman Beto
O'Rourke pushed a resolution last January calling for a discussion on
legalizing drugs to undercut the illegal market. "Mind you, it was not
to legalize anything, necessarily," says O'Rourke, whose 10th-floor
office overlooks the Rio Grande and the impoverished Mexican
metropolis beyond. "Basically, it was a way of saying the current
policy had failed; we need to put everything on the table and have a
dialogue."

The city council approved the resolution without dissent, but it was
vetoed by Mayor John F. Cook. An irked O'Rourke tried to override the
veto, only to be strong-armed by U.S. Representative Silvestre Reyes,
who phoned all eight council members to make sure the matter was
quashed. "You need to cut this out," Reyes said, as O'Rourke
remembers. "It's going to be tough to get [federal] money for the
community if you pass this."

Reyes, a tough law-enforcement man who spent 27 years in the U.S.
Border Patrol, might have handled it differently if the resolution had
only dealt with marijuana, rather than all drugs, says his press
deputy, Vincent Perez. As it was, the resolution was defeated--and
drug deaths in Juarez have continued to climb.

"We're almost at 2,300 murders for [2009]," O'Rourke
says.

NORML, the lobbying group for the reform of marijuana laws, had a
field day lambasting Reyes on its Web site. Much as in New York, where
Levine's research has drawn nationwide media attention, the "intense
blowback" over the failed resolution actually achieved what O'Rourke
termed a Pyrrhic victory for the hard-liners and a step forward for
those willing to consider change. "All of a sudden we had calls from
all over the country," O'Rourke says.

The psychological war is one the marijuana movement can win--and why
weed advocates will likely win, barring the unforeseen. It is not
quite a done deal, however, because the question of pot use, for many,
becomes a moral argument, and moral values are slow to change.

"People long for rules," says sociologist B.J. Gallagher, an author
and lecturer in Los Angeles. "Without them, the world would be chaotic
and unpredictable. We'd be having sex with each other's spouses, we'd
be stealing things...

"If we legalize pot, what next? Cocaine? Heroin? That's what people
are afraid of. It's not the pot, per se. It's the bigger issue: Where
do we draw the line? So they say, 'Let's not change the line.'"

But history shows that the line does change--eventually. "When a
majority are saying, 'This does not make sense,' the line will shift,"
Gallagher says. "We've seen it with [alcohol] prohibition, slavery,
women's rights. We're now seeing it with gay rights. Our moral values
change over time, despite the objection of people who are terrified."

A new class is in session at Oaksterdam, a how-to about opening and
running medical-marijuana dispensaries. Dark-haired, bespectacled
lecturer Don Duncan, a prominent pot man because of his lobbying
efforts at Los Angeles City Hall and his ownership of a busy outlet in
West Hollywood, warns a room of rapt students to be mindful of the
rules. After federal agents raided his business in 2007, Duncan says,
the state Board of Equalization slapped a lien on his house for
nonpayment of taxes.

"Don't mess with those guys," Duncan says. Pay your taxes. Pay your
rent on time. Don't drive a Bentley and take 'round-the-world
vacations if you're running a nonprofit collective.

"But if you earn a healthy salary because you work hard, that's OK,"
Duncan adds. "That's actually a very patriotic and American way of
life."

Next to speak is Robert A. Raich, a leading marijuana attorney most
remarkable for his halo-like crown of white hair. Raich gets down to
the nitty-gritty of applying for business licenses. Medical marijuana
is still illegal in the eyes of the federal government, even if the
Obama administration is backing away from enforcement. So be creative
when you have to fill out forms describing what you plan to sell, Raich says.

"Let me give you some truthful euphemisms," offers Raich, who seems to
delight in presenting them: medicinal herbs, Chinese herbs, cut
flowers, dried flowers. "You don't want to lie to the government," he
says cheerfully. "You just don't want to give them too much
information."
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