News (Media Awareness Project) - US ME: OPED: Legalizing Marijuana In Maine Would Force Federal |
Title: | US ME: OPED: Legalizing Marijuana In Maine Would Force Federal |
Published On: | 2011-05-12 |
Source: | Portland Press Herald (ME) |
Fetched On: | 2011-05-14 06:00:32 |
LEGALIZING MARIJUANA IN MAINE WOULD FORCE FEDERAL CHANGES
The state should act on its own to end this wasteful burden on police
and the courts.
I'm surprised at the editorial position of The Portland Press Herald
on marijuana legislation ("Debate on marijuana belongs in federal
arena," April 21). The fact of a present disconnect between state and
federal laws involving marijuana isn't a basis for dismissing the
importance of L.D. 1453. To the contrary, the fact that states across
America have enacted various statutes authorizing the regulated use
of marijuana is strong evidence that the national perspective is changing.
Passing L.D. 1453 would not subject Mainers to greater risk under
federal enforcement efforts. But it would eliminate a wasteful burden
that state authorities (including police, courts, corrections)
presently bear at the expense of Maine taxpayers.
Federal authorities are in a serious quandary concerning the
enforcement guidelines they presently employ and those they will need
to employ in the future. This is an event horizon. The 13 states
(including Maine) that have already begun to revise their state
legislation concerning marijuana will be joined by many others. The
more involvement by state legislatures in pronouncing the futility,
wastefulness and personal harm that marijuana prohibition promotes,
the better the chances are that meaningful federal change will occur.
That alone, in my view, is a very good reason to support the present bill.
The final foible in the Press Herald's analysis is the observation
that if this bill is passed, Maine authorities will be abetting
criminal activity, while in the same paragraph acknowledging that we
already do so by regulating medical marijuana. To then follow with
the Neanderthalic query "What costs would result from even more drug
abuse ." reveals an underlying and profound misunderstanding of both
the political environment we are in and the facts concerning
marijuana use itself.
I am usually understanding, if not enthusiastic, about most Press
Herald editorials, but this isn't one of them.
The state should act on its own to end this wasteful burden on police
and the courts.
I'm surprised at the editorial position of The Portland Press Herald
on marijuana legislation ("Debate on marijuana belongs in federal
arena," April 21). The fact of a present disconnect between state and
federal laws involving marijuana isn't a basis for dismissing the
importance of L.D. 1453. To the contrary, the fact that states across
America have enacted various statutes authorizing the regulated use
of marijuana is strong evidence that the national perspective is changing.
Passing L.D. 1453 would not subject Mainers to greater risk under
federal enforcement efforts. But it would eliminate a wasteful burden
that state authorities (including police, courts, corrections)
presently bear at the expense of Maine taxpayers.
Federal authorities are in a serious quandary concerning the
enforcement guidelines they presently employ and those they will need
to employ in the future. This is an event horizon. The 13 states
(including Maine) that have already begun to revise their state
legislation concerning marijuana will be joined by many others. The
more involvement by state legislatures in pronouncing the futility,
wastefulness and personal harm that marijuana prohibition promotes,
the better the chances are that meaningful federal change will occur.
That alone, in my view, is a very good reason to support the present bill.
The final foible in the Press Herald's analysis is the observation
that if this bill is passed, Maine authorities will be abetting
criminal activity, while in the same paragraph acknowledging that we
already do so by regulating medical marijuana. To then follow with
the Neanderthalic query "What costs would result from even more drug
abuse ." reveals an underlying and profound misunderstanding of both
the political environment we are in and the facts concerning
marijuana use itself.
I am usually understanding, if not enthusiastic, about most Press
Herald editorials, but this isn't one of them.
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