News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Web: Drugs And The Nation |
Title: | US: Web: Drugs And The Nation |
Published On: | 2004-11-04 |
Source: | AlterNet (US Web) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 19:33:12 |
DRUGS AND THE NATION
In an election whose outcome was determined by militaristic,
theocratic culture warriors, medical marijuana in Montana was one of
the few bright spots.
Even as 59 percent of the state's voters were going for George W. Bush
and two-thirds opting to ban gay marriage, Montanans were approving
Initiative 148, which would allow medical marijuana use by patients
with a doctor's recommendation, by a 62-38 percent margin.
Two further-reaching state drug initiatives lost. Alaskans rejected a
proposal to legalize marijuana under regulations similar to alcohol,
by a 57-43 percent margin, and Oregon defeated a measure to expand the
state's medical marijuana law by 58-42. The number of people voting
against the Oregon initiative -- which would have set up
state-licensed medical-herb dispensaries, so patients could obtain a
legal supply -- almost exactly matched the number who voted to ban gay
marriage.
Three local initiatives won. Oakland, Calif. voted to make adult
cannabis offenses the lowest priority for the city's police. In Ann
Arbor, Mich., where pot possession already carries only a $25 fine,
voters approved an initiative to legalize medical use and reduce the
penalty for third-offense possession or sale to a $100 fine. (Detroit
voters passed a medical marijuana measure in August.)
Another college town, Columbia, Miss., enacted two pot proposals, one
to legalize medical use and one to decriminalize possession of up to
35 grams. The decrim measure will reduce the penalty to a $250 fine
and require police and prosecutors to take pot-possession cases to
municipal courts, where it will be a minor violation, instead of to
state courts, where it remains a criminal offense.
The moral: There is still substantial support for liberalizing the
nation's drug laws, but proposals that push drug law reform too far or
too fast are risky, and support is strongest in urban and
countercultural enclaves.
Paul Befumo of the Montana Medical Marijuana Policy Project says the
initiative there succeeded because it was a libertarian, common sense
issue.
"The idea that medical decisions should be between a person and their
doctor really resonated with Montanans," he explains. "We made our
case." People who have had relatives with serious illnesses, he adds,
"really get it."
The main arguments opponents raised were that it would send a bad
message to children about drugs and that separating medical and
recreational marijuana would be a law enforcement nightmare.
The Oregon initiative's biggest problem was it was underfunded, says
John Sajo of Voter Power in Portland: They had a budget of $600,000 to
reach about 1.7 million voters. "I think that if we had three or four
million we would have won."
The initiative, intended to help Oregon's 15,000 registered medical
marijuana users get a legitimate supply, was also far-reaching. It
would have let users growing outdoors have one 6-pound crop a year,
given free cannabis to indigent patients and allowed naturopaths and
nurse practitioners to recommend medical marijuana.
That, says Sajo, opened the initiative up to "lying and distorting" by
opponents, who called it "legalization in disguise" and said it would
make the state a haven for drug dealers. Bill O'Reilly on Fox News
claimed the measure would let shamans from the Amazon set up shop in
Oregon. Some legalization supporters also opposed the initiative on
the grounds that it would get the state too involved with marijuana
patients.
If cannabis legalization advocates have to portray responsible drug
use in order to succeed, prohibitionist propaganda remains extremely
potent when it collides, even marginally, with reality. In the 1930s,
Harry Anslinger made Victor Licata, a Florida pothead who killed his
family with an axe, his poster boy for marijuana prohibition -- and
the Alaska initiative campaign, which emphasized alcohol-style
regulation, was damaged by an eerily similar murder case.
On Oct. 21, 16-year-old Colin Cotting of Anchorage was arrested and
charged with beating his stepmother to death and stuffing her body in
a freezer after she confronted him about being high. Police said
Cotting told them he was "too stoned" to remember much about what
happened. Nevada's 2002 legalization initiative failed under similar
circumstances; two months before the election, the managing editor of
the Las Vegas Sun was killed when a stoned driver rear-ended her car
at a red light.
The Alaska initiative still got a respectable 43 percent of the vote,
and marijuana possession remains legal there under state Supreme Court
decisions from 1975 and last August. Gov. Frank Murkowski and Alaska's
attorney general will now probably try to enact a cannabis ban that
doesn't violate the state's constitutional right to privacy, says
David Finkelstein, a former state legislator who headed the initiative
campaign. To do this, he says, they will have to prove that marijuana
is more of a danger than the court said it was.
Paul Armentano of NORML suggests that activists should turn to doing
local initiatives, which are easier to organize, cost less, and can be
done on friendlier turf. Oakland definitely fits that last criterion;
the city's cluster of medical cannabis dispensaries has been nicknamed
"Oaksterdam."
"We didn't have to do a lot of work," says Judy Appel of the Oakland
Civil Liberties Alliance. "The people of Oakland support this." With
endorsements from Rep. Barbara Lee and state Senate Majority Leader
Don Perata, Measure Z won with 64 percent of the vote. It remains to
be seen whether the city police will not bother pot smokers, but the
measure sets up an advisory board to establish guidelines. Local
initiatives, adds Appel, are a crucial model for alternatives to the
war on drugs.
Columbia, home to the University of Missouri and two other colleges,
is also culturally sympathetic territory. It backed pot
decriminalization by a 61-39 margin, and also voted overwhelmingly to
require the city government to start using alternative energy sources
for electrical power. A similar decrim measure lost in a special
election last year, but in a general election, says Dan Viets of
Missouri NORML, "we didn't have to get people out, we just had to
persuade them."
A key issue, he adds, was that moving cannabis cases to municipal
court will protect students from losing their financial aid under the
federal Higher Education Act, which denies college funds to people
with drug convictions. The initiative also benefited from a 70 percent
increase in the number of registered voters between 18 and 24 in the
last two years.
Bruce Mirken of the Marijuana Policy Project, which financed much of
the Alaska, Oregon and Montana campaigns, sees a bright spot in
Vermont, where a strong grassroots campaign helped defeat the three
"most hardcore opponents" of medical marijuana in the state
legislature.
Still, drug-policy reformers now have to face another four years under
a president whose political base is among puritanical cultural
warriors. When Bush took office in 2001, many in the movement, at
least among those who hadn't lived in Texas while he was governor,
expressed hope that he would approach drug issues as a "compassionate
conservative," or better yet, reveal a libertarian streak and pull a
"Nixon goes to China."
That proved to be severely wishful thinking. Bush made medical
marijuana a top law enforcement priority, sending SWAT teams to jail
the Californians who dared defy Schedule I of the Controlled
Substances Act and flooding the airwaves with ad campaigns conjuring
the specter of pot smokers financing terrorists and stoned teenagers
accidentally shooting their best friends. ("Hey man, it's loaded!
"Kewl, dude!") The Bush campaign advocates increasing drug testing of
high school students, federal drug czar John Walters' pet cause.
(Meanwhile, John Kerry offered extremely muted, tepid support for
medical marijuana.)
Mirken tries to remain optimistic, saying that if Bush wants history
to see him as "a uniter, not a divider," medical marijuana would be a
good place to start, and the Montana results indicate it wouldn't hurt
him with his base. On the other hand, he says, "there's absolutely no
indication they plan to change. They can make life very miserable for
a lot of sick people. Patients and their supporters may have to hunker
down for a very rough four years."
"Culture war is not our biggest problem," says John Sajo. "I think we
could legalize marijuana if our constituents actually made up a
movement." The biggest problem, he believes, is the "complacency and
apathy" of the nation's tokers. The decriminalization movement is now
funded largely by a handful of wealthy benefactors, because "the
average pot smoker doesn't have the consciousness that they have to
pay for it," he says. "If every pot smoker donated half of what they
spent on marijuana, we'd have a war chest in the billions."
In an election whose outcome was determined by militaristic,
theocratic culture warriors, medical marijuana in Montana was one of
the few bright spots.
Even as 59 percent of the state's voters were going for George W. Bush
and two-thirds opting to ban gay marriage, Montanans were approving
Initiative 148, which would allow medical marijuana use by patients
with a doctor's recommendation, by a 62-38 percent margin.
Two further-reaching state drug initiatives lost. Alaskans rejected a
proposal to legalize marijuana under regulations similar to alcohol,
by a 57-43 percent margin, and Oregon defeated a measure to expand the
state's medical marijuana law by 58-42. The number of people voting
against the Oregon initiative -- which would have set up
state-licensed medical-herb dispensaries, so patients could obtain a
legal supply -- almost exactly matched the number who voted to ban gay
marriage.
Three local initiatives won. Oakland, Calif. voted to make adult
cannabis offenses the lowest priority for the city's police. In Ann
Arbor, Mich., where pot possession already carries only a $25 fine,
voters approved an initiative to legalize medical use and reduce the
penalty for third-offense possession or sale to a $100 fine. (Detroit
voters passed a medical marijuana measure in August.)
Another college town, Columbia, Miss., enacted two pot proposals, one
to legalize medical use and one to decriminalize possession of up to
35 grams. The decrim measure will reduce the penalty to a $250 fine
and require police and prosecutors to take pot-possession cases to
municipal courts, where it will be a minor violation, instead of to
state courts, where it remains a criminal offense.
The moral: There is still substantial support for liberalizing the
nation's drug laws, but proposals that push drug law reform too far or
too fast are risky, and support is strongest in urban and
countercultural enclaves.
Paul Befumo of the Montana Medical Marijuana Policy Project says the
initiative there succeeded because it was a libertarian, common sense
issue.
"The idea that medical decisions should be between a person and their
doctor really resonated with Montanans," he explains. "We made our
case." People who have had relatives with serious illnesses, he adds,
"really get it."
The main arguments opponents raised were that it would send a bad
message to children about drugs and that separating medical and
recreational marijuana would be a law enforcement nightmare.
The Oregon initiative's biggest problem was it was underfunded, says
John Sajo of Voter Power in Portland: They had a budget of $600,000 to
reach about 1.7 million voters. "I think that if we had three or four
million we would have won."
The initiative, intended to help Oregon's 15,000 registered medical
marijuana users get a legitimate supply, was also far-reaching. It
would have let users growing outdoors have one 6-pound crop a year,
given free cannabis to indigent patients and allowed naturopaths and
nurse practitioners to recommend medical marijuana.
That, says Sajo, opened the initiative up to "lying and distorting" by
opponents, who called it "legalization in disguise" and said it would
make the state a haven for drug dealers. Bill O'Reilly on Fox News
claimed the measure would let shamans from the Amazon set up shop in
Oregon. Some legalization supporters also opposed the initiative on
the grounds that it would get the state too involved with marijuana
patients.
If cannabis legalization advocates have to portray responsible drug
use in order to succeed, prohibitionist propaganda remains extremely
potent when it collides, even marginally, with reality. In the 1930s,
Harry Anslinger made Victor Licata, a Florida pothead who killed his
family with an axe, his poster boy for marijuana prohibition -- and
the Alaska initiative campaign, which emphasized alcohol-style
regulation, was damaged by an eerily similar murder case.
On Oct. 21, 16-year-old Colin Cotting of Anchorage was arrested and
charged with beating his stepmother to death and stuffing her body in
a freezer after she confronted him about being high. Police said
Cotting told them he was "too stoned" to remember much about what
happened. Nevada's 2002 legalization initiative failed under similar
circumstances; two months before the election, the managing editor of
the Las Vegas Sun was killed when a stoned driver rear-ended her car
at a red light.
The Alaska initiative still got a respectable 43 percent of the vote,
and marijuana possession remains legal there under state Supreme Court
decisions from 1975 and last August. Gov. Frank Murkowski and Alaska's
attorney general will now probably try to enact a cannabis ban that
doesn't violate the state's constitutional right to privacy, says
David Finkelstein, a former state legislator who headed the initiative
campaign. To do this, he says, they will have to prove that marijuana
is more of a danger than the court said it was.
Paul Armentano of NORML suggests that activists should turn to doing
local initiatives, which are easier to organize, cost less, and can be
done on friendlier turf. Oakland definitely fits that last criterion;
the city's cluster of medical cannabis dispensaries has been nicknamed
"Oaksterdam."
"We didn't have to do a lot of work," says Judy Appel of the Oakland
Civil Liberties Alliance. "The people of Oakland support this." With
endorsements from Rep. Barbara Lee and state Senate Majority Leader
Don Perata, Measure Z won with 64 percent of the vote. It remains to
be seen whether the city police will not bother pot smokers, but the
measure sets up an advisory board to establish guidelines. Local
initiatives, adds Appel, are a crucial model for alternatives to the
war on drugs.
Columbia, home to the University of Missouri and two other colleges,
is also culturally sympathetic territory. It backed pot
decriminalization by a 61-39 margin, and also voted overwhelmingly to
require the city government to start using alternative energy sources
for electrical power. A similar decrim measure lost in a special
election last year, but in a general election, says Dan Viets of
Missouri NORML, "we didn't have to get people out, we just had to
persuade them."
A key issue, he adds, was that moving cannabis cases to municipal
court will protect students from losing their financial aid under the
federal Higher Education Act, which denies college funds to people
with drug convictions. The initiative also benefited from a 70 percent
increase in the number of registered voters between 18 and 24 in the
last two years.
Bruce Mirken of the Marijuana Policy Project, which financed much of
the Alaska, Oregon and Montana campaigns, sees a bright spot in
Vermont, where a strong grassroots campaign helped defeat the three
"most hardcore opponents" of medical marijuana in the state
legislature.
Still, drug-policy reformers now have to face another four years under
a president whose political base is among puritanical cultural
warriors. When Bush took office in 2001, many in the movement, at
least among those who hadn't lived in Texas while he was governor,
expressed hope that he would approach drug issues as a "compassionate
conservative," or better yet, reveal a libertarian streak and pull a
"Nixon goes to China."
That proved to be severely wishful thinking. Bush made medical
marijuana a top law enforcement priority, sending SWAT teams to jail
the Californians who dared defy Schedule I of the Controlled
Substances Act and flooding the airwaves with ad campaigns conjuring
the specter of pot smokers financing terrorists and stoned teenagers
accidentally shooting their best friends. ("Hey man, it's loaded!
"Kewl, dude!") The Bush campaign advocates increasing drug testing of
high school students, federal drug czar John Walters' pet cause.
(Meanwhile, John Kerry offered extremely muted, tepid support for
medical marijuana.)
Mirken tries to remain optimistic, saying that if Bush wants history
to see him as "a uniter, not a divider," medical marijuana would be a
good place to start, and the Montana results indicate it wouldn't hurt
him with his base. On the other hand, he says, "there's absolutely no
indication they plan to change. They can make life very miserable for
a lot of sick people. Patients and their supporters may have to hunker
down for a very rough four years."
"Culture war is not our biggest problem," says John Sajo. "I think we
could legalize marijuana if our constituents actually made up a
movement." The biggest problem, he believes, is the "complacency and
apathy" of the nation's tokers. The decriminalization movement is now
funded largely by a handful of wealthy benefactors, because "the
average pot smoker doesn't have the consciousness that they have to
pay for it," he says. "If every pot smoker donated half of what they
spent on marijuana, we'd have a war chest in the billions."
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