Pubdate: Thu, 06 Sep 2001 Source: Fairfax Journal, The (VA) Copyright: 2001 The Journal Newspapers Contact: http://www.jrnl.com/cfdocs/new/ffx/writealetter.cfm Website: http://cold.jrnl.com/cfdocs/new/ffx/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1339 Author: Robert McBride Note: McBride is Chairman, Libertarian Party of Prince William County Note: Referenced - Reams Reeferendum www.reeferendum.com Letters POT PROHIBITION HAS GONE TOO FAR I'd like to express my thanks to the Journal staff for providing such fair and prominent coverage of Gary Reams' campaign for lieutenant governor ("Libertarian Candidate Targets Drug Laws," Aug. 13). This campaign has attracted much media attention and has succeeded in generating public discussion, as shown by the Aug. 28 letter to the editor from Bart Frazier of Centreville, "Libertarian message gets lost." Mr. Frazier eloquently laid out the Libertarian philosophy of individual choice and personal responsibility and presented a reasonable argument against having any candidate run a single-issue campaign. But he got it wrong when he said that Reams "proposes to legalize marijuana." In fact, Reams simply wants to begin a public debate about many issues concerning cannabis, a family of plants that were, after all, completely legal and agriculturally important in Virginia until 1937. Reams does not claim to know what the answers are, but he does point out the many serious problems in our society that are a direct result of this costly, failed policy of prohibition. I agree with Mr. Reams that marijuana prohibition has gone too far. It has gone too far when Richmond's chief of police is concerned about the erosion of our Fourth Amendment's protections because of marijuana enforcement. It has gone too far when DaimlerChrysler Corp. has to import hemp from Canada because the legal production of a Sebring convertible involves raw materials that cannot be produced legally in the United States. It has gone too far when Virginia doctors write prescriptions for medical marijuana to help cancer patients, only to have Washington politicians "just say no." It has gone too far when the home state of Thomas Jefferson trades in its heritage of civil liberties for a "moral crusade" against its own people. The Reams campaign is not about Gary Reams, or about Libertarian philosophy. He has unselfishly set aside those concerns to provide an opportunity for Virginians who want their leaders to finally discuss the merits of industrial hemp, the rights of doctors to prescribe a natural medicine to the seriously ill, and the preference of having recreational marijuana sold in ABC stores to adults, rather than being sold in every public high school by the young recruits of organized crime. Because of the hysteria over the drug war, which lumps marijuana with more dangerous drugs, few people are willing to publicly debate, not to mention criticize, the government's prohibition of these plants. Thanks to Gary Reams, we will be able to express our concerns in the privacy of the voting booth, while sending a very public message to our representatives in Richmond. Robert McBride Chairman, Libertarian Party of Prince William County - --- MAP posted-by: Beth