Pubdate: Sat, 10 Aug 2002 Source: Athens Banner-Herald (GA) Copyright: 2002 Athens Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.onlineathens.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1535 Author: Ed Tant Note: The author has been an activist since 1968 and a journalist in Athens since 1974. NEVADA IS NOT JUST BLOWING SMOKE ABOUT MARIJUANA REFORM "All great ideas are controversial, or have been at one time," said courageous American journalist George Seldes. In November, voters in Nevada will have a chance to vote on the great but still controversial issue of marijuana law reform. According to The New York Times of Aug. 2, "After voting two years ago to ease state drug laws, Nevada voters could go even further this year, making their state the first to legalize marijuana and derive taxes from a regulated sales system." This is an idea whose time has come in Nevada and around the nation. Billy Rogers of Nevadans for Responsible Law Enforcement, the group that put the reform measure on the state's November ballot, told the Times, "Most Nevadans think it is a waste of taxpayers' money to arrest people for small amounts of marijuana when the time could be better spent arresting murderers and rapists." Actually, most Nevadans seem about equally divided over the issue. The Las Vegas Review-Journal, Nevada's largest daily newspaper, polled voters in the Silver State and found that 44 percent of them favored the marijuana legalization initiative, 46 percent were against it and 10 percent were undecided. On July 7, the newspaper endorsed the idea, saying that current harsh pot laws push "the needless harassment of individuals who peacefully and privately use marijuana. Nine states have in the last six years passed initiatives allowing patients to use marijuana with a doctor's prescription to ease the symptoms of such ills as AIDS and cancer, and about a dozen states have ceased jailing citizens for possession of small amounts of cannabis since Oregon pioneered marijuana decriminalization in 1974. The proposed reforms in Nevada are far more sweeping than those in any other state. The initiative would end criminal penalties for possession of up to three ounces of the weed by citizens 21 or older and would, according to The New York Times, "direct the Legislature to treat marijuana much like tobacco products and alcohol, regulating it through a system that would oversee how it is grown, distributed and sold, generating tax revenue in the process." Pro-pot backers of the legalization measure say that, if enacted, it would have safeguards such as bans against advertising marijuana, selling it to anyone under 21 or selling it near schools or in public places such as parks. Keith Stroup of the Washington-based National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws called the Nevada proposal "a landmark initiative that seeks more than what any state has accomplished so far." He also admitted the federal government would probably never stand for the initiative. "It is highly unlikely that the federal government would allow a state to create a legal market," said Stroup, "What it would do is place enormous pressure on Congress to take a rational look at the nation's drug laws. As we begin to get more and more states considering legalization, it will be impossible for Congress to stand in their way." It's time for Congress, the courts and the White House to quit standing in the way of freedom and compassion on the marijuana issue. For too many decades, America's benighted pot laws have shown the hemp hypocrisy of both major political parties. Thirty years ago, in 1972, Republican President Richard Nixon ignored the results of a national commission that recommended reforms in the pot laws. In spite of the fact that the Nixon-era commission was chaired by a GOP governor of Pennsylvania, Nixon dismissed its findings by snarling on his now notorious White House tapes, "Every one of the bastards that are out for legalizing marijuana are Jewish." Under the White House administrations of both William J. "I Didn't Inhale" Clinton and George W. "I Won't Say if I Did or Didn't" Bush, marijuana arrests have soared to record numbers and cannabis clubs for medical marijuana buyers have been hounded by big government federal agents from both political parties. While Europe currently reaps the benefits of pot law reform there, American politicians of both major parties would do well to heed the wise words of Abraham Lincoln who said, "Prohibition goes beyond the bounds of reason in that it attempts to control a man's appetite by legislation and makes a crime out of things that are not crimes. A prohibition law strikes a blow at the very principles upon which our government was founded." - --- MAP posted-by: Alex