Pubdate: Fri,  8 Nov 2002
Source: Tahlequah Daily Press (OK)
Copyright: Tahlequah Daily Press 2002
Contact:  http://www.tahlequahdailypress.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2636
Author: Eddie Glenn

PASTURE NOT SO GREEN FOR MARIJUANA ACTIVISTS

Some Believe Laws Will Be Relaxed

The hopes of activists trying to soften anti-marijuana laws across the 
country went up in smoke Tuesday night, as drug reform measures were turned 
down in Nevada, Arizona and Ohio.

Wealthy backers who had succeeded in easing access to marijuana for medical 
uses sought to go a step further and lessen the penalties for its use in 
general. Many voters apparently drew a distinction between the two ideas.

Early polls had made advocates optimistic. The measures were heavily 
financed by three billionaire philanthropists - George Soros, John Sperling 
and Peter Lewis - as part of a broader effort to roll back the federal war 
on drugs.

During the past six years, the three have financed successful efforts to 
pass 17 of 19 state-level initiatives easing drug laws. In the past, 
though, most of the measures dealt with medical marijuana.

This time, voters in Nevada defeated a measure to legalize the possession 
of up to 3 ounces of marijuana. In Arizona, residents rejected an 
initiative that would have likened marijuana possession to a traffic 
violation. Finally, Ohio defeated a proposal that would have required 
judges to order treatment instead of jail for some drug offenders.

President George Bush's newly appointed drug czar, John Walters, campaigned 
in all three states against the measures, joining with state law 
enforcement, judicial and political leaders in denouncing them. Walters and 
his supporters characterized marijuana as a gateway drug that leads to 
increased drug abuse by youths and more traffic accidents, domestic 
violence and health problems.

Advocates were surprised by the force with which the White House fought 
them in this election.

"What we have seen tonight is how hard the drug war ideologues are willing 
to fight and how dirty they're willing to fight," said Bruce Merken, a 
spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, one of the groups that 
coordinated the campaigns. "I think we need to sit down and take a deep 
breath and take a look at how we can present the facts in a way that people 
can understand."

Critics of the three tycoons, contending the citizen initiative process had 
been hijacked, trumpeted the results as a victory for the common people.

"We told them Ohio is not for sale," said the state's first lady, Hope 
Taft, a leader of Ohio's anti-pot campaign.

Marijuana advocates did win a couple of small battles in Tuesday night's 
elections, though.

In San Francisco, officials received approval to explore establishing a 
distribution program for medical marijuana; and in the District of 
Columbia, voters approved a treatment-instead-of-jail measure for pot 
possession.

One local pro-hemp activist - we'll call him "Jim" - said that should 
Oklahomans ever get an initiative to de-criminalize marijuana, more people 
than just smokers will need to recognize the benefits of legalization and 
get involved in the movement.

"There's no political willpower among the farmers and other people in 
agriculture who would benefit from the legalization of industrial hemp," 
said Jim.

Industrial hemp, legal in most European countries and Canada, is the same 
plant as the smokable marijuana plant, but contains far less Delta-9 
Tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the chemical in marijuana that gets smokers 
"high." Industrial hemp has a wide variety of uses, from high-quality paper 
to automobile fuel.

And many advocates believe that once the usefulness of hemp becomes 
apparent in the Canadian market, more Americans will push for its legalization.

As most people in northeastern Oklahoma know, hemp grows very well in this 
part of the country, and a huge body of research has proved the plant is an 
excellent rotation crop. But even with its low THC levels, industrial hemp 
is still illegal.

According to Jim, once Oklahoma farmers realize how useful-- and 
profitable-- hemp can be, a legalization movement will have a much greater 
chance of success.

"It's going to take a coalition of farmers and environmentalists, and some 
willfulness on the part of those people," said Jim.

Jim said that people also need to be aware of the political situation in 
the 1930s that led to the prohibition of marijuana. Despite the lack of 
evidence of the dangers associated with marijuana - no deaths have ever 
been attributed solely to marijuana use, and it isn't chemically addictive 
- - many large corporations, including those in the newspaper and wood pulp 
industries, lobbied heavily to have hemp banned.

Those industries, of course, emphasized to politicians hemp's use as a 
smokable drug, and downplayed its use as an industrial fiber.

"The American people have been sucked into this war on marijuana," said 
Jim. "And they need to understand the facts behind why it was made illegal."

As far as smokable marijuana is concerned, Jim believes it should be 
legalized as well, with laws put in place to insure responsible use, not 
unlike the current alcohol regulations.

"The people who smoke marijuana are going to smoke marijuana, anyway, 
whether it's legal or not," said Jim. "I think this prohibition should be 
ended and laws put in place - they're probably already in place - to keep 
those people who would be a danger to others from hurting anyone else."

Such laws, according to Jim, would hold marijuana smokers accountable for 
their actions, without penalizing those who are responsible users.

Dan Garber, Cherokee County Undersheriff, said that if Oklahomans desire a 
change in the enforcement of marijuana laws, they have the means at their 
disposal - the referendum - to have those laws changed. In Oklahoma, the 
signatures of 8 percent of the legal voters in the state are required on an 
initiative petition to get a change in state law on the ballot.

"We in law enforcement don't make the laws, but we're going to have to 
enforce whatever laws are in place," said Garber. "If a majority of the 
people want the law changed, then they can certainly do what they did in 
San Francisco with the medical marijuana laws, and get the law changed."
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens