Pubdate: Mon, 13 Jun 2005 Source: Summit Daily News (CO) Copyright: 2005 Summit Daily News Contact: http://www.summitdaily.com/home.php Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/587 Author: Gary Lindstrom Note: State Rep. Gary Lindstrom of Lakeview Meadows represents Summit, Eagle and Lake counties. He writes a Monday column. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Raich (Gonzales v. Raich) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Cannabis and Driving) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) SUPREMES TAKE ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA IS PRICELESS The United States Supreme Court has ruled medical marijuana is not legal. I would not have expected a different decision from the justices. But there is some interesting reasoning in the justice's decision. Some of the more conservative justices voted with the minority, saying it is a states' rights issue and the federal government should butt out. (No pun intended.) The majority ruled that medical marijuana laws in states interfere with the free commerce of the United States. Yes. Free commerce. They said if individual states allow medical marijuana and others do not, it will cause the free-market prices of marijuana to be adversely affected. Man, what a stretch. The older I get, the less I understand why some courts make the decisions they make. Colorado voters approved medical marijuana use in a statewide ballot initiative in 2000. What we said was if a person has a note from his or her doctor, it is legal to grow and smoke marijuana for medical purposes. A couple of relatively local cases come to mind. The Summit County Drug Task Force raided a home in Park County a couple of years ago. The resident of the home had a prescription from his doctor for medical marijuana. Big controversy at the time. Up in Routt County, federal agents raided a home where a person was smoking and growing weed under permission from his doctor. The drugs were seized and all hell broke loose. Not sure the status of that case. In Denver a month or so ago, a drug grower and smoker was arrested and his dope was seized. A judge ordered the police to give the stuff back because the smoker/grower had a note from his doc. Several years ago the state decriminalized marijuana in small amounts, less than an ounce, for personal use. It became a petty offense, and a ticket can be issued to the possessor instead of going to the slammer. All of these laws make a lot of sense. The free market excuse does not. Sheriff Bill Masters down in San Miguel County has his own approach to the problem. He has said it is a waste of time and money to enforce any drug laws. He is a Libertarian and has gained national prominence for his position on drugs. I have to agree with the sheriff. In my more than 30 years experience in law enforcement, I have never seen anyone hurt from smoking marijuana. The only damage done is to the nearest bag of chips. I suppose someone could bang his head if he started nodding too much. There are more people killed in the United States every year in car accidents than were killed during the entire Vietnam War. Most died because of alcohol, not wearing seat belts, or both. I am not aware of anyone ever being killed in a car accident as the result of smoking marijuana. When have you ever heard a news report of a fatal car accident where they said the cause was smoking marijuana? In almost every fatal accident the reporter will say, "The police suspect alcohol was involved." I suppose an argument could be made that marijuana smoking causes the user to fall asleep. Falling asleep while driving is not good. Talking on a cell phone while driving is not good either. Smoking your cell phone while driving could be fatal, too. Maybe if we legalized marijuana we could set the market price nationally to placate the Supreme Court. We could also heavily tax it and gain government benefit from legalizing it. Maybe we could use the tax revenue for important things like education and health care. For health reasons, I oppose smoking. People should not smoke marijuana, tobacco, phone books, or old tires because smoking anything is bad for your health. But not that it creates pricing issues and interferes with the free trade of the United States of America. That is just plain silly. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake