Pubdate: Wed, 08 Nov 2006 Source: Daily Sentinel, The (Grand Junction, CO) Copyright: 2006 Cox Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.gjsentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2084 Author: Le Roy Standish, The Daily Sentinel Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Amendment+44 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) VOTERS NOT HIGH ON POT AMENDMENT Colorado voters have pitched Amendment 44 aside like an assortment of stems and seeds found at the bottom of an empty bag of weed. Tuesday's election results showed that the amendment failed by a wide margin statewide. Across Colorado 688,987 or 60.7 percent voted against the amendment, compared to 445,280 votes or 39.3 percent, in favor. In Mesa County, voters turned the amendment down by an even greater margin. Results were 31,637 votes or 68.2 percent against Amendment 44 and 14,240 or 30.7 percent in favor. The amendment would have decriminalized possession of less than one ounce of marijuana by adults over the age of 21. Currently state law makes possession of an ounce or less of pot a class 2 petty offense punishable by a fine of up to $100. Though David Cox of Palisade and Rex Newkirk of Grand Junction are among the minority of voters in this year's election, they say they will continue breaking the law partaking of the green herb where and when they choose. For them the amendment was never about personal use, it was about reforming a system. "The idea of this wasn't to change our personal lives, but to dismantle a criminal infrastructure by moving toward regulation," said Cox, a member of SAFER Colorado, the organization that got Amendment 44 onto this year's ballot. "I never expected it to pass the first time," he said. "Everyone who was working on this was hoping it would pass, but anyone who is realistic knew it wouldn't." Cox, 25, says he has been smoking pot for the last seven years. But it wasn't always that way. "My mom caught me trying to smoke marijuana when I was 12," said Cox, who works on his father's peach farm in Palisade. "And she put a stop to it." It wasn't until six years later that he got high. "It was the most terrifying experience I ever had," Cox said. "I could tell that this substance was a strong step away from reality." Then, sometime before graduating from the University of Colorado at Boulder with a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering, he got stoned again. "We had a fantastic time, a phenomenal time," he said. Now Cox, will smoke up to four times in a week, but never to excess, he said. "I got too many dreams. I got too many other things to do with my life then get high all day," Cox said. Newkirk, 51, is the owner of a tower painting company, ABC Tower Services, said he has been smoking since the eighth grade. "Marijuana is not a drug; it's an herb, a plant," Newkirk said shortly before torching a bowl of weed at Lincoln Park. He got his start smoking marijuana when he and a friend scored some bud and smoked it off the top of an empty can of chewing tobacco, he said. Newkirk says these days an ounce of weed, which costs him $25, will last a week or two. Nearly everyone he knows smokes marijuana. "At least 85 percent of them smoke marijuana," Newkirk said. "I meet very few people who don't smoke marijuana." But there are people who begin smoking and find the smoke too thick to handle. Those are the people Carol Mulligan, co-owner of Inner Journey Counseling in Grand Junction, sees daily. She said the use of marijuana pulls people into social circles they might not otherwise be involved with, because in order to buy marijuana, you have to visit a criminal. "It could be putting you into that lifestyle," she said. "It could be the start of experimenting with other drugs and into another lifestyle." But that is why people like Cox and Newkirk say it is time to legalize marijuana. Decriminalizing marijuana and making it available to purchase legally could break up existing social circles. It could eliminate the "us vs. them" feeling experienced by those who regularly break the law to buy and smoke marijuana, Cox and Newkirk said. "I like policemen; I fear bad laws," Newkirk said. "This is all about liberty." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake