Pubdate: Wed, 22 Jul 2009 Source: Red Bluff Daily News (CA) Copyright: 2009 Red Bluff Daily News Contact: http://redbluffdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1079 Author: Rob Taylor Note: Editor's note: Rob Taylor, of Red Bluff, is a law student at Creighton University. POT DEBATE TOO OFTEN SIDETRACKED Marijuana is not the root of evil. Nor is marijuana the telltale solution to our state's budget crisis. Marijuana is simply a drug that is illegal under the federal law of the United States of America. The Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution states to us that all constitutionally enacted federal legislation and federal executive decisions stand as the supreme law of the land alongside the Constitution, treaties, and other federal legal arrangements. Since the federal government has spoken in a constitutional manner against this drug, the illegality of this drug is considered the supreme law of the land, the illegality of this drug applies to the entirety of the United States, and no law can supersede this drug's legal status except federal law. I do not understand the quagmire that has become California law with respect to marijuana. I do not understand how a state can find the authority to supersede the authority of the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution and enact legislation partially legalizing an illegal substance. I do understand that, for the time being, medical marijuana is a fact with which we all must live. I must defer and acknowledge that those using medical marijuana possess some right to the substance. Although, I am skeptical over the constitutionality of that right, and that such right should not be infringed. That being said, this town must use common sense and realize that, so we do not infringe on the statutory rights of medical marijuana users, we can regulate this illegal substance. It is legally irrelevant whether or not the ills of marijuana are the result of its current status as a product on the black market. It is legally irrelevant to ask the question of the drug's effects on our budget if it were legalized and taxed. It is legally relevant to regulate an illegal substance and to regulate such substance in a way that keeps its effects away from our schools and our children. There was nothing in the proposed legislation that limited what rights medical marijuana users have. The legislation simply regulated those areas most sensitive to our community. This town is ludicrously debating the right to use an illegal drug above the right to protect the education and wellbeing of our children. California needs to snap out of this irrational logic that it is effectively above the United States of America, needs to stop buying into this belief that a drug is going to save the state from its ills, and needs to start refocusing on the things that should truly matter to California: the protection and education of its children and the foundation of its children's future. I recommend the Board of Supervisors formulate an ad hoc committee and reconsider this ordinance not from the standpoint of pot smokers, but from the standpoint of the children of our community who currently find their schools placed within spitting distance of marijuana gardens. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake