Pubdate: Thu, 4 Nov 2010 Source: Charleston Gazette (WV) Copyright: 2010 Charleston Gazette Contact: http://www.wvgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/77 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?261 (Cannabis - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular) POT: TURNING LEGAL CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- In Tuesday's U.S. election, several attempts to legalize marijuana fell short. By a margin of 3.8 million to 3.3 million, California voters declined to approve pot possession for recreational use. Arizona, Oregon and South Dakota rejected medical marijuana, but two Massachusetts districts gave tentative approval. Regardless, it seems clear that public support is fading for America's police blitz that throws hundreds of thousands of young people into cells for smoking the wrong plant. Ask yourself: Why should it be a crime to smoke shredded pot leaves, while it's perfectly legal to smoke shredded tobacco leaves? Why does one leaf send you to prison, but the other doesn't? Highly addictive tobacco kills 400,000 Americans prematurely each year -- yet authorities welcome it, while branding marijuana a terrible evil. That's illogical. "Our marijuana laws are clearly doing more harm than good," financier George Soros wrote last week in The New York Times. He pointed out that 750,000 Americans are jailed each year for small amounts of pot - -- their lives and futures marred by criminal records. America loses much of their potential contribution to society and the economy. Blacks are punished far worse than whites, because of lopsided prosecution. Research shows that young whites smoke more pot -- but blacks are caught and prosecuted at much higher rates. "This makes it more difficult for black men to find jobs, more difficult for black women to find suitable husbands, and less common for black children to grow up in stable families with black male role models," columnist Nicholas Kristof wrote last week. About the only groups benefiting from America's drug laws are smuggler gangs. Endless police crackdowns keeps street prices sky-high, which keeps traffic flowing. Fourteen states already have approved medical marijuana. The Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy -- headed by the ex-presidents of Brazil, Colombia and Mexico -- advocates decriminalization as a way to halt deadly international trafficking. A Newsweek poll found that 70 percent of likely voters under 30 support legalization. Their age cohort will be more dominant in future elections. If pot were legal, like other agricultural crops, the price soon would drop, and criminals would lose interest. State and local governments would reap revenue from controlled, licensed pot sales. Almost a century ago, prohibition of alcohol was a dismal blunder for America. Rum-running unleashed unstoppable organized crime. Police wasted much of their time nailing speakeasies and secret drinkers -- or taking payola to look the other way. Prohibition of pot doesn't work any better than prohibition of booze did. Despite Tuesday's election setbacks, the future seems clear: Eventually, marijuana leaves will be as legal as tobacco leaves. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake