Pubdate: Tue, 22 Feb 2011 Source: Modesto Bee, The (CA) Copyright: 2011 The Modesto Bee Contact: http://www.modbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/271 Author: Jeff Jardine Referenced: Previous Column http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v11/n117/a03.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Robert+Sharpe E-MAIL ON MARIJUANA BUST DESERVES A RESPONSE From the e-mails, voice mails and other sources: GONE TO POT - I rarely react to letters to the editor regarding my columns, but this one merits further comment: "Arresting local marijuana growers just helps Mexican drug cartels." The author criticized law enforcement for busting the largest indoor marijuana-growing operation ever discovered in Stanislaus County - so sophisticated that it was capable of producing roughly $8 million a year in finished product. "Eliminating local marijuana growers only to have them replaced by Mexican drug cartels that sell cocaine, heroin and methamphetamine is not a good thing," wrote Robert Sharpe, a policy analyst for the Common Sense for Drug Policy organization in Washington, D.C. Some thoughts about his thoughts: That's the worst "buy American" argument I've ever read. And I've got news for him: The Mexican cartels have been here for decades, trafficking in everything from drugs to people to drugs inside people. Busting that warehouse in Crows Landing won't create a void for the Mexican drug runners to fill. At best, it merely shut down one of their competitors. Marijuana is legal only for medicinal purposes in California. If you advocate legalizing it for recreational use, too, you have every right to organize, lobby, campaign and exercise your free speech rights toward changing the law. Until then, though, you can't manufacture, sell or possess it. If we had reported that authorities, say, had long known about an operation and hadn't busted it, they'd get criticized for that, too - and rightfully so. "Taxing and regulating marijuana, the most popular illicit drug, is a cost-effective alternative to never-ending drug war," Sharpe wrote. Maybe so. Maybe someday marijuana will become legal. Companies would be required to make their employees file W-2 forms. They'd have to withhold federal, state and local taxes and Social Security and pay for workers comp. The owners themselves would pay income taxes as well. Until then, these operations are burdened with none of the restrictions other small-business owners must follow. So there might be a day when marijuana is legalized for all to toke, and its manufacturers will have to play by the same rules as other businesses. Until then, it's illegal, meaning against the law. Busting an operation like that is what authorities are supposed to do. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake