Pubdate: Tue, 15 Mar 2011
Source: North Kitsap Herald (WA)
Copyright: 2011 North Kitsap Herald
Contact:  http://www.northkitsapherald.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2609
Author: Troy Barber, North Kitsap Coordinator of Sensible Washington

IT'S TIME TO LEGALIZE CANNABIS

People have mixed reactions when they see or hear the words "legalize
marijuana."

To marijuana reform advocates, the implications are understood, but
when these words fall on prohibitionist eyes and ears, they impart a
fear of moral decay. These words are often interpreted as approving
of, or advocating for the use of marijuana.

This is simply not true.

The phrase "legalize marijuana" is a clarion call to end prohibition
on cannabis. When we hear the word "prohibition," we usually associate
it with alcohol and the 18th Amendment. The connection that many
people do not make is that we have been living under prohibition of
cannabis in Washington state since 1923.

"Marijuana" is not even a proper term. The Depression-era propaganda
of "Reefer Madness," which led to the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937, used
the word to connect it to Mexican migrant workers. It was intended as
a derogatory slur, rooted in racial prejudice.

"Cannabis" is the more appropriate term. It is the plant family that
both industrial hemp and marijuana come from. Hemp contains very
little of the psychoactive compounds that produce a "high," yet it is
grouped with marijuana as a Schedule I drug in the Controlled
Substances Act, along with heroin.

This schedule classification is clearly misleading. Marijuana has
demonstrated medicinal value and hemp is not a drug. This creates a
false dichotomy, one in which either marijuana is as dangerous as
heroin -- or worse -- that heroin is as safe as marijuana.

Calling for an "end" to prohibition is not entirely accurate either.
The word "end" suggests that prohibition on cannabis has always
existed. The truth is, American citizens have lived for more than a
century and a half without any prohibition whatsoever.

Many generations have now lived under the tenets of legislated
morality. This is a violation of the core principles of freedom and
liberty.

Now that we know what it is not, let's address what it is: the repeal,
reform and regulation of laws concerning cannabis. Reversing
prohibition is more sensible than ending it.

The problem is that these terms don't have the impact that the phrase
"legalize it" has. For better or worse, this is the most widely used
phrase, even if misunderstood or inaccurately applied.

If this phrase continues to create an element of fear, for the
destruction of our moral fabric, please consider what living under
prohibition does: it creates an illegal black market that lures people
to profit from a risk-valued product (price inflated by risk).
Prohibition has not driven down demand. It creates criminals and
potentially corrupts some in law enforcement.

This market is unregulated, and profits are not taxed. Our children
are at risk because drug dealers do not check for identification, and
our drug policies do not tell the truth. Innocent people are caught in
the wake of drug cartel violence and murder.

For anyone that says "legalize it," what they are really saying is:
"Let's reform current drug policy to a civil and humane approach of
regulate and educate."

Considering the destructive impact the war on drugs has on our
society, the damage to families, and economic and environmental
losses, we soon realize "legalization" is not a dirty word after all.
It is a moral imperative.
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.