Pubdate: Thu, 22 Sep 2011
Source: Chico News & Review, The (CA)
Copyright: 2011 Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.newsreview.com/chico/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/559
Author: Robert Speer
Note: Robert Speer is editor of the CN&R.

WHY A 'POT ISSUE'?

Because It's About a Lot More Than Marijuana

This is the CN&R's third "pot issue," and readers may be asking why 
we're giving the herb so much space. It's a good question.

One reason is that marijuana has been much in the news lately, in 
Chico and elsewhere. Officials all over California have struggled to 
respond to the emergence of a Prop. 215-fueled army of people eager 
to open medical-marijuana dispensaries or grow pot in their back yards.

Also, Prop. 215 has created a big mess for local governments to clean 
up. Watching elected officials twist themselves into knots because of 
it has become a spectator sport. And the federal government has been 
as inconsistent as the state on the issue, as Chico city officials 
know all too well.

Another is that marijuana cultivation has become a huge business in 
Butte County. We don't know exactly how much money it brings in 
because the industry is unregulated, but we know it's many millions 
of dollars. Statewide, marijuana cultivation is estimated to be a $14 
billion industry.

And of course there are the ever-present Mexican cartels, with their 
huge plantations in the forests and armed guards. They make no 
pretense of growing for the medical market.

Some CN&R readers, we know, are interested in the subject because 
they smoke pot for pleasure, others because they're sick and it helps 
them feel better. Still others are interested because they believe 
the prohibition of pot does more harm than good and is part of a 
failed "war on drugs" that has cost taxpayers billions, fostered the 
creation of paramilitary police units, sent hundreds of thousands of 
nonviolent offenders to prison, and diverted police resources from 
more serious crimes.

Other readers, I'm aware, follow the news and debate about marijuana 
with interest tinged with dread. They've never used pot, see it as a 
dangerous drug and worry that medical marijuana is just a legal 
charade that is part of a general degradation of society due to illicit drugs.

For all of these reasons, and more, marijuana is a subject worthy of 
special consideration.

My own view is that collectively we're going through a painful 
transition in which society is slowly accepting the fact that 
marijuana prohibition isn't worth the trouble or expense. Critics of 
Prop. 215 who say most "patients" aren't really sick are right, but 
so what? Young people have been smoking pot for decades. It's better 
for them to be able to walk into a store and buy it legally than to 
flirt with arrest-or worse-by purchasing it on the street.

Most important, liberalization of marijuana laws means that fewer 
people will go to prison. As of 2008, 31,500 people were in 
California prisons for drug-related crimes, about 9,000 of them on 
marijuana charges, out of a total prison population of 171,000. Not 
only is it expensive to house these prisoners-about $47,000 a year 
each, according to the Legislative Analyst's Office-it's also 
destructive to lives, the prisoners' as well as their families'. 
Reasonable people can debate whether marijuana is bad for them, but 
almost nobody believes prison is good for anyone.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom