Pubdate: Sat, 04 Feb 2012 Source: Verde Independent (AZ) Copyright: 2012 Western News & Info, Inc Contact: http://verdenews.com/Formlayout.asp?formcall=userform&form=1 Website: http://verdenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4433 THAT GRATING SOUND IS FRICTION OF MARIJUANA LAW Arizona law seems to be forever pushing up against federal law, and the grating sound is becoming unbearable. Sometimes it's political defiance and sometimes it's nonsense. We've had a bit of both with SB 1070. Sometimes it's Arizonans challenging Washington, D.C., and sometimes it's our state legislators resisting the will of Arizonans. We have a big mix of both with the medical-marijuana law. State officials are notoriously bad losers when a citizens' initiative they do not like is approved by voters. The marijuana issue has brought out the worst in them. That grating sound is their teeth grinding. The results of the medical-marijuana initiative have been legitimate friction with federal law in various quarters as well as an illegitimate pile of excuses that elected officials have thrown onto the path of enactment. The reasons given for the roadblocks preventing college students from using prescribed medical marijuana sound eerily similar to the rejected arguments the Brewer administration tried out in the state's Health Department. Both raised the warning that the feds were going to smack Arizona around if state officials followed through on the law's provisions. We were warned that state employees would get arrested by Washington's anti-drug czars if they dared to allow marijuana dispensaries and prescriptions. The federal court not only shrugged that off but also warned Brewer that her foot-dragging was illegal. Now, lawmakers want us to believe that allowing medical marijuana on university and college campus for the few that need it would result in a loss of federal funding. Obviously, there are federal laws against illegal controlled substances. But Arizona voters made medical marijuana a legal controlled substance. There's that grating sound again. The big stick called "The Feds" can be effectively brandished at the convenience of lawmakers, but they have been waving it so frequently during the marijuana transition that it has lost its threat. The medical-marijuana law does grind against some federal regulations, but Arizona's best efforts should go into assisting the legal conversion, which is complicated enough, instead of defying state voters. An anti-marijuana stand may be the high moral ground, but tactics against the law are growing unethical. If it continues, that grating sound will be friction from Arizonans tired of their wishes being ignored. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom