Pubdate: Wed, 11 Apr 2012 Source: Livingston County Daily Press & Argus (MI) Copyright: 2012 Livingston Daily Press & Argus Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/Kk1qVKJf Website: http://www.livingstondaily.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4265 POT LAWS OFFER UP HIGH DOSE OF ABSURDITY If a 21-year-old is caught by police smoking marijuana, he could face a 90-day jail term. The sentence will be longer if that person is selling marijuana. But if the same person is smoking a tobacco cigarette, he soon will face only disturbing pictures, such as a cadaver on a slab or an image of smoke coming from a tracheotomy hole. Barring a courtroom challenge, the federal government will this year require such photos to be prominently displayed on all cigarette packs sold in America. Such is the insane way that our society deals with seemingly similar acts of cultivating a plant so that it can be burned and the smoke inhaled into one's lungs. Marijuana is illegal for almost all purposes. In Michigan, aggressive law enforcement has in many places -- such as Livingston County -- eviscerated a state law that recognizes that marijuana has some medical benefits. No one claims tobacco has positive medical purposes. Yet, it is 100 percent legal for all adults, even though even secondhand smoke is thought to be so dangerous that most states ban its use in public buildings. Sale of marijuana in Michigan, however, can land a person a prison term of two years to 15 years, depending on how much of the product is in one's possession. There is no similar law restricting how many cancer-producing cigarettes one can possess. On the surface, such conflicting standards are insane. But it's understandable that many adults are wary about legalizing the drug, particularly if they don't -- or no longer --use it. Are times changing? Perhaps. There were politics in addition to the normal aromas in the air during the annual Hash Bash in Ann Arbor last weekend as speakers urged those in attendance to support a petition drive to let voters decide if marijuana should be legal. While one can wonder if those who like to get stoned are really likely to gather 322,609 signature by July, it is clear that the marijuana-legalization push is broadening. This year, none other than conservative TV evangelist Pat Robertson said that marijuana should be legalized because it is apparent that the war on drugs has failed. Robertson is only the latest to say what others have long preached: Criminalizing marijuana is a wasteful use of police resources that leads to a massively expensive prison system. And it doesn't work. Despite decades of harsh laws, the use rate is unchanged. But will that translate into legalization? It seems an uphill battle. Even though Michigan voters overwhelmingly approved the use of marijuana for medical purposes, law enforcement officials across the state vigorously pursue those who use the new law as a defense for growing or distributing marijuana. Although some, such as Attorney General Bill Schuette, were staunchly against the law from the start, others merely say they don't want people to use the law as shield for their recreational use. Thus, while voters favored the medical use of marijuana to ease the pain of cancer sufferers, it is not clear that they will support a movement to make marijuana as legal and accessible as alcohol. If so, we will continue to have a bizarre world where it's OK to toss down a couple of drinks at a bar, purchase a six-pack of beer at the corner party store and then light up a cigarette when you get home. Everything is legal as long as the cigarette is filled with tobacco, which may kill you, and not marijuana, which may only give you a temporary high. It's madness. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom