Pubdate: Thu, 02 Oct 2014 Source: Daily Times (Primos, PA) Contact: 2014 The Daily Times Website: http://www.delcotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1284 Author: Chris Goldstein Note: Chris Goldstein is co-chair of PhillyNORML, based in Philadelphia. The mission of NORML, the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, is to move public opinion sufficiently to legalize the responsible use of marijuana by adults, and to serve as an advocate for consumers to assure they have access to high quality marijuana that is safe, convenient and affordable. AN ANTI-POT TIRADE GOES UP IN SMOKE Immigration lawyer and columnist Christine Flowers calls cannabis consumers the "lowest common denominator" in a recent piece. The truth is quite the opposite. The last three U.S. presidents admitted to an experience with the devil's lettuce along with scientists like Carl Sagan and possibly half of the NBA. In fact, 100 million Americans have tried cannabis. Sprinkled with Latin and filled with a laundry list of marijuana cliches, Flowers decried Philadelphia's move to reduce penalties for pot possession. As a writer and legal expert she has, apparently, failed to do her homework. First: Local cops in Delaware County already tend to issue a summons for marijuana possession. Philly's city officials agreed to the recent shift because more the 4,000 people were put into handcuffs and holding cells every year for small amounts of weed. Second: In Delco most offenders make it to court and then plead to a lesser offense of disorderly conduct anyway. Not exactly the North Korean style of deterrent Flowers seeks. Third: While African-American residents make up just 20 percent of the Delco population they account for 52 percent those summoned to court in Delco for marijuana possession. Still, "happy grass" does not seem to be a real priority of Delco police departments. Population in the county is 562,000 and only 886 people were nabbed for weed in 2013. Of course, Flowers has an easy answer to the disturbing racial disparities in cannabis prohibition enforcement: Arrest more white people. That would be easy to do in Delco, home to some of the biggest college campuses in Pennsylvania. Perhaps some large, expensive raids on the dorms of Penn State, Villanova, Swarthmore, Haverford and Widener to snuff out every joint would be in order. Then again, that might not sit well with the white, somewhat privileged students or, especially, their parents. They might not want to see their kids harassed by police or lose their financial aid for experimenting with something far safer than alcohol. Why does Flowers think that young, African-American adults in Philly deserve a harsher treatment than the Delco college students? Far from some massive change in policy, Philadelphia is now simply acting like every other county in Pennsylvania. This will save more than $4 million per year in the public safety budget. The new code will also put police back on the street for 17,000 hours per year instead of taking marijuana smokers in for fingerprints and photos. So look out, college folks -- Christine Flowers wants to go back to the "Reefer Madness" days in Delco. She could be in your dorm room with a SWAT team the next time you hit that bong. Because 70 years of marijuana prohibition at gunpoint has totally worked to uphold the pure moral fiber of our country and stopped people from partaking of this plant ... right? - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom