Pubdate: Fri, 30 Oct 2015
Source: Ukiah Daily Journal, The (CA)
Copyright: 2015 The Ukiah Daily Journal
Contact: http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/feedback
Website: http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/581
Author: Marc Parsley

THE POT MONOPOLY GROWS

To the Editor:

The state of Ohio has just announced that it's on the path to 
legalize marijuana but with a twist.

California, Washington, Oregon and Colorado have all legalized 
medical pot and then some have moved on to legalizing recreational 
pot, but Ohio is saying it's going to be the first state to legalize 
both at the same time. I'm not sure how much sense this makes.

Doesn't recreational pot invalidate medical marijuana?

Whichever is cheaper is going to end up covering both bases.

We all know how easy it is to get a medical pot card. I recently read 
in an Associated Press article, "20150415 Colorado mulls mandatory 
lab testing for medical marijuana, AP," that in Colorado, party pot 
must be officially inspected for contaminates but not medical pot. It 
just follows suit. California just passed Assembly Bill No. 266 to 
help manage medical marijuana.

This bill gave birth to the Bureau of Medical Marijuana Regulation 
under the Department of Consumer Affairs. This bill also states that 
moneys collected as a result of fines and civil penalties are to be 
deposited into the "Medical Cannabis Fines and Penalties Account." I 
wonder who's going to be keeping those books?

It seems to me that when the state of California allowed the 
legalization of pot, in total breach of federal law, it is basically 
saying that the state can break federal law but woe to any body that 
breaks state law. This is kind of like saying, "do as I say, not as I 
do" with a big cash reward for a hand full of people and the ever 
mounting list of problems to be paid for by everyone else. Many of 
the laws against marijuana that are being broken weren't in existence 
just to inhibit the pot industry; they were there to protect our 
kids, the safety of our streets and the environment. High potency 
marijuana is now available in almost every school in the nation and 
not by accident. Some politicians and law enforcement are learning 
what illegal drug dealers have known for decades, "money from 
children's pockets spends as good as any". The laws to protect our 
kids from illegal drugs aren't being strongly enforced because the 
people who are financially benefiting i.e., the illegal drug dealers, 
and now some politicians, regulatory agencies and law enforcement, 
don't want to cause a 50 percent cut their profits.

Our children and the environment have two things in common, they 
don't vote or make campaign contributions. These were two recent news 
articles from the land of legal pot. 20150208 Colorado considering 
lowering the bar for high school graduation, Denver Post 20150417 
Soaring gang violence in Denver on track to surpass five-year high, Denver Post

In Ohio, two-term former governor Bob Taft is one of the amendment's 
strongest opponents.

He states, "I don't think that the tax benefits outweigh the hazards, 
the risks of going full for recreational-medical all the way, 
flooding our state with edible products that are attractive to our 
kids." Woody Taft, Bob's distant cousin, finds himself on the "pro 
legalization" side of the issue. The pro side says that the state is 
trying to turn a black market into the newest big business.

This sounds to me like campaign spin that's trying to put lipstick on 
a pig. So far Woody and 23 other investors have funded $20 million of 
the $24 million pro legalization campaign. 23 people financing 83.3 
percent of a campaign that will affect millions of people.

Monopoly?

- - Marc Parsley, Willits
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom