Pubdate: Mon, 01 Feb 2016 Source: Trentonian, The (NJ) Copyright: 2016 The Trentonian Contact: http://www.trentonian.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1006 Author: Dave Neese, For The Trentonian POT LEGALIZATION PIPE DREAM Is the Zonker community inclined to overindulge in the product it champions - namely, marijuana? Seems so. That could explain the yawning gaps in Zonker logic - the apparent burnt spots in the medial temporal lobes from the pothead community's misfiring synapses. The Zonker community takes its name from Zonker Harris, the cannabis-addled character in the Doonesbury comic strip. Talking up marijuana, Zonker's namesakes illogically say that since alcohol is legal, marijuana should be too. Alcohol fuels crime, domestic abuse, deteriorating health, bankruptcy and highway carnage, to name just a few. So, heck, why not legalize marijuana along with it? By this "logic," if there's a bubonic plague loose on the land, what's the harm in a little ol' outbreak of Ebola as well? According to the University of Colorado Medical School's research, fatal traffic accidents involving marijuana use increased from 4.5 percent of highway deaths to 10 percent after the legalization of marijuana in that state. Now, marijuana legalization efforts are rolling down the runways of other states with the hope of taking wing. So, a question: Do we really want the Zonker Harris cohort behind the wheel padding such statistics as the 35,000- plus annual traffic fatalities we already have? Just asking. Yes, there are way scarier statistics than the ones involving weed. There are the 88,000-plus annual deaths the CDC attributes to alcohol. Then there are the 33,600 annual firearms deaths. But if that constitutes a national crisis, as progressives never tire of telling us, what label do we apply to the 47,000 annual deaths attributed to dope? To ODs and such? And keep in mind, a certain number of the firearm deaths might better be counted in the dopedeaths column, given the open warfare on the streets by armed gangs fighting over narcotics turf. The Zonker community, while prone to snigger over nothing in particular, is especially prone to be overcome by a case of mirthful giggles at the thought of the old "Reefer Madness" propaganda campaigns waged back in the day. Folks were depicted as taking a toke and being transformed into rapists and ax murderers. Undeniably, there was a lot of shouting "Wolf!" But the moral of the Boy Who Shouted Wolf story is not that there are no wolves. Or that wolves are nothing to be concerned about. Not all of the second thoughts being voiced today on pot are coming from panic-promoting anti-drug czars with self-aggrandizing political agendas. Medical research is raising questions about the neurological implications of marijuana use, especially among adolescents. Studies published in reputable research journals have reported a correlation - not yet a proven causation but a clear statistical correlation - between marijuana use and later heroin, cocaine and meth use. In other words, indications are that marijuana is indeed a "gateway" to more serious drug abuse. Correlation findings include research reported in 2014 in the journal European Neuropsychopharmacology. A 2003 study of twins, published in the AMA's journal, also reported a statistical correlation between pot smoking and more hard-core drug use. Just from a commonsense standpoint, can you realistically visualize first-time drug experimenters taking up needles, spoons, rubber tubing and the other accoutrements of heroin use without ever having gone through the intermediate step of smoking pot? True, most marijuana smokers don't go on to use heroin, coke or meth. But it's a likely winning wager that virtually all heroin, coke or meth addicts used (maybe still are using) marijuana. Don't confuse legalization with decriminalization. Decriminalization - - traffic ticket-type fines for minor possession infractions instead of draconian sentences - makes sense. Legalization, not necessarily. The Canadian Medical Association advises its physician members that they may decline to prescribe medical cannabis due to "insufficient evidence on clinical risks and benefits." Dr. Mark Ward of Canada's McGill University Health Center, a leading cannabis researcher and no hysteric on the subject, says he agrees with that policy to this extent: "We need more research." The Zonkers are no longer lonesome fringe figures in their quest for legalization. They have acquired powerful allies in revenue-ravenous state and local governments and school districts. The allies are desperate to cover the costs of their corpulent bureaucracies. They have over-priced payrolls and humongous pension liabilities to feed. And the bureaucracies see marijuana legalization as a moneymaker. Legalize it and tax it! You can practically hear the lips smacking in the back rooms of the state legislatures. Parsimonious taxpayers refuse to forfeit their final farthings to yet more income and sales and property taxes, not to mention myriad fees. But maybe, just maybe, they'll go for a legalized-pot tax measure. Legalization referenda shrewdly avoid phrasing the question for voters to ponder as an indulgence of the Zonker community's recreational reveries. Instead, the legalization referenda are phrased as revenue-raisin' tax acts to educate children, save the environment and accomplish other worthy and noble goals. The revenue ruse gives libertarians what psychologists call cognitive dissonance - extreme discomfort from being confronted with fervently held but directly conflicting values. Libertarians' flagship journal, Reason magazine, loves marijuanalegalization as much as it hates government bureaucracy and taxes. What's a poor conflicted libertarian to do! Being of pristine ideological belief, Reason grapples with the dilemma. Ultimately, the emirs of libertarian dogma come down on the side of opposing the practical politics of marketing pot legalization as a revenue measure. As Reason accurately notes, first of all this sales approach has the hallmarks of a typical political tax scam. Short of the entire population becoming Zonkers, there's no revenue pot of gold at the end of marijuana legalization rainbow. Taking into account the several special and ordinary sales and use taxes levied on legalized Colorado grass, the levies collected pursuant thereto cover not even 1 percent of the state's budget. And Colorado is much less a big spender than, say, New Jersey. Still, such as the revenue is, the Zonkers are counting on the bureaucracy to develop an irreversible craving for it that will keep any legalization repeal initiatives at bay. The pot legalizers roll out the example of the "failed" alcohol Prohibition of the 1920s. However ill-advised it was in practical terms, Prohibition did in fact sharply curtail alcohol consumption and its negative consequences. Ultimately, Repeal was instituted in large measure thanks to the lobbying efforts of powerful distillery and brewery interests and the government's desperation quest for revenues and jobs in the Great Depression - and less so due to concerns about Al Capone and the outlaw element. Re-legalizing booze and brew and regulating and taxing them worked because they are liquid bulk products not easily hidden or smuggled. They are far more difficult to hide and smuggle than, for example, pot, coke, heroin and meth. A second marijuana legalization sales pitch - that commercialization of pot will put the vicious Mexican narcobanditos out of business - is likewise farfetched. Already, Colorado's legalization initiative has activated an extensive regulatory apparatus. Legalization has awakened a burrowing bureaucracy reminiscent of the those toothy gastropods - the giant, wormlike "exogorths" - of Star Wars. Regulating and taxing marijuana, it turns out, entails an army of clerks, administrators, auditors, inspectors, programmers, attorneys, HR monitors, coordinators, interfacers and what-have-you. And being public-sector employees, they must, of course, be well provided with paid holidays not provided in the private sector, including such as Presidents Day, Columbus Day and King Day. And they must have a double layer of protection including unionization and civil service. The banditos are loaded down with no such personnel burdens. Thus they can easily undercut the price of the legalized market. The banditos continue to flourish in Denver and other Colorado pot markets even as they reinvest the profits in coke, heroin and meth diversification. If anything, legalization drums up business for them. And, of course, the banditos also have full, exclusive use of a highly effective management tool to encourage productivity: grisly violence including but not limited to dismemberment and such. The legalize-regulate-and-tax initiative is, in sum, but the latest installment in the long chronicle of snake-oil peddlers hustling their miracle, cure-all tonics. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom