Pubdate: Mon, 09 May 2016 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2016 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/submissions/#1 Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: Joe Garofoli SUPPORTERS OF LEGAL POT STRIVE TO WIN OVER FAITHFUL The reason marijuana might actually be legalized for adult recreational use in California this November is because professionals - - not stoners - are running the campaign this time. This crew is so straight that the wackiest guy to speak at the campaign's kickoff event the other day in San Francisco was Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, a Republican from Orange County who used to be a speechwriter for President Ronald Reagan. Yet even though the 68-year-old Rohrabacher told me he hasn't fired up since he was 23, it sounded as if he might have caught some secondhand caught some secondhand smoke out on Post Street when he compared the fight to legalize marijuana to Reagan going to Germany and telling Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to "tear down that wall." "Today, I think we're sending the message that the walls of cannabis prohibition and this tyranny that our people have faced are coming down," Rohrabacher said. "Join us in tearing down this wall." 'Softening' on legalization There's an even bigger wall that supporters of legalization need to scale. It's the wall surrounding churches in many African American and Latino communities. Getting over that wall will be one of the keys to winning the legalization campaign being steered by a combination of political pros and longtime advocates. Six years ago, when California NAACP Chairwoman Alice Huffman was one of the few black leaders to support the failed Proposition 19 legalization measure, she couldn't even get inside African American churches to talk about the issue. A group of black leaders led by a Sacramento pastor called for her ouster, as they wondered why "would the state NAACP advocate for blacks to stay high?" Their opposition closed many church doors to Huffman and other legalization advocates. "They thought I was crazy," Huffman told me the other day. Church leaders told her marijuana was a gateway to harder drugs (not true) and blamed much of the violence in their communities on weed. "I understand that they're fearful. They see people die. They see people incarcerated," Huffman said. "But what they were doing was miseducating a lot of people about cannabis." She and others have spent the past few years explaining how African Americans are nearly four times as likely (and Latinos 2.5 times) to to be arrested for drug use and possession. Slowly, over the past few years, Huffman and others say there has been what they call "a softening" on legalization. With everyone from Black Lives Matter supporters to presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders now talking about mass incarceration and the federal government's failed war on drugs, more people are willing to at least listen to arguments in favor of legalizing weed. "I say 'regulating,' " Huffman corrects, "because 'legalizing' is too hard for them to hear. It makes the fear factor come forth." Drug war's long-term effects Now, roughly a dozen pastors statewide are actually supporting the legalization campaign. "I hear a whole lot of people say, 'The war on drugs destroyed our community' - they weren't saying that in 2010," Huffman said. "We felt like we've educated them - to a point." Huffman said church leaders still "might not come right and say, 'Oh, we're with you, we love you, we're on board.' But that's not what I want. What I want is for them not to miseducate their members, so that they can make their own choice. I just want them to say, 'We'll pass this on to our members.' And that's been real progress." The challenge is harder in Latino religious communities. The Catholic Church, influential in the Latino community, opposed Prop. 19. Some legalization advocates remember seeing priests in East Los Angeles handing out anti-Prop. 19 leaflets six years ago. And it's more difficult for advocates to tap into their Pentecostal and evangelical churches, which aren't networked to the degree African American churches are. Now, there's hope that the Catholic Church will remain neutral on this year's Adult Use of Marijuana Act, said Armando Gudino, who organizes in the Latino community for the Drug Policy Alliance. He hears from parents who are comforted seeing that teen marijuana use remained flat in Colorado after that state legalized weed. "People in the Latino community are realizing that the war on drugs is creating more harm in their community than legalization would," Gudino said. "You can be caught with a joint - and living here with a green card for 30 years - and be deported." Unusual coalition People also see how mass incarceration is hurting their community, he said. "Once you start that conversation, you're just a few sentences away from legalization." Huffman is feeling confident that if church communities continue to soften, legalization could pass - with the help of what she called "one of the most unusual coalitions I've ever been a part of. You'd never get me up there with that Republican guy on anything else." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom