Source: Little Rock Free Press (AR) Pubdate: Wed 17 Feb 1999 Contact: http://www.aristotle.net/FREEP Author: Jack Page (President of NORML Arkansas) APATHY, AMERICA'S GREATEST VICE Marijuana has become more to me than a healthier and more pleasant alternative to alcohol and other drugs. Marijuana has become the symbol of oppression in our country and across the globe. It is the catalyst that has created the healthy skepticism I have concerning our federal government, replacing the blind faith of ignorance. It truly amazes me how so many Americans are content with their government. We Americans have so much money that we don't mind our elected officials wasting millions after millions of our hard earned tax dollars in their own petty partisan quarrels. We don't mind when they spend millions more covering-up their lies and misinformation which were the foundation upon which the war on drugs was created. The problem is that we Americans are inherently selfish to the bone. Why should we care that 2.1 million other Americans were arrested for marijuana under President Clinton's administration alone?! Why should we care that millions of other Americans are suffering from cancer, AIDS and the like and are denied access to the most responsive therapy?! Why should we care that federal agencies are busting-down doors to other Americans' homes and businesses on a daily basis and seizing everything they own and keeping it even after they are proven innocent.?! It didn't happen to us--that's their dumb luck!! I have been involved in the defense of your freedom against the war on drugs for almost four years now. I started in California getting signatures for the petition that birthed Proposition 215 which legalized marijuana for medical use for the state of California. As you should know by now, Prop. 215 pioneered the successful legislation to legalize and decriminalize marijuana that is now sweeping the nation. As it now stands, five states have legalized marijuana for medical use and eleven states have decriminalized possession of marijuana for personal use. This is all fine and dandy except that the federal government is not recognizing these states' sovereignty and has been opposing the will of the people who put them in office and pay their salaries. As an insider I'd like to reveal a little known fact about the now historic Prop. 215. It came very close to never making it past the petition stage. We were at the proverbial brink of failure as the financial support required for such an effort was close to running out halfway into the campaign. For a period of two weeks or so the petition drive came to a halt as we sat on the sidelines anxiously awaiting our fate. Just as we were resigning ourselves to failure, it happened. Someone very rich and powerful in the state got busted buying marijuana for a sick family member. We were never told who it was, but we knew it was somebody big as the money started rolling in better than anticipated and the rest, as they say, is history. And now, as president of NORML Arkansas, I see the same selfish apathy that is the true enemy of freedom. You would be amazed, if not appalled, by how many pot smokers I've talked to about getting involved with the fight for their freedom only to hear the same selfish apathy. The most response I've seen has been from people who are those other Americans -- those citizens whom have personally felt the crushing fist of oppression which is the war on drugs. You would think that we Americans would have learned by now that prevention is half the cure. Has the AIDS epidemic taught us anything?! It will be a little too late to fight for your own freedom from an out-of-touch, self-serving federal government when you have a row of bars between you and the rest of the world. Every 49 seconds an American is arrested for marijuana (according to FBI statistics). Each and every one of you that smoke pot are in extreme jeopardy of being the next casualty of the war on drugs. None of you are safe -- none of you are truly free (unless, of course, your father is the governor). The following is an excerpt from "STILL CRAZY AFTER ALL THESE YEARS: Marijuana Prohibition, 1937- 1997; A Report Issued by NORML on the Occasion of the 60th Anniversary of Marijuana Prohibition." "The 'war on drugs' is not really about drugs; if it were, tobacco and alcohol would be the primary targets. They are the most commonly used and abused drugs in America and unquestionably cause far more harm to the user and to society than does marijuana. Yet neither is illegal. "America tried to prohibit alcohol, but soon discovered that the crime and violence associated with prohibition was more damaging than the evil sought to be prohibited. With tobacco, America has learned over the past two decades that education is the most effective way to discourage use. Americans smoke far fewer cigarettes today than in the past without having the criminal justice system issue a single arrest, administer one drug test, seize any property, or sentence anyone to jail. Yet, the federal government fails to apply these lessons toward a rational and effective marijuana policy. Instead, politicians continue to support and enforce a failed, 60-year old public policy at the expense of rational discourse, billions in misappropriated funds and resources, and many of the founding principles and freedoms that America was built upon. The 'war on drugs' has become largely a war on marijuana smokers, and the casualties of this war are the wrecked lives and the destroyed families of the half a million otherwise law-abiding citizens who are arrested each year on marijuana charges." - --- MAP posted-by: Pat Dolan