Legal Marijuana: It's Coming, Whether You Like it or Not
Paul Armentano has an exciting summary of various marijuana reform legislation, initiatives, etc. that are moving forward around the country. Meanwhile, The Washington Post had a report Monday entitled Support for legalizing marijuana grows rapidly around U.S., celebrating the issue's forward momentum in terms of public opinion and political victories.
Looking around the room, it seems we've moved beyond the question of whether marijuana reform is possible, and everyone seems to be asking instead when the breakthrough will occur or what form it will take. And no, I don't think there's anything misplaced or unhealthy about this sudden sense of inevitability. Time has always been on our side and optimism is a very necessary virtue in the fight for social and political change.
A wise colleague (I think it was this guy) recently suggested to me that we should stop introducing our arguments with phrases like "if marijuana were legal…" and instead say, "when marijuana is legal…" and he's exactly right. One of our greatest obstacles has always been a widespread lack of faith that our politicians and fellow citizens would ever stand with us in great enough numbers to create a mandate for reform. That simple assumption stops untold numbers of potentially great activists dead in their tracks before they ever sign up for an email list, send a letter to the editor, or make a small donation. It also helps explain why the press spent decades fueling anti-drug hysteria and investing in the drug war doctrine, even after the case for reform had begun to bubble beneath the surface.
Yet, the instant that spell is broken, you get the opposite result. People you'd never heard of prior to this year are leading legalization efforts in California. Journalists you've known for decades are speaking out about drug policy reform for the first time in their careers. And the leaders of the drug war army are experimenting with new language to replace the failed propaganda that so profoundly discredited their predecessors.
So those who have a problem with legalizing marijuana should really consider doing everyone (including themselves) a favor and refrain from spending the next several years trying in vain to prevent this from taking place. It's going to happen one way or the other and it's going to work, because we're all going to make sure it works.
Ten years after marijuana legalization takes hold in America, almost everyone will agree that it's an improvement, and those who most vigorously opposed it will probably deny ever having done so.










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Marijuana shouldn't follow alcohol model
Comment posted by William Aiken on Sat, 11/28/2009 - 8:35pmWilliam Aiken
In forwarding the debate of marijuana legalization, the comparisons to alcohol as a regulated model give plenty of ammunition to our adversaries. The main point being that the cost of harm caused by alcohol is far greater than any tax revenue that's collected. We live in a culture that encourages drinking on every ocassion due to the billions spent on alcohol advertising. The regulation model for pot will be similiar to the restrictions of tabacco advertising, even though pot is far less harmful than tabacco.
When legalization arrives there's no way it will have the luxury, perks and loop holes that the alcohol industry enjoys. Pot will be taxed at much higher rate, the ability to advertise will be severly restricted and the licensing of it's distribution will be tightly regulated. Don;t forget that the alcohol industry has spend milllions funding "The Partnership for a Drug Free America". They have successfully lobbied Congress to defeat many sensible measure to identify the possible harms of their product through warning lables. And you can forget about any tax on alcohol to pay for the astronomical damages it causes society. Their influence is everywhere in government, the FDA and the broadcasters. The last thing they want to see is any laws legitimizing pot.
SAFER is wise to make comparative arguments with pot and alcohol. There is a mountain of evidence to expose the hypocriscy of pot prohibition that will win the hearts and minds of the public. Science based education is our biggest ally. Getting the message out will be the challenging aspect as the acohol industry has lock on the broadcasters. Once this monopoly is exposed then prohibition of pot will really fall like a house of cards.