America’s ‘Preposterous War On Pot’ Continues
source: http://pubrecord.org/nation/6012/americas-war-on-pot-continues/
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- WakeUpPeople
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People convicted of possessing even one ounce of marijuana can face a mandatory minimum sentence of a year in jail, and having even one plant in your yard is a federal felony,” progressive organizer Jim Hightower and co-author Phillip Frazer point out in the November issue of “The Hightower Lowdown.”
Police arrest someone in America every 36 seconds on marijuana charges, with a record 872,000 arrests made in 2007, “more than for all violent crimes combined,” Hightower and Frazer point out. They note that 89 per cent of all marijuana arrests “are for simple possession of the weed, not for producing or selling it.”
They argue the drug war “is doing far more harm than marijuana itself ever will,” because (1) it diverts hundreds of thousands of police agents from serious crimes “to the pursuit of harmless tokers”; (2) it costs taxpayers at minimum $10 billion a year to catch, prosecute and incarcerate marijuana users and sellers; (3) it enables government to snatch the cars, money, computers and other properties of people caught up in drug raids even if they have had no charges filed against them; and (4) it allows “police agents at all levels to trample our Bill of Rights in their eagerness to nab pot consumers.”
The drug war has also unleashed a torrent of racism in the form of unjust sentencing, which confines crack-cocaine users who are mostly black to prison for longer terms than powder snorters, who are mostly white.
Hightower and Frazer say authorities have perverted the infamous “Patriot Act” of 2001 for use in non-terrorism cases, allowing “sneak-and-peak” search warrants to be used in drug war probes, including pursuit of marijuana users.
The Act’s provisions were supposed to be applied only for suspected terrorist acts. Only three of the Justice Department’s 763 requests for “sneak-and-peak” last year were used for terrorism searches, they report in Lowdown.
By outlawing drugs, Hightower and Frazer contend, Congress has created “a vast, murderous narco-state within Mexico” to satisfy U.S. consumer demand for the drugs. And Plan Colombia, the multi-billion-dollar operation started by Bill Clinton in 2000 to eradicate coca production there, has failed, judging by the 15 percent increase in coca production.
For all the legislation against it, pot is more plentiful than ever and 10 per cent of Americans told surveyors they have enjoyed using it in the previous year while four in ten say they used it at some point in their lives.
Plus, a 2005 survey found 85 per cent of high school seniors claimed pot was “easy to get”, easier than alcohol, which is a regulated drug, The Hightower Lowdown points out.
The publication quotes a University of Michigan student who told them, “If the government trusts society to use alcohol responsibly, it is idiotic to assume citizens are somehow incapable of responsible use of cannabis.”
A Gallup opinion poll in 2005 found 51 percent of Americans stating that alcohol is more dangerous than marijuana and 52 per cent saying pot should be legalized, taxed, and regulated.
State and local governments, Hightower and Frazer report, “have begun walking step by step away from the weed war.” Since 1996, 13 states from Rhode Island to Alaska have passed laws to allow growing and distribution of doctor-prescribed marijuana for medical purposes.
What’s more, pot possession is no longer criminalized in a dozen states: Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio and Oregon.
The drive now is for outright legalization of pot, the authors say. This would enable officials to take the exorbitant profit and violence out of illicit black-market weed by legalizing it and turning it into a revenue-producer that would rake in tax dollars.
Instead, the Office of National Drug Control Policy says, Americans spend $9 billion a year buying pot from Mexico; $10 billion on pot from Canada, and $39 billion on home-grown pot, now America’s Numero Uno cash crop – “topping the value of corn and wheat combined.”
By one estimate, legalization would produce annual tax revenues of $6.2 billion. In Portugal, which legalized all drugs in 2001, hard drug use has showed a stunning decline while the numbers of people getting detox aid has soared, Time magazine reported on April 26. By contrast, the United States has the highest rates of drug use in the world.
As Rep. Barney Frank has said, “I now think it’s time for the politicians to catch up to the public. The notion that you lock people up for smoking marijuana is pretty silly.”
more at link...
http://pubrecord.org/nation/6012/americas-war-on-pot-continues/
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- tags:
- News, US News, Cannabis, War on Drugs, 1 more
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Roseann_Schutz
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Someday folks will be able to have their medicine without fear of imprisonment! I believe that less people will choose alcohol over cannabis and that the crime rate will go down. Also, folks will be more relaxed and nicer to each other!! Our country needs the revenue now! In addition, hemp isn't pesticide dependent like cotton!! Legalize it!!!
- 2 years ago
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Roseann_Schutz
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jubal
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Keeping Marijuana illegal in America is a multi billion dollar bonanza for corporations who provide ancillary services to law enforcement.
- 2 years ago
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jubal
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sugarlilly
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i'm SO SO SO grateful i was born when i was. my whole family smokes! back in the day, there were serious (seriously ridiculous) consequences for even getting caught with a piece! i can't even blame my family for how paranoid they are. a year in jail just for possession! ridiculous!!!!
"In Portugal, which legalized all drugs in 2001, hard drug use has showed a stunning decline while the numbers of people getting detox aid has soared, Time magazine reported on April 26. By contrast, the United States has the highest rates of drug use in the world."
in sociology this is called the forbidden fruit factor. humans want what they cannot have. the end. make it available, people will try it, maybe even get really into it for awhile, but eventually drop the habit or use it in moderation. tell a person "NO" right off the bat with no reasoning behind it and ALAS, we have a country of addicts.
- 2 years ago
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sugarlilly
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steven7
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I truly believe that Marijuana will be legalized and it should be. Legalizing it would help our economy drastically. I think everyone will act stupid and abuse Marijuana. But of course there will be rules like being 21 to purchase it and only buying so much a day. But if people are smoking, selling, growing, baking and much more now that is illegal imagine when it is legal. So why not benefit by having idiots waste there money daily on weed and helping the economy?
- 2 years ago
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steven7
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JETaylor
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The fourth paragraph says it all. Would you give up that kind of power.
- 2 years ago
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JETaylor
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Progresshiv
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Pot smokers don't make good little proles.
- 2 years ago
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Progresshiv
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grape
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hopefully it is just going to take a couple more political generations to get this ball of weed rolling. i mean, the pro's are all too obvious and the con's have become all too obvious.
its like telling someone who is on fire to simply jump in water ...but they won't. - 2 years ago
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grape
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passjay
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The public wants this to be legalized so badly that it can taste it...that's why it's in the news everyday in some fashion..........congress should go ahead and just make it legal already...anyways...I've heard that legalizing weed would help the economy to an extent.
- 2 years ago
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passjay
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SleepDirt
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The 'war' on drugs was a sham from the beginning and it feeds the for-profit private prison system with many people that should never have been jailed at all.
- 2 years ago
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SleepDirt
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WakeUpPeople
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Continuing this completely unwinnable war is ludicrous. Prohibition is the govt telling you that they know what's best for you, and therefore you should be denied some of the simple pleasures in life. We are throwing away billions of dollars of revenue every year, and the drug cartels are picking it up and thanking our govt for it. Absurdity.
- 2 years ago
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WakeUpPeople
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Maeveeo
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What if BOOZE was treated like Weed then what would you do ????? HUH ?
I mean it has provin to be much worst ,,,,,,RIGHT ????? Maybe it were the other way around ,,,people would live LONGER ,,,,Right ? & Alot more people
would still be alive .......RIGHT ? But to the people who drink that stuff I AM CRAZY !
,,,,,,,,,RIGHT ?????? - 2 years ago
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Maeveeo
