Posted on 06/23/2014 12:17:27 PM PDT by Kaslin
On Friday, Senators Rand Paul (R-KY) and Corey Booker (D-NJ) offered a medical marijuana amendment on the floor of the Senate. The bill is a massive win for states rights, as it outlaws the Department of Justice and the Drug Enforcement Agency from undermining state marijuana laws and prohibits the DEA from interfering with the production of hemp in states where it is legal.
There is simply no reason the federal government should be trampling over state laws to perform armed SWAT-team raids on state-legal medical marijuana dispensaries. Destroying property and hauling entrepreneurs off to jail is not the proper role of the federal government.
In addition, these federal laws get between patients and their medicine. Conservative commentator Michelle Malkin has written for this site about why she supports legal medical marijuana:
More than 15 years ago in Seattle, while working at The Seattle Times, I met an extraordinary man who changed my mind about the issue. Ralph Seeley was a Navy nuclear submarine officer, pilot, cellist and lawyer suffering from chordoma, a rare form of bone cancer that starts in the spine. He had undergone several surgeries, including removal of one lung and partial removal of the other, and was confined to a wheelchair.
Chronically nauseous from chemotherapy and radiation, weak from a suppressed appetite, and suffering excruciating pain, Seeley turned to marijuana cigarettes for relief.
Contrary to cultural stereotype, Seeley was far from "wasted." While smoking the drug to reduce his pain, he finished law school -- something he couldn't have done while on far more powerful "mainstream" narcotics, which left him zonked out and vomiting uncontrollably in his hospital bed after chemo.
And she describes whats at stake when the feds ignore what states want to fight the costly and ineffective War on Drugs (which is actually a war on patients).
When you get past all the "Rocky Mountain High" jokes and look past all the cable-news caricatures, the legalized marijuana entrepreneurs here in my adopted home state are just like any other entrepreneurs: securing capital, paying taxes, complying with a thicket of regulations, taking risks and providing goods and services that ordinary people want and need. Including our grateful family.
Nothing about the way the War on Drugs has been prosecuted passes the small-government or, for that matter, common-sense test.
Jailing small business owners who are operating according to the laws in their state? Fail. Distorting police incentives to ignore violent and property-related crimes to go after petty drug possession? Fail. Creating the worlds largest prison population, which is taxpayer-funded? Fail. Justifying laws which allow police to steal peoples property, including their cash and cars, without ever charging them with a crime? Fail. Allowing the DEA to work with the NSA to comb through phone, email, and social media records to find low-level drug dealers without ever needing a warrant? Fail. Arming police departments with tanks, machine guns, and SWAT gear which are used mostly to bust casual pot users and shoot their dogs while theyre at it? Fail. Fail. Fail.
Rand Paul and Corey Booker are doing great work by reining in the overgrown DEA and putting a check on federal power. Ultimately, the DEA needs to be disbanded and the entire War on Drugs needs to be relegated to the dustbin of history. But this is a good first step.
The federal “War on Drugs” has not only been a massive failure and done more harm than good, it is unconstitutional. Nowhere does the Constitution give the federal government power over an individual’s choice to take drugs.
George Soros agrees.
All the ‘war on drugs’ has done is send people to jail for having harmless fun, raising the cost of pot because it is illegal, and cause crime to GROW because there is MONEY TO BE MADE in illegal pot.
As a FORMER smoker (and also a FORMER drinker) I can say from experience it is far less harmful than alcohol - everything in moderation.
Right. The 18th Amendment was needed to give the Feds power to ban booze. It was a bad idea, but at least the prohibitionists were honest about it. The drug prohibitionists are dishonest about it.
War on Drugs and legalization should be two separate issues. America sucks, it’s going to suck a lot more when more people are smoking pot. Yes, more people will be smoking pot when it’s legal.
And the Mexican cartels that use our federal lands to grow plantations of the stuff.
So, the HIGH powered recreational marijuana the potheads are now selling in Colorado and Washington is “medical marijuana” too? (As is implied in the first paragraph). Well, as long as the politicians “tax the hell out of it”, who am I to complain? Everybody’s Happy Happy Happy.
As Reagan once alluded, the things we stand for and the direction we choose - whether we hold and value the Constitution as the rule of law and the protector of our God-given freedoms - are ultimately not questions of Left or Right but Up or Down.
The drug issue is a state's issue that the people of each state must deal with as they see fit.
End the WOD and end the government tyranny.
Brave New World of legal drugs, open borders and sex with kids is coming.
Libertardians...
The left is good at putting us in no win situations. I think our fight is with the tyrant. The left will just use legalization to grow government by regulating it or whatever.
ever read Brave New World?
Tyrants love Soma
it’s just fun to use crack... pass it out to all the kids!!
Can’t deny those children their “harmless fun”!
seriously?
No it would not. DO you really think tyranny will end if drugs were legal?
don’t be stupid...
we are talking about POT not crack...
Bingo. The Right needs to get that.
THE BIG issue of the day is the $4 TRILLION FEDERAL GOVERNMENT GORILLA. Too many on the Right don't seem to understand this oversized, grossly unconstitutional government is by far the greatest threat to our freedoms, way of life, and posterity.
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