Tag: medical marijuana

  • Pot is in the news

    From the LA Times:

    Tucked deep inside the 1,603-page federal spending measure is a
    provision that effectively ends the federal government’s prohibition on
    medical marijuana and signals a major shift in drug policy.

    The
    bill’s passage over the weekend marks the first time Congress has
    approved nationally significant legislation backed by legalization
    advocates. It brings almost to a close two decades of tension between
    the states and Washington over medical use of marijuana.

    Also, I think more significant, as as reported by USA Today:

    Marijuana use among teens declined this year even as two states,
    Colorado and Washington, legalized the drug for recreational use, a
    national survey released Tuesday found.

    Of course we can’t be certain till we try it, but all evidence (seen in the
    US, Portugal, and the Netherlands) seems to show that ending
    prohibition does not increase drug use. This is a big deal because the effect of prohibition versus regulation (ie: legalization) on drug use really is the core issue related to people’s support of the drug war.

    If ending the drug war lowered drug use — and it’s a big “if” but it’s certainly a possibility — would you still support the war on drugs. Is the war on drugs worth fighting for it’s own sake simply because drugs are wrong? Even if that same drug war causes more people to take and be harmed by drugs?

    If you can’t conceive of how ending the drug war could reduce drug use, consider these factors, in no particular order:

    1) Kids love doing what they’re not supposed to do.
    2) Peer pressure is stronger when you’re doing something illegal. To protect yourself, there’s greater pressure to implicate everybody.
    3) Drugs can be dangerous. Honest education is better at reducing harms than “just say no” and cracked eggs on a frying pan.
    4) I’ve yet to meet anybody who says they would love to try heroin, if only it were legal and regulated. People do or don’t take drugs for many reasons, the law seems pretty low on the list. 

    5) Prohibition doesn’t actually work. Drugs are not hard to get.

  • Brokeback Marijuana

    It amazes me that all those rugged western cowboy can get all Big State when it comes to drugs (actually, nothing really amazes me in the war on the drugs).

    The headline reads: In Montana, an Economic Boom Faces Repeal Effort. Really? Because you’d think they wouldn’t be in a position to shut down money-making agriculture.

    A resurgent Republican majority elected last fall is leading a drive to repeal the six-year-old voter-approved statute permitting the use of marijuana for medical purposes, which opponents argue is promoting recreational use and crime.

    Promoting recreational use? Who cares. Ain’t much else to do with all that nature. And maybe fewer people will take meth. Perhaps they problem is that they’ve become too dependent on taking our money. That’s what they’re really addicted to. Talk about a culture of poverty.

    As to legal marijuana promoting crime? I’d like to see some of those pesky “facts.” [A quick search of Montana crime rates shows less crime than six years ago.]

    An industry group of marijuana growers (probably exaggerating a bit, but whatever) claims they spend $12 million annually around the state and created 1,400 (legal) jobs.

    Montana has 975,000 people.

    975,000 people.

    Man oh man… The Borough of Queens has 2.3 million people. 165,000 people live in my neighborhood.

    I guess Montana is so booming that they can do without their one free-market agricultural success story. I mean, who needs to work if you get $380 million in federal farm welfare last year.

    It’s a shame Montana, Wyoming, and the two Dakotas–with a combined population of 3 million–get 8 senators to represent their world-view of small government and pseudo “self-sufficiency.”

    These four states collectively sucked up $1.9 billion in farm welfare in 2009. They wouldn’t survive without government largess. Maybe we should take some of that dole away, at least until they reconsider their position on profit-making agriculture.

    And yet not surprisingly, the same people who shout loudest again big government are really just closeted. These welfare queens (here’s a good story) say they hate Washington, but then they get a look at all sexy green coming from D.C., and they say, “I just can’t quit you!”

  • Prop 19

    Here’s Neill Franklin, executive director of LEAP. He’s also my former commanding officer, friend (though not when he was my former commander), and co-author.

  • Mobile Marijuana Dispensaries

    I enjoy watching California’s marijuana laws evolve. That’s the way we should be dealing with drugs. Delivery services are one way people are getting their weed in California (and in New York City, too, even though it’s clearly illegal here).

    I’m all for legal and regulated drugs. And yet I wouldn’t want to live next to a marijuana dispensary. Nor for that matter would I want to live next to a bar, barking dogs, cigar smokers, a child daycare center, or an older Italian couple that puts our their TV in the summer and watches “Wheel of Fortune” at high volume. But sometimes you do (I put up the latter).

    So now the anti-marijuana crowd and some police wants to crack down on the mobile weed dealers. Why? I’m not certain. Seems to me that a delivery service is the ideal way to deliver drugs. No congregating. No street dealers. Nobody gets hurt.

  • L.A. acts to cap medical marijuana dispensaries

    I’m all for regulation. But a ban on locations within 1,000 feet of a residence could be the same as a ban. We’ll see.

    The storyin the LA Times.

  • Support for legal marijuana growing

    Or so says the Washington Post.

    “Seriously,” said Bruce Merkin, communications director for the Marijuana Policy Project, an advocacy group based in the District, “there is a reason you don’t have Mexican beer cartels planting fields of hops in the California forests.”

  • The Curious Case of Barry McCaffrey

    General Barry McCaffrey was the Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (the “Drug Czar”) from 1996 to 2001.

    I can’t say much about his military career (1964-1996). I think it was just and honorable. He commanded a division in Operation Desert Storm and later the U.S. Southern Command. Wikipedia also says he created “the first Human Rights Council and Human Rights Code of Conduct for U.S. Military Joint Command.” Seems damned decent.

    But the Barry McCaffrey I know, the Clinton Drug Czar McCaffrey, is either a bald-faced liar or delusional. Until last night, I assumed the former. But when you talk to a man who steadfastly denies the truth with vigor, I wonder.

    Exhibit A: The “Unmitigated Disaster”

    In 1998, McCaffrey told CNN’s “Talkback Live” that the murder rate in Holland was twice that in the US. “The overall crime rate in Holland is probably 40 percent higher than the United States,” said McCaffrey. That’s drugs.” He called Dutch drug policy, “an unmitigated disaster.”

    The Dutch government’s Central Planning Bureau poured scorn on McCaffrey’s figures. Official data put the Dutch murder rate at 1.8 per 100,000 people in 1996, up from 1.5 at the start of the decade. The Dutch say the U.S. rate is 9.3 per 100,000.

    “The figure (McCaffrey is using) is not right. He is adding in attempted murders,” a planning bureau spokesman said.

    Confronted with reality, McCaffrey denied it.

    Instead of apologizing for the error, McCaffrey’s deputy, Jim McDonough, responded, “Let’s say she’s right. What you are left with is that they are a much more violent society and more inept [at murder], and that’s not much to brag about.”

    A month later, McCaffrey defended himself:

    There was a huge uproar (in Holland) over murder rates and crime stats, and was I right or wrong?… For an American to suggest that their crime rates were higher than the U.S. absolutely blew their mind

    Actually, what blows their mind is that a man of such importance could lie. Though McCaffrey did finally admit that Dutch drug policy may just be a “mitigated disaster.”

    That whole bit is classic good ammo for the anti-drug-war cause. But it’s 11 years ago now. And I don’t like to hold grudges. So imagine my surprise last night.

    Exhibit B: Conant v. McCaffrey

    After being kind enough to tell me good things about my father (before we were on the air), McCaffrey whole-hoggedly denies what happened when he was Drug Czar. “Nonsense!” McCaffrey says. The Cato Institute’s Tim Lynch sets him straight.

    You can read more of Lynch’s excellent take on McCaffrey here:

    Whatever one’s view happens to be on drug policy, the historical record is there for any fair-minded person to see — and yet McCaffrey looked right into the camera and denied past actions by himself and other federal agents. And he didn’t say, “I think that’s wrong” or “I don’t remember it that way.” He baldly asserted that my recounting of the facts was “nonsense.” Now I suppose some will say that falsehoods are spoken on TV fairly often–maybe, I’m not sure–but it is distressing that this character held the posts that he did and that he continues to instruct cadets at West Point!

    The court case, Conant v. McCaffrey was in McCaffrey’s name, for crying out loud! [though the decision was renamed Conant v. Walters by the time it became law of the land in 2002.]

    Does McCaffrey not remember it? Does he believe it never happened? I’m tempted to believe the general at his word. Which means… well… I’ll leave you to decide. Here’s what the court ruled in 2000:

    On December 30, 1996, less than two months after the Compassionate Use Act[Medicinal Marijuana]took effect, the Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy[that’s McCaffrey]… stated “that a practitioner’s action of recommending or prescribing Schedule I controlled substances[that’s marijuana]is not consistent with the ‘public interest’ … and will lead to administrative action by the Drug Enforcement Administration to revoke the practitioner’s registration.”

    The Administration’s Response stated that the Department of Justice and the Department of Health and Human Services would send a letter to national, state, and local practitioner associations and licensing boards, stating unequivocally that the DEA would seek to revoke the registrations of physicians who recommended or prescribed Schedule I controlled substances.

    Now over time, the administration backed down a bit from the hard line. But that doesn’t mean it never happened. The court ruled unequivocally against the government.

  • Me and Lou Dobbs

    I was on Lou Dobbs today.
    I didn’t have the heart to tell him I love immigrants.
    You can read more (and see the video) here.

  • Good news for states’ rights…

    …and stoners. The Feds say they’ll lay off medicinal marijuana enforcement in states where it’s legal. This seems like a no-brainer.