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Marijuana Ballot Issues Have Little To Do With Drugs
Shout Bits Blog ^ | 07/30/2012 | Shout Bits

Posted on 07/30/2012 10:38:42 AM PDT by Shout Bits

This November, as many as eight States will have marijuana ballot issues before their voters. Most are medicinal issues, but States like Oregon and Colorado will decide on full legalization. Just as judging the average alcohol drinker by observing gutter drunks is unfounded, most marijuana users are not actually wild smelly Occupy Wall Street hippies (as annoying as they can be). Pollsters estimate that 25 million Americans regularly consume marijuana, and there simply are not enough Rasta cab drivers and jazz fans to fill those ranks. Politically, the tide is turning in favor of recreational marijuana use, but for the 90% of Americans who are not regular partakers, the marijuana issue has more impact than getting high. In fact, the marijuana issue is a test bed for the entirety of the wrongs Washington imposes on the States and the People.

Marijuana has, of course, been proven to be medically benign. Contrary to government propaganda, marijuana does not engender violent or dangerous behavior – unlike tequila. Further, the drug's use does not seem to rise or fall based on its legality. In The Netherlands, where marijuana is more or less legal, its use is less prevalent than in the US, where marijuana is mostly illegal. Dreamers who think states can balance their budgets by taxing marijuana like tobacco or booze will be disappointed as marijuana usage cannot generate a large tax base as do cigarettes and liquor. Those who foresee a fall in crime as the illegal profit is eliminated are also overly optimistic. Until all vices are legal and regulated, cartels will still trade in violence. In short, should marijuana become legal in the US, expect essentially no impact.

Why, then is the marijuana issue relevant? The marijuana issue brings the 10th Amendment, the Commerce Clause, and the Supremacy Clause to a poignant head and is a colorful wedge for those who generally support individual liberty and responsibility. Washington's corruption withers in the light of the marijuana issue.

In Wickard v. Filburn, the Supreme Court held that FDR's multi-year attempt to help farmers by forcing them to farm less acreage than they wanted was constitutional. They held that even if farm produce were grown in a single state with seed, fertilizer, and water from only that state, for consumption intrastate, the Commerce clause allowed Washington to dictate any aspect of that farm's operation because the activities of the farm might affect markets out of state. Nothing had to cross state lines to be regulated as interstate commerce. Fast forward 80 years, and this same logic (under a different name) allows Washington to force individuals to buy a minimum level of healthcare products. For those who think Washington knows best, these rulings are wonderful news, but for the libertarian they invite tyranny.

Regardless of Supreme Court decisions, the plain language and original intent of the Commerce Clause is to ensure that states do not enact trade barriers between themselves. It does not say that commerce may be regulated within a state; it does not say that the commerce of individuals may be regulated. The Commerce Clause puts regulating interstate commerce at the same level as trade with foreign nations and Indian tribes, clearly implying that Washington's role is to facilitate free trade, not to dictate how many acres a farmer may plant. Quite often the plain language reading of a law is truer than the convolutions of talented specialist minds.

FDR outlawed marijuana about the same time as he regulated farmers and under the same Commerce Clause authority (in the form of a tax, if that sounds familiar). Indeed, most of Washington's departures from the Constitution's enumerated powers stem from the abuse of the Commerce Clause. Should a State fully legalize marijuana this November, the very heart of Washington's bloat will be tested. Interestingly, Justice Roberts's horrid logic that Obamacare was illegal under the Commerce Clause but legal as a tax gains traction in such a showdown. Should a State's perfect document, its Constitution, be amended to legalize marijuana, that State would be obligated to take the issue to the Supreme Court unless Washington backs down. The marijuana issue may give libertarians another swipe at the Commerce Clause, a gift given by States broadly in favor of Obamacare.

Can Washington imprison someone for growing a plant in Colorado using Colorado materials, all for Colorado or even personal consumption? Is there any boundary to Washington's power over the States and the People? Is Washington's law supreme over a State's, even when Washington's law is not authorized under the Constitution? Does the 10th Amendment mean anything? Should marijuana be legalized somewhere this November, these questions might be revisited and the tide of Washington's tyranny over its purported masters could be reversed. Even for those who find the herbal libation distasteful, these are good reasons to vote to legalize marijuana.

Shout Bits can be found on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/#!/ShoutBits


TOPICS: Politics
KEYWORDS: drugs
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To: DiogenesLamp
Bottom line, China went from very low addiction to very high addiction between the time Britain started importing opium and the time it stopped. On the other hand, We nipped it in the bud back around 1900 and as a result of the war on drugs, our addiction rate is still only 1.5%, and that's by YOUR numbers.

We nipped nothing in the bud. Drugs were legal in the US since colonial times, yet no one saw it as a problem for fedgov to handle until the progressives came along.

If you'll read the DEA link I provided, you'll see that addiction to opium was high in 1880 due to addiction by Civil War veterans - 400,000 in a population of 50M. That's 0.8% addicted to opium alone.

Yet by 1900, says the DEA, the addiction rate to either cocaine or opium was 0.5%. That's a significant decline that would be even greater if they had not included cocaine addicts in the 1900 figure.

So from 1880 to 1900, when drugs were legal, addiction fell. From 1900 to 2000 addiction rose. Your argument that prohibition nipped a growing problem in the bud is not credible.

161 posted on 07/31/2012 2:04:07 PM PDT by Ken H
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To: Ken H

Your argument that we wouldn’t have turned out like China is not credible. China legalized Drugs. We Prohibited them. They collapsed, We survived. Figure it out.


162 posted on 07/31/2012 2:07:25 PM PDT by DiogenesLamp (Partus Sequitur Patrem)
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To: tnlibertarian
Exactly.

Thanks to weed, he's now just a better than average Olympic swimmer and even teenage Chinese girls can keep up with him in the pool.

163 posted on 07/31/2012 2:08:30 PM PDT by The KG9 Kid (Semper Fi)
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To: DiogenesLamp
So the Tenth Amendment isn't enough to persuade you?Sure, but only if I can first be persuaded that Marijuana cannot pose the sort of threat that Opium or Cocaine poses.

As has been pointed out to you several times, prohibition is based on expanded federal powers under the Wickard Commerce Clause. That's what you're endorsing when you endorse the War on Drugs. You have ceded any principled constitutional objection to programs such as the war on poverty, the EPA and federal control of health care.

164 posted on 07/31/2012 2:21:59 PM PDT by Ken H
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To: DiogenesLamp

“Cocaine and Heroin grow out of the ground too.”

Heroin is refined from poppy plants, and was first synthesized by a Chemist, no it doesn’t grow as a plant.

Cocaine is refined from Coca leaves. Chewing Coca leaves as the local have done for hundred of years is different than using the concentrated processed form.

Plants/Natural form OK chemically refined form not OK.

In this approach the pot plant would be legal chemically refined THC would not.


165 posted on 07/31/2012 2:38:08 PM PDT by Leto
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To: DiogenesLamp
Your argument that we wouldn’t have turned out like China is not credible. China legalized Drugs. We Prohibited them. They collapsed, We survived. Figure it out.

Heh! According to you, the US in 1900 was headed for massive addiction, despite it never having occurred in the prior 200+ years, and that the only thing that prevented it was fedgov prohibition.

Even the silliest drug warriors are going to have a difficult time swallowing that one.

166 posted on 07/31/2012 2:38:36 PM PDT by Ken H
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To: Leto

No one likes my plan.

1. Allow anyone (over the age of majority) to grow poppies and marijuana SOLELY for their own use. NO SELLING. Heck, let ‘em grow coca if they can.

2. Anyone selling OR buying gets publicly caned.

3. Increasing strikes for repeated offenses.

4. All other drugs prohibited, sellers get publicly caned, second offense for hard drugs like cocaine and meth, execution. Public.

I think it makes total sense. Those who want to be drugged and stupid and crazy, they can. But NO selling, and being able to grow ‘em will take down the price to rock bottom anyway.


167 posted on 07/31/2012 3:04:17 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point. CSLewis)
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To: Ken H
Heh! According to you, the US in 1900 was headed for massive addiction, despite it never having occurred in the prior 200+ years, and that the only thing that prevented it was fedgov prohibition.

I'm sorry that you have such a poor education in history and understanding of past times, but the facts are that drugs did not become illegal until AFTER they became a problem. For the prior several hundred years, nobody was bringing cocaine or opium into the country in any large quantities. That was starting to change around the 1880s. Sure, morphine, opium and cocaine were available, but not in large quantities. Not in the Ton quantities at which they were shipped into China, but China didn't start out with those quantities. They started out small.

Before you can have a market, you have to have a demand, and with no huge demand, there was no huge market. (I think it's Silly that I should have to explain this stuff to a conservative, and supposedly someone who understand supply/demand, and free markets.)

The market was just starting to get larger when people started noticing that these medicines which were making people feel good were all too often getting them addicted as well.

1900 - Opium, morphine and cocaine in many patent medicines leads to addiction and death. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup kills many children each year due to overdosing on morphine. Morphine is the syrup’s primary ingredient but it is not listed on the label.

There are a host of sources on the web which would explain all of this to you, but some how I don't think you want to look at them. You have your beliefs, and they are dearer to you than the truth, i'll wager.

Even the silliest drug warriors are going to have a difficult time swallowing that one.

And never let it be said that you are not one of the silliest drug warriors. Perhaps some soothing syrup for children might help you swallow it?

168 posted on 07/31/2012 3:17:16 PM PDT by DiogenesLamp (Partus Sequitur Patrem)
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To: Ken H
As has been pointed out to you several times, prohibition is based on expanded federal powers under the Wickard Commerce Clause.

Why are you lecturing me about stuff you seemingly do not know as much about as do I? The Pure Food and Drug act was in 1906, well before Wickard. The Harrison Narcotics act was in 1914, again, well before Wickard.

It begs the question. If these two landmark pieces of drug legislation both occurred before Wickard, how can you claim they are "based on expanded federal powers under the Wickard Commerce Clause" ?

That's what you're endorsing when you endorse the War on Drugs. You have ceded any principled constitutional objection to programs such as the war on poverty, the EPA and federal control of health care.

Nonsense. The War on Drugs is a legitimate National Defense Issue. The primary mandate of any government is to protect it's people from Danger, especially such danger as comes into the Nation from beyond it's borders. Fighting against those who seek to undermine and destroy our society is indeed a rightful and proper activity for our governments to undertake. Social Engineering (War on Poverty) and the endless expansion of the power of the Federal Bureaucracy (EPA) are not.

This argument is like equating any criticism of Obama with Racism. The two things are not equivalent.

169 posted on 07/31/2012 3:53:46 PM PDT by DiogenesLamp (Partus Sequitur Patrem)
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To: Leto
I'm not going to bother quoting you. Natural Hemlock is deadly, as is Nightshade. As are other toxic plants. That brings us back to basic biology. Do you know why plants synthesize toxins which operate on the mammalian nervous system? TO KILL PREDATORS!

It is a self defense mechanism to make animals which eat them stop eating them and go away. Along comes stupid humans who like the disorienting effect of the plant toxins, and decide to tamper with their nervous system on a regular basis.

Beyond that, Marijuana is continuously being hybrid into varieties with nearly deadly concentrations of THC. How do you put that into your philosophical "nature is good" pipe and smoke it?

170 posted on 07/31/2012 4:02:44 PM PDT by DiogenesLamp (Partus Sequitur Patrem)
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To: longtermmemmory

Yes, but seizures can occur at any time, so it’s effectively the same as perpetual impairment. Pot doesn’t just randomly make you stoned without you doing something, so I don’t see how it would fall in that category.


171 posted on 07/31/2012 4:11:51 PM PDT by Boogieman
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To: DiogenesLamp

“Marijuana is continuously being hybrid into varieties with nearly deadly concentrations of THC”

Nearly deadly?!? Are you serious? How could you even quantify a deadly dose of THC, seeing as nobody has ever overdosed on it?


172 posted on 07/31/2012 4:16:23 PM PDT by Boogieman
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To: DiogenesLamp
For the prior several hundred years, nobody was bringing cocaine or opium into the country in any large quantities. That was starting to change around the 1880s. Sure, morphine, opium and cocaine were available, but not in large quantities.

It was available in enough quantity to satisfy demand, just like today. As far as worsening addiction, the DEA flat out refutes you. Their numbers say addiction fell substantially from 1880 to 1900. This is the equivalent of the star witness for the prosecution giving testimony in favor of the defense. It knocks your whole premise out from under you.

Here's a better explanation. Like their liberal descendants of today, Progressives were hell bent on increasing the size and scope of the federal government, and were not above using demagoguery and dishonesty to achieve their goals. The same era that began drug prohibition also gave us the 16th and 17th Amendment.

Big government, like prohibition, is a legacy of the progressives.

173 posted on 07/31/2012 4:41:31 PM PDT by Ken H
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To: DiogenesLamp

“I do not know about your community, but in my community the City Council passed an ordinance regulating sales of the stuff.”

Yes, I did say there are usually local ordinances, though in the case of spraypaint they are ordinances concerning graffiti and not substance laws. Still, some places have no ordinances, and we have no Federal laws on the issue. There are quite of few of those kinds of substances that have absolutely no regulation, so that a 10 year old can buy them anywhere in America. Somehow, we manage to survive this mortal threat though.

“Possibly, but why would we have need of regulating substances that are not being abused?”

I’m not talking about substances that aren’t abused. Inhalants like spray paint, paint thinner, toluene, even gasoline, are abused. Still, we don’t need a federal law to deal with them. In most cases, we don’t even need state or local laws.

You made an argument that if pot were legal, some people would use it irresponsibly and ruin their lives, so we would have to either ban it or license it. What I’m saying is, we have plenty of other substances that are legal that people do use irresponisbly and we aren’t forced to ban or license them. Society survives just fine using other methods to deal with those substances.


174 posted on 07/31/2012 4:48:01 PM PDT by Boogieman
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To: DiogenesLamp
The WOD that you are defending is indeed based on Wickard. Read Clarence Thomas's dissent in Raich:

Respondents Diane Monson and Angel Raich use marijuana that has never been bought or sold, that has never crossed state lines, and that has had no demonstrable effect on the national market for marijuana. If Congress can regulate this under the Commerce Clause, then it can regulate virtually anything–and the Federal Government is no longer one of limited and enumerated powers.

More education for you from the opinion of the Court, written by Stevens:

The question presented in this case is whether the power vested in Congress by Article I, §8, of the Constitution “[t]o make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution” its authority to “regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States” includes the power to prohibit the local cultivation and use of marijuana in compliance with California law.

So which side are you on, Stevens or Thomas?

____________________________________________________________

The War on Drugs is a legitimate National Defense Issue.

Garbage. There is no legislation or case law that cites national defense provisions in the Constitution as a delegation of authority to regulate intrastate drugs. It's the Wickard Commerce Clause. That is what you are endorsing, rationalizations notwithstanding.

175 posted on 07/31/2012 5:10:18 PM PDT by Ken H
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To: DiogenesLamp
That a substance is "naturally occurring" is irrelevant to the point. There are a multitude of "naturally occurring" substances that are down right deadly, and of course we don't let just anyone play with them. Arsenic, Hemlock and Strychnine come to mind.

Consider, if you will, why "we don't let just anyone play around with" the substances you just mentioned.

The Socially destructive effects of drugs are not "nebulous" there are very well documented and innumerably verified consequences to tolerance of drugs in any society or culture. The argument here is whether or not Marijuana is sufficiently dangerous as to be a threat to the existence of a society. Opium obviously is, and I would expect the evidence to reveal that meth and cocaine are as well.

This is not guess work. This is not "theory." These experiments have been run, and the consequences of tolerating highly addictive drugs have been uniformly horrifying. To my knowledge there are no good examples of a working culture which embraces highly addictive and dangerous drugs.

Hmm. With all due respect, I think you're not applying consistent logic here with your argument. You insist on viewing marijuana through the dangerous, destructive, socially catastrophic lens that is more accurately applied to drugs like opium, heroin, meth, etc. You're leading the witness and the witness you're leading is yourself.

Marijuana is not the same as the drugs you're trying to lump it it with.

Everyone I know who smokes the stuff is a worthless bum. Maybe this doesn't happen to everyone who smokes it, but it certainly seems to happen to a lot of people who do.
Everyone I know isn't. Evidently, you should hang out with a better class of people.

176 posted on 08/01/2012 6:28:20 AM PDT by Hemingway's Ghost (Spirit of '75)
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To: Shout Bits

I’d postulate that a lot of peeps here would continue the WoD, hell, PRAISE it even. As most of those touting its ‘rousing success’; I consider those in the same group as the NIMBYs

They still believe the gov’t has SOME role to play, and the power comes from....pick your poison (excuse the pun). No matter that Prohibition needed an Amendment (2 actually); but NOT for the WoD!

Hell, it’s worked SO well for the past 100 yrs (leaving aside it was only a problem since the Dawn of Man, until 100 years ago), why mess with it now. Hell, S.Security has worked SO WELL for almost 100 years; the Fed. Reserve....Why, even the DoE has been just dandy for over 30 yrs.

How about this: Return the Constitutional powers (IE: Regulate as it should be read - to make regular). People can do what the hell they want, when they want (and I’m talking ADULTS here) and prosecute, when/if that infringes on others Rights, for damages/etc..

Companies can hire whom they want, users can enjoy the drugs...or OD. Just don’t go all ‘it takes a community/village’ or ‘they can’t handle reading the labels’ BS. Life should have consequences for those weak of will or just stupid.

I, for one, don’t need the Nanny State (nor Nanny Neighbors) dictating to me. When you lose the rights to do what you wish TO yourself, you are no longer free, but a slave.


177 posted on 08/01/2012 8:35:50 AM PDT by i_robot73
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To: DiogenesLamp

Well philosophically I agree with the Bible:

“And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat.”

Genesis 1:29

Note God didn’t say SOME he said EVERY.
Words matter.

Works for me.

If you drink too much water it will kill you.


178 posted on 08/01/2012 10:20:23 AM PDT by Leto
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