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Potheads, puritans and pragmatists: Two marijuana initiatives put drug warriors on the defensive
Townhall ^ | October 18, 2006 | Jacob Sullum

Posted on 10/23/2006 5:03:34 PM PDT by JTN

Nevada is known for gambling, 24-hour liquor sales and legal prostitution. Yet the main group opposing Question 7, an initiative on the state's ballot next month that would allow the sale and possession of up to an ounce of marijuana by adults 21 or older, is called the Committee to Keep Nevada Respectable.

In Colorado, opponents of Amendment 44, which would eliminate penalties for adults possessing an ounce or less of marijuana, are equally certain of their own rectitude. "Those who want to legalize drugs weaken our collective struggle against this scourge," declares the Colorado Drug Investigators Association. "Like a cancer, proponents for legalization eat away at society's resolve and moral fiber."

To sum up, smoking pot is less respectable than a drunken gambling spree followed by a visit to a hooker, while people who think adults shouldn't be punished for their choice of recreational intoxicants are like a tumor that will kill you unless it's eradicated. In the face of such self-righteous posturing, the marijuana initiatives' backers have refused to cede the moral high ground, a strategy from which other activists can learn.

The Nevada campaign, which calls itself the Committee to Regulate and Control Marijuana, emphasizes the advantages of removing marijuana from the black market, where regulation and control are impossible, and allowing adults to obtain the drug from licensed, accountable merchants. To signal that a legal market does not mean anything goes, the initiative increases penalties for injuring people while driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

The "regulate and control" message has attracted public support from more than 30 Nevada religious leaders. The list includes not just the usual suspects -- Unitarian Universalist ministers and Reform rabbis -- but also representatives of more conservative groups, such as Lutherans and Southern Baptists.

"I don't think using marijuana is a wise choice for anyone," says the Rev. William C. Webb, senior pastor of Reno's Second Baptist Church. "Drugs ruin enough lives. But we don't need our laws ruining more lives. If there has to be a market for marijuana, I'd rather it be regulated with sensible safeguards than run by violent gangs and dangerous drug dealers."

Troy Dayton of the Interfaith Drug Policy Initiative, who was largely responsible for persuading Webb and the other religious leaders to back Question 7, notes that support from members of the clergy, which was important in repealing alcohol prohibition, "forces a reframing of the issue." It's no longer a contest between potheads and puritans.

The Colorado campaign, which goes by the name SAFER (Safer Alternative for Enjoyable Recreation), emphasizes that marijuana is less dangerous than alcohol and asks, "Should adults be punished for making the rational choice to use marijuana instead of alcohol?" This approach puts prohibitionists on the defensive by asking them to justify the disparate legal treatment of the two drugs.

So far they have not been up to the task. Mesa County District Attorney Pete Hautzinger has implicitly conceded marijuana itself is not so bad by implausibly linking it to methamphetamine. In a televised debate with SAFER's Mason Tvert, Colorado Attorney General John Suthers insisted "the only acceptable alternative to intoxication is sobriety."

That's fine for those who avoid all psychoactive substances as a matter of principle. But since most people -- including Suthers, who acknowledges drinking -- like using chemicals to alter their moods and minds, it's reasonable to ask for some consistency in the law's treatment of those chemicals, especially at a time when police are arresting a record number of Americans (nearly 787,000 last year) for marijuana offenses.

Despite a hard push by federal, state and local drug warriors who have been telling voters in Nevada and Colorado that failing to punish adults for smoking pot will "send the wrong message" to children, the latest polls indicate most are unpersuaded. Perhaps they worry about the message sent by the current policy of mindless intolerance.

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine and a contributing columnist on Townhall.com.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: addiction; bongbrigade; dopers; drugaddled; druggies; drugskilledbelushi; explainsclinton; goaskalice; letsgetstupid; libertarians; potheads; potheadsvotedemocrat; reverendleroy; smokybackroomin10; userslosers; wodlist
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To: SampleMan
Section 2.
The judicial power shall extend to all cases, in law and equity, arising under this Constitution, the laws of the United States, and treaties made, or which shall be made, under their authority;--to all cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls;--to all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction;--to controversies to which the United States shall be a party;--to controversies between two or more states;--between a state and citizens of another state;--between citizens of different states;--between citizens of the same state claiming lands under grants of different states, and between a state, or the citizens thereof, and foreign states, citizens or subjects.

That is authority to rule on cases of law, not to create, rewrite, or nullify the law. Again, if I'm wrong, why did the SC fail to act for 140 years?

Read Marbury [1803]. It is has been accepted since then that the 'appellate Jurisdiction' clause delegates the Court authority to nullify unconstitutional 'law', whether fed/state/local. Can you agree?

There is nothing in the Constitution about the Court being "more equal" than the other branches,

Specious comment, as no one here so claims

and nothing about being final arbiter of the Constitution.

Again specious, as no one here has so claimed.

The Constitution created the SC to be the ultimate arbiter of criminal and civil law, and to serve as a higher authority when states were in legal disagreement.

See Marbury, as above.

The supreme court has already shown that if an amendment goes against how they have define the Constitution, they will just ignore it,

Quite true. They ignored the obvious unconstitutionality of the 16th, 17th & 18th Amendments.

or strike it down before it can be ratified.

??? -- You really will write most anything for effect, won't you?

421 posted on 10/30/2006 6:38:49 PM PST by tpaine
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To: tacticalogic
Gonna do Congress while you're at it, or are Hillary and Teddy already perfect as far as your concerned?

Sure. If you've got the magic formula, let's do it. Otherwise you'll have to live with the fact that they represent people like themselves that you either have to find a way to avoid civil war with, or kill.

By the way, the principal purpose of the Consitution is to avoid having a civil war every 20 years. So far we're beating the average.

That includes any laws passed by Congress.

Includes seeing the cases, not rewriting the law, and I've got the framers and the first 140 years of Legislators and Justices in agreement on this. Its not even questionable.

If the constitutionality of federal law is not within their pervue, there is no point in them being Constitutional scholars or studying Constitutional Law. All that's left is to rule on propriety of the process.

They are to do what all judges are to do. Try a case by the law and rule on it. They have many purposes all defined explicitly in Section 3. Do you think that had the framers intended the SC to have veto power on the legislature and executive that they would have been clear about it, like they were with the executives veto power, so that it wouldn't take 140 years for it to be understood?

Fail to act on what? Marbury v Madison was in 1803. You seem to be interested in revising more than the Constitution.

There was no issue of a law being constitutional in Marbury v. Madison. It was a case of whether an incoming President could be forced to act on a previous President's promised commission. That's mechanical, not super-legislative. Like a legislator suing the whip for more time on the floor.

422 posted on 10/30/2006 6:40:57 PM PST by SampleMan (Do not dispute the peacefulness of Islam, so as not to send Muslims into violent outrage.)
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To: Diggity
The police are pretty effective or bad depending on the level of unionism they have submitted to. In some areas the police do a fantastic job of policing and in others pretty horrible.

I would suggest (as others have) privatizing certain police functions like going after the druggies...that would free up some resources - mainly the time required to get the evidence.

So no, I would not want to surrender to THC addicts but rather do a more effective job in rounding them up.
423 posted on 10/30/2006 6:42:46 PM PST by eleni121 ("Show me just what Mohammed brought:: evil and inhumanity")
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To: PaxMacian

You're insulted? I thought you'd be delighted, or at least reach a transandental state. And the accusations certainly aren't empty.


424 posted on 10/30/2006 6:44:19 PM PST by SampleMan (Do not dispute the peacefulness of Islam, so as not to send Muslims into violent outrage.)
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To: SampleMan
You know on these pot threads the quirky people come out of the woodwork. They have a vested interest in staying quirky and absurd. They are angry about trite things but frustrated and impotent because the citizenry has not embraced their fundamentally flawed libertarian ideology.

They would be perfect characters in a dadesque theater of the absurd play - think Beckett Genet, etc.
425 posted on 10/30/2006 6:55:04 PM PST by eleni121 ("Show me just what Mohammed brought:: evil and inhumanity")
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To: bpjam
So they came upon the initiative process and started with the 'medical marijuana' cannard


426 posted on 10/30/2006 7:02:59 PM PST by WKB (I Refuse To Have A Battle Of Wits With An Unarmed Person.)
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To: SampleMan
Includes seeing the cases, not rewriting the law, and I've got the framers and the first 140 years of Legislators and Justices in agreement on this. Its not even questionable.

They don't "rewrite law". They rule on the constitutionality of laws. It's left to Congress to re-write them if necessary.

They are to do what all judges are to do. Try a case by the law and rule on it. They have many purposes all defined explicitly in Section 3. Do you think that had the framers intended the SC to have veto power on the legislature and executive that they would have been clear about it, like they were with the executives veto power, so that it wouldn't take 140 years for it to be understood?

Every Supreme Court in every State weighs State laws against the State Constitution, and will strike it down if it is found to be in violation. Only Supreme Courts do this. This job of Supreme Court judges, be they state or federal, is not like the job of lower court judges in either venue.

What changed under FDR was not that the judges ruled on the constitutionality of federal law, but the basis upon which they interpreted the Constitution.

There was no issue of a law being constitutional in Marbury v. Madison. It was a case of whether an incoming President could be forced to act on a previous President's promised commission. That's mechanical, not super-legislative. Like a legislator suing the whip for more time on the floor.

Marbury formally established the Court's role as the final arbiter of constitutionality.

427 posted on 10/30/2006 7:07:11 PM PST by tacticalogic ("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: SampleMan
There was no issue of a law being constitutional in Marbury v. Madison.

From Marbury v. Madison: "So if a law be in opposition to the constitution; if both the law and the constitution apply to a particular case, so that the court must either decide that case conformably to the law, disregarding the constitution; or conformably to the constitution, disregarding the law; the court must determine which of these conflicting rules governs the case. This is of the very essence of judicial duty. . . "

If the Constitution is the Supreme Law of the Land, which one to uphold is a foregone conclusion.

428 posted on 10/30/2006 7:16:51 PM PST by tacticalogic ("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: eleni121

"So no, I would not want to surrender to THC addicts but rather do a more effective job in rounding them up."

And while you're at it, you should round up all the caffein,alcohol, fat fast food eating, and nicotine addicts too. Oh yea, lest I forget you should round up all those turkey eating folks before T-day because whatever that drug is in turkey that makes you sleepy needs to be outlawed too. And all those doctors prescribing and the drug manufacturers making Lunesta that puts people to sleep need to be round up too. And all those doctors prescribing and all those manufacturers making xanex need to be rounded up too right? Xanex is a mind/mood altering drug. And all those doctors prescribing and all those manufacturers making ritalin need to be rounded up too right? Because ritalin is a mind/mood altering drug. And all those doctors prescribing and all those manufacturers making that drug adderol(sp) for ADD which is also a mind altering drug needs to be rounded up as well.

Who else would you round up to make your world drug free and more suited to your fantasy?


429 posted on 10/30/2006 7:26:54 PM PST by takenoprisoner
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To: WKB

oh yeah........


430 posted on 10/30/2006 7:28:37 PM PST by bpjam (Not Voting in '06? Turn in your VRWC card at exit quietly)
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To: tacticalogic

It was mechanical. Another example would be if the Congress passed a law allowing the President to serve 20 more years. Constitutional conflict on the mechanics of government.

Conversely, you have super-legislative, where you have Justice O'Connor ruling that Affirmative Action is Constitutional today, but may not be in the future if its no longer necessary. Necessity being defined by her. Her ruling had nothing to do with protecting the Constitution, but rather protecting a law from the Constitution. The developing trend to use foreign law and mandate legislative action, makes my case all the stronger.

If it were intended for the SC to have veto power, the Constitution would have required bills to go there for review before becoming law.


431 posted on 10/30/2006 8:16:49 PM PST by SampleMan (Do not dispute the peacefulness of Islam, so as not to send Muslims into violent outrage.)
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To: tacticalogic

Your understanding of the law is so self-serving that I must conclude that you are a lawyer. Which might explain your desire to be ruled by lawyers.


432 posted on 10/30/2006 8:19:25 PM PST by SampleMan (Do not dispute the peacefulness of Islam, so as not to send Muslims into violent outrage.)
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To: eleni121

You have hit the proverbial nail on the head. End of the bar potentates, trying to rule the world without social interaction.


433 posted on 10/30/2006 8:23:11 PM PST by SampleMan (Do not dispute the peacefulness of Islam, so as not to send Muslims into violent outrage.)
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To: takenoprisoner

Whoa...chill out.

Those items you refer to are all legal. When at such time the citizenry or some outlaw government entity decides to reconsider, I might be persuaded to join in an uprising. As for the present, keep the legal lid on drugs...the mind altering addictive ones.


434 posted on 10/30/2006 8:31:05 PM PST by eleni121 ("Show me just what Mohammed brought:: evil and inhumanity")
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To: tacticalogic; SampleMan
S-man wrote:

[The USSC has] authority to rule on cases of law, not to create, rewrite, or nullify the law. Again, if I'm wrong, why did the SC fail to act for 140 years?

Read Marbury [1803]. It is has been accepted since then that the 'appellate Jurisdiction' clause delegates the Court authority to nullify unconstitutional 'law', whether fed/state/local. Can you agree?

There was no issue of a law being constitutional in Marbury v. Madison. It was a case of whether an incoming President could be forced to act on a previous President's promised commission. That's mechanical, not super-legislative. Like a legislator suing the whip for more time on the floor.

From Marbury:

"-- Why does a Judge swear to discharge his duties agreeably the constitution of the United States, if that constitution forms no rule for his government? If it is closed upon him, and cannot be inspected by him?
If such be the real state of things, this is worse than solemn mockery. To prescribe, or to take this oath, becomes equally a crime.
It is also not entirely unworthy of observation that in declaring what shall be the supreme law of the land, the constitution itself is first mentioned; and not the laws of the United States generally, but those only which shall be made in pursuance of the constitution, have that rank.
Thus, the particular phraseology of the constitution of the United States confirms and strengthens the principle, supposed to be essential to all written constitutions, that a law repugnant to the constitution is void; and that courts, as well as other departments, are bound by that instrument. --" Justice Marshall 1803

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"-- There was no issue of a law being constitutional in Marbury v. Madison. --" Only in your imagination S-man.

"-- how about an answer? You haven't bothered to have one of those in the last dozen or so posts.
Running away from the issue isn't a good sign for your argument's strength. --- How about being brave and making one? --"

435 posted on 10/30/2006 9:14:36 PM PST by tpaine
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To: SampleMan
Your understanding of the law is so self-serving that I must conclude that you are a lawyer. Which might explain your desire to be ruled by lawyers.

I take it they never taught Civics or American History where you went to school.

436 posted on 10/31/2006 5:13:42 AM PST by tacticalogic ("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: SampleMan
Conversely, you have super-legislative, where you have Justice O'Connor ruling that Affirmative Action is Constitutional today, but may not be in the future if its no longer necessary. Necessity being defined by her. Her ruling had nothing to do with protecting the Constitution, but rather protecting a law from the Constitution. The developing trend to use foreign law and mandate legislative action, makes my case all the stronger.

If it were intended for the SC to have veto power, the Constitution would have required bills to go there for review before becoming law.

The quote I gave you from Marbury was written by Chief Justice Marshall, one of the Founders. I trust him to know what was "intended" a lot more than I do you.

In contrast to OConner's jurisprudence, I'll give you some from Clarence Thomas:

"I write separately only to express my view that the very notion of a ‘substantial effects’ test under the Commerce Clause is inconsistent with the original understanding of Congress’ powers and with this Court’s early Commerce Clause cases. By continuing to apply this rootless and malleable standard, however circumscribed, the Court has encouraged the Federal Government to persist in its view that the Commerce Clause has virtually no limits. Until this Court replaces its existing Commerce Clause jurisprudence with a standard more consistent with the original understanding, we will continue to see Congress appropriating state police powers under the guise of regulating commerce."

There's something directly releveant to the issue at hand. Tell me what you think is wrong with it.

437 posted on 10/31/2006 5:21:27 AM PST by tacticalogic ("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: tacticalogic
There's something directly releveant to the issue at hand. Tell me what you think is wrong with it.

What's wrong is that you don't have a court made up of like minded individuals. Have you noticed that Thomas writes mainly minority positions?

The Court is given far too much undeserved praise for being non-political, and an objective guardian of the Constitution.

I'd like to get back to your premise that the Court isn't really unchecked, because the People can always pass Amendments. First, you need to go off in a corner with tpaine and come to grips with your assertion that majority rule canceling out fundamental rights is OK, as long as its a super-majority. Now let's look at your assertion. If the People pass an amendment to the Constitution stating that black people can't vote, and the first case goes before the Supreme Court. The Court will strike down the laws created in the umbrella of the new amendment, because the laws are in violation of the preponderance of the Constitution, and there is no mechanism to stop that. Now I used a clear example, where the SC ruling was what we would all agree with, but the SC can do the same with anything.

Also please explain how you are protecting us all from the whims of the People, when a single election can result in a President who packs the court with zealots of a particular flavor who will rule for the next 40 years? Are you simply trusting statistics that 5 of 9 elderly people don't die within a four year, or eight year span? Or that the Senate and President are never like minded?

438 posted on 10/31/2006 5:52:24 AM PST by SampleMan (Do not dispute the peacefulness of Islam, so as not to send Muslims into violent outrage.)
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To: tacticalogic
I take it they never taught Civics or American History where you went to school.

I'm guessing that only one of us has a higher degree in History and Political Science, and that its not you. Having said that, I have History books from the last 100 years and six countries. Picking selectively from those, I can document History to be about anything someone wants it to be. I have one that says we had a non-aggression pact with Hitler, and because of that, we were able to land our armies unopposes at Normandy.

Its not the degrees, but the depth of thought that count.

So what type of law do you pracice?

439 posted on 10/31/2006 6:01:40 AM PST by SampleMan (Do not dispute the peacefulness of Islam, so as not to send Muslims into violent outrage.)
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To: SampleMan
What's wrong is that you don't have a court made up of like minded individuals. Have you noticed that Thomas writes mainly minority positions?

I have. Have you noticed that he's of the opinion that the current federal drug war is not within Congress' powers as they were originally intended and granted?

The Court is given far too much undeserved praise for being non-political, and an objective guardian of the Constitution.

By who? You've accused me of it simply because I submit that they are less subject to the influence of special interest groups.

I'd like to get back to your premise that the Court isn't really unchecked, because the People can always pass Amendments. First, you need to go off in a corner with tpaine and come to grips with your assertion that majority rule canceling out fundamental rights is OK, as long as its a super-majority. Now let's look at your assertion. If the People pass an amendment to the Constitution stating that black people can't vote, and the first case goes before the Supreme Court. The Court will strike down the laws created in the umbrella of the new amendment, because the laws are in violation of the preponderance of the Constitution, and there is no mechanism to stop that. Now I used a clear example, where the SC ruling was what we would all agree with, but the SC can do the same with anything.

What a pantload. Just exactly where in your vision of "how things ought to be" is there any protection of fundamental rights? You wouldn't even require a supermajority and ratification by the States. You want a simple majority of Congress and the president's signature to be enough. If a simply majority of Congress passes a law that says black people can't vote, and the president signs it, what then?

Also please explain how you are protecting us all from the whims of the People, when a single election can result in a President who packs the court with zealots of a particular flavor who will rule for the next 40 years? Are you simply trusting statistics that 5 of 9 elderly people don't die within a four year, or eight year span? Or that the Senate and President are never like minded?

Explain how doing away with judicial review is going to make it any better. The president won't need to pack the court, or even threaten to because they won't be any obstacle to he and a like minded Congress doing whatever they want.

You don't like what the Court has become and the decisions they've made. That much we can agree on. Why do you want to eliminate the system of checks and balances between the three branches of government, and leave the Legislative and Executive branches unchecked when they are largely responsible for the Court being the in shape it is today?

440 posted on 10/31/2006 6:22:21 AM PST by tacticalogic ("Oh bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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