Legal Recreational Marijuana: Not So Far Out
- The drive to legalize marijuana has long been a fringe cause,
associated with hard-core libertarians and college-age stoners. But it
could go mainstream in a big way in this November’s election, when
Washington could become the first state to legalize recreational pot
use. If it does — or if voters in any of several other states do — this
year could be a turning point in the nation’s treatment of marijuana.
- The idea that a majority of voters could support legalizing
marijuana may seem far out — but the polls say otherwise. In many
states, the prolegalization and antilegalization camps are roughly equal in size. In a poll
of Washington state voters released last month, supporters of the
legalization referendum outnumbered opponents: 48% vs. 45%.
And Washington probably won’t be the only state voting on marijuana
this year. In Colorado, supporters last week fell about 3,000
signatures short of getting a legalization measure on the ballot — but
the law gave them 15 days to collect the rest, and it seems likely they
will. Activists are also collecting signatures in other states,
including California, Michigan and Montana.
- For years, the debate over marijuana has been focused on a narrower
question: medical marijuana. The argument that cancer patients and
others with chronic pain should be able to alleviate it by using
marijuana has been prevailing in state after state. Today, 16 states —
including Washington and Colorado — and the District of Columbia have
legalized marijuana for medical purposes.
- Recently, the action has shifted to recreational marijuana use.
Washington’s referendum would treat pot much like alcohol, so the sale
of marijuana would be restricted to people over 21. The new law would
give the Liquor Control Board the authority to license marijuana farms,
and marijuana tax revenues would be directed to health and drug-abuse
prevention programs.
- But other states’ proposed laws are more laissez-faire. Colorado
would legalize marijuana so that, as its supporters put it, cannabis
would be regulated like “grapes, tomatoes or other harmless botanical
plants.” Montana’s amendment focuses on decriminalizing marijuana but
leaves it to the legislature to work out the details.
- Supporters argue that legalization is long overdue. They argue that
it is no more harmful than alcohol or tobacco — and that in a free
country people should be able to decide on their own whether to use it.
They also argue that, as a practical matter, laws against marijuana
have been no more successful than Prohibition was against alcohol — and
that, similarly, it has given criminals a monopoly on distributing and
selling it. Legalization, they say, would reduce the number of people
in prison, and it would shift revenue from drug syndicates to
government in the form of tax receipts.
- Not surprisingly, the legalization drives have drawn heated
opposition. Critics argue that marijuana is harmful and addictive — and
that it is often a gateway drug, leading to cocaine or heroin. They say
stoned drivers would be a menace on the roads. And they warn that if it
were legalized and readily available, marijuana use could soar. (The
University of Michigan’s “Monitoring the Future” survey
reported that daily marijuana use is already at a 30-year high among
high school seniors, even as alcohol use has been declining.) The
anticamp also argues that marijuana is stronger than it was decades ago — from two to 10 times stronger, some experts say. (Other experts dispute the figures.)
- If Washington or some other state legalizes marijuana, that would
not settle the matter. It would still be a controlled substance under
federal law. And the U.S. Constitution’s Supremacy Clause says that
when federal and state laws clash, federal law trumps. As a practical
matter, though, the federal government does not have the resources to
police everyday use of marijuana. If states begin to legalize it, the
federal government might be hard-pressed to justify diverting limited
Drug Enforcement Agency resources away from heroin cartels toward
small-time pot smokers.
- It is hard to handicap this year’s voting, but one possibility is
this: marijuana legalization could lose in Washington and Colorado in
November, but recreational use could nonetheless be headed toward
legalization in many states in the not-too-distant future. Support for
legalization has been rising steadily, from just
12% in 1970 to 31% in 2001 to 50% today, with young people (ages 18-29)
the most in favor (62%) and older people (ages 50-64) the least (49%).
- In strictly political terms, this is a powerful combination:
fast-growing support and solid majorities among the young, who
represent where the electorate is headed. (Support for gay marriage
polls similarly — which is why it is becoming law in more states.) In a
few years, the national discussion may well turn from whether to
legalize marijuana to how to do it in the most prudent way. ~TIME.com
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