By Sherwood Ross
Seven million Americans have been arrested since 1995 on marijuana charges and 41,000 of them are rotting in federal and State prisons—but the public is starting to rebel against “the preposterous war on pot,” two political scientists say. Thousands of other pot users and sellers are confined in local jails as well.
“People convicted of possessing even one ounce of marijuana can face a mandatory minimum sentence of a year in jail, and having even one plant in your yard is a federal felony,” progressive organizer Jim Hightower and co-author Phillip Frazer point out in the November issue of “The Hightower Lowdown.”
Police arrest someone in America every 36 seconds on marijuana charges, with a record 872,000 arrests made in 2007, “more than for all violent crimes combined,” Hightower and Frazer point out. They note that 89 per cent of all marijuana arrests “are for simple possession of the weed, not for producing or selling it.”
They argue the drug war “is doing far more harm than marijuana itself ever will,” because (1) it diverts hundreds of thousands of police agents from serious crimes “to the pursuit of harmless tokers”; (2) it costs taxpayers at minimum $10 billion a year to catch, prosecute, and incarcerate marijuana users and sellers; (3) it enables government to snatch the cars, money, computers and other properties of people caught up in drug raids even if they have had no charges filed against them; and (4) it allows “police agents at all levels to trample our Bill of Rights in their eagerness to nab pot consumers.”
The drug war has also unleashed a torrent of racism in the form of unjust sentencing, which confines crack-cocaine users who are mostly black to prison for longer terms than powder snorters, who are mostly white.
Hightower and Frazer say authorities have perverted the infamous “Patriot Act” of 2001 for use in non-terrorism cases, allowing “sneak-and-peak” search warrants to be used in drug war probes, including pursuit of marijuana users. The Act’s provisions were supposed to be applied only for suspected terrorist acts. Only three of the Justice Department’s 763 requests for “sneak-and-peak” last year were used for terrorism searches, they report in Lowdown.
By outlawing drugs, Hightower and Frazer contend, Congress has created “a vast, murderous narco-state within Mexico” to satisfy U.S. consumer demand for the drugs. And Plan Colombia, the multi-billion operation started by Bill (“I didn’t inhale”) Clinton in 2000 to eradicate cocoa production there, has failed, judging by the 15 per cent increase in coca production.
For all the legislation against it, pot is more plentiful than ever and 10 per cent of Americans told surveyors they have enjoyed using it in the previous year while four in ten say they used it at some point in their lives. Plus, a 2005 survey found 85 per cent of high school seniors claimed pot was “easy to get”, easier than alcohol, which is a regulated drug, Hightower Lowdown points out.
The publication quotes a University of Michigan student who told them, “If the government trusts society to use alcohol responsibly, it is idiotic to assume citizens are somehow incapable of responsible use of cannabis.”
A Gallup opinion poll in 2005 found that 51 per cent of Americans stating alcohol is more dangerous than marijuana and 52 per cent saying it should be legalized, taxed, and regulated.
State and local governments, Hightower and Frazer report, “have begun walking step by step away from the weed war.” Since 1996, 13 states from Rhode Island to Alaska have passed laws to allow growing and distribution of doctor-prescribed marijuana for medical purposes. What’s more, pot possession is no longer criminalized in a dozen states: Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, and Oregon.
The drive now is for outright legalization of pot, the authors say. This would enable officials to take the exorbitant profit and violence out of illicit black-market weed by legalizing it and turning it into a revenue-producer that would rake in tax dollars.
Instead, the Office of National Drug Control Policy says, Americans spend $9 billion a year buying pot from Mexico; $10 billion on pot from Canada, and $39 billion on home-grown pot, now America’s Numero Uno cash crop—“topping the value of corn and wheat combined.” By one estimate, legalization would produce annual tax revenues of $6.2 billion. In Portugal, which legalized all drugs in 2001, hard drug use has showed a stunning decline while the numbers of people getting detox aid has soared, Time magazine reported last April 26th. By contrast, USA has the highest rates of drug use in the world.
As Rep. Barney Frank has said, “I now think it’s time for the politicians to catch up to the public. The notion that you lock people up for smoking marijuana is pretty silly.”
There is, however, a downside to the legalization of pot: some of the individuals in the legal system who depend on the arrests of pot smokers might have to find worthwhile jobs instead. Look at all the paychecks that get cut: The cops make their collars. The bail bondsmen get their rake off. The prosecutors make their cases. The social workers write up their interviews. The clerks push their papers. The lawyers collect their fees. The judges render their verdicts. The prison guards make their rounds. The vendors sell their baloney sandwiches. The construction firms build their additions. And the shrinks nod their heads.
One last thought: cigarettes kill 440,000 Americans every year and sicken millions—but no one reportedly ever has been killed by smoking a joint. If the growers and peddlers of pot belong in jail, where do the manufacturers of brand name cigarettes and cigars belong? In two years’ time they kill more Americans than all the Blue and Grays who died (620,000) in the Civil War. Indeed, in the next two years, 440 times as many Americans will be killed by smoking cigarettes than all U.S. troops killed in six years of fighting in Iraq. While this writer opposes the use of all drugs, and does not indulge himself, it’s easy to see the prosecution of pot smokers and growers for victimless crimes is, as Hightower Lowdown (lowdown@pipeline.com) reports, “preposterous.”
























gotta keep that cash flowing. if pot gets legalized, the gdp might drop. criminal-prosecutions-R-us.
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I do not support or approve the use of pot however I will say it is foolish to allow other vises that cause damage & harm to our society , ie (alcohol , cigarettes etc). Knowing this I have come to believe the only reason pot is not legal is , the goverment can not figure out how to make all the money off of it. So by keeping it illegal they can make just as much by throwing people in jail. Its all about the bullsh-t almighty dollar. Throwing people in jail for alledged crimes that do not effect society or other people for the most part is nothing more than a money making scheme. Another method of controling the citizens . So called illegal drugs & the boarder issue can be solved if the goverment wanted it solved. They will not because of the money profit it generates. Why would they anyways, I believe they bring in more drugs than anyone else. Now saying that I say leave them alone , we have far greater issues to deal with besides someone smoking a joint or two.
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its a plant…read genesis…1;29..and god said…behold i have given you every herb…which is upon the face of the earth,…and every tre…in the which is the fruit of the tree yeilding fruit…to you it shall be meat
more revealing is re the bush that burned on the mount…fot..exodus re the lampstand in the holy of holies..25;40..;
and look that thou make them after their pattern…which was shewed thee on the mount
but read issiah …quoted /read from by jesus himself into the new trestiment…42.;1-3..a bruised canna shall he not break…ans smoking flax…shall he not quench
isa 61;1….he has sent me to make the broken-hearted well, to say that the prisoners will be made free,
and that those in chains will see the light again;
To proclaim liberty to captives And freedom to prisoners;
GOD’S WORD® Translation (©1995)
The Spirit of the Almighty LORD is with me because the LORD has anointed me to deliver good news to humble people. He has sent me to heal those who are brokenhearted, to announce that captives will be set free and prisoners will be released.
King James Bible
The Spirit of the Lord GOD is upon me; because the LORD hath anointed me to preach good tidings unto the meek; he hath sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are bound;
American King James Version
The Spirit of the Lord GOD is on me; because the LORD has anointed me to preach good tidings to the meek; he has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are bound;
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Auntiesemite Reply:
December 25th, 2009 at 4:12 am
Since Jonah brought up the Holy Scriptures, I would like to add this observation; first off, God said that seed bearing plants are to be for MEAT, not smoke, although He didn’t seem to forbid its use as smoke, I believe that He meant for us to eat it.
Second, what was the manna that Yahweh provided? I ask anyone. If you know what pot seeds look like, –Can the seeds of marijuana really be the actual manna received by the Israelites from God?
Exod.16
1. [31] And the house of Israel called the name thereof Manna: and it was like coriander seed, white; and the taste of it was like wafers made with honey.
Num.11
1. [7] And the manna was as coriander seed, and the colour thereof as the colour of bdellium.
Sounds like pot seeds to me.. We have all heard the “HEMPUSA.com ads here on RBN..
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Ciaran T Reply:
February 3rd, 2010 at 3:00 pm
Sounds interesting Jonah, you could be right but I believe it also says somewhere in the book of Tobit (cant remember the exact CH/V `never let excess become your travelling companion` – I think thats where we are all going wrong, be it drink or drugs!
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The underlying issue that everyone seems to be missing is the term “Liberties.” In this country, the Constitution clearly states a “Free People”; I ask, how can you be free if there are so many laws on the books?
The Lord God gave us ten Commandments. He did not give us one million laws and counting.
When neighbors start worrying about what their neighbors are doing, this is the real issue. I do not care if anyone supports this–it is none of your business.
I personally do not consume this or any other plant, but what you do is your business. These laws have ruined millions of families, and has lead to the Granny State that we have now.
I ask, what the hell is going on when a government passes a law that keeps its people from drinking alcohol?
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Drugs are processed or synthesized substances.
Plants are not drugs.
All plants are the common property of humanity.
What we hold in common are our human rights. Plants are a human right
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Say what you will about some of California’s misguided socialist policies and inability to balance its budget but at least they are taking the initiative on the pot front. Dispensaries are everywhere. With the simple process of getting a prescription, it’s virtually legal to buy, possess, grow and consume. People are being employed, taxes are being collected and the illegal black market has shrunk. The rest of the country needs to follow suit, and industrial hemp production for commercial use should be the USDA’s number one priority. Hemp can give us back our economic stability.
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even a jerk like barney frank says that
“…The notion that you lock people up for smoking marijuana is pretty silly.”
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no rat has every been given cancer in the lab tests. what the tests proved was that the nicotine suppressed cancer, what they didnt tell the news media was that all five groups of rats were exposed to radiation and the group that had smoke injected in the lungs had less cancer that the rest, they needed a cover for all the a bomb testing that released all the radiation and they knew that there would be cancers coming
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http://www.reformation.org/synagogue-of-satan.html
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Tax revenue my ass. God’s plants and the government is telling me what I can do with them.
I don’t even smoke pot but the idea that the government can tell me I can’t? Screw them.
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they are lockiing people up for the money and to get people used to being a subject growing pot for your on use has never been illegal,but they ignore the law and your lawyer is not going to kill the golden goose by spillin the beans in court.here is the law in ga. the thc content has to be 15 percent or more to be marjuana, how can you tell that from 500 ft in the air
(P) Tetrahydrocannabinols which shall include, but are not limited to:
(i) All synthetic or naturally produced samples containing more than 15 percent by weight of tetrahydrocannabinols; and
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I happened to be flippin the remote one night and I saw a “Cops” program where the local cops were selling loose joints to motorists then bagging them around the corner and confiscating their cars. I think it was in Tampa but it’s used by other PDs mostly in the south. These people are crazy and crooked.
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