Now the Hard Part Begins
Of course, just because the people of Colorado and Washington decided to
legalize marijuana production and consumption does not mean the War to
End the War on Drugs has been won in those states. For one thing, other
recreational drugs will remain illegal, so the government can keep right
on kicking down doors and shooting family pets in its crazed search for
those substances. (If you haven't heard about such occurrences yet,
check out
this chilling music video for the song “No Knock
Raid” by Toronto musician Lindy.)
But even when it comes to marijuana, a substance that by all accounts is
less harmful than alcohol, the fight is not over. That's because the
federal government is unlikely to honour the democratically expressed
wishes of a majority of voters in these two states to be left alone.
Instead, according to two former U.S. drug control officials
interviewed by Reuters,
“the federal government could sue to block parts of the measures or send
threatening letters to marijuana shops, followed up by street-level
clampdowns similar to those targeting medical marijuana dispensaries the
government suspects are fronts for drug traffickers.”
On the campaign trail in 2008, Barack Obama, who has admitted to using
marijuana and other drugs when he was young, spoke as if he were going
to allow states to go their own way on the medical marijuana issue,
breaking with the Bush administration's policy of raiding pot
dispensaries. “I'm not going to be using Justice Department resources to
try to circumvent state laws on this issue,” he promised. Yet as
President,
he has broken that promise,
cracking down even more than his predecessor on growers and dispensaries
in the 16 states that allow marijuana use for medical purposes. There is
little reason to believe that the Hypocrite in Chief's reaction to the
Colorado and Washington initiatives will be any more restrained.
We're from the Government, and We're Here to Help
The notion that prohibition could accomplish anything besides the
empowerment of organized criminals is one that should have died with the
Volstead Act in 1933. The notion that other people ought to have the
power to tell you what you can and cannot put into your own body is one
that should offend any individual with a modicum of self-respect. On the
one hand, it's discouraging that the Drug War drags on in this day and
age. But on the other hand, the fact that voters in Colorado and
Washington have, for practical or moral reasons, called bullshit on this
destructive, bankrupt policy is at least a little something for lovers
of liberty to celebrate this election cycle.
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