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Kucinich: Marijuana Decriminalization [View All]

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Flabbergasted Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-05-07 06:19 PM
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Kucinich: Marijuana Decriminalization
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http://kucinich.us/issues/marijuana_decrim.php

With the enactment of the Volstead Act in 1919, America embarked on a social experiment known as Prohibition. Prohibitionists rejected the idea that people could be trusted to drink in moderation, arguing that alcohol use inevitably led to moral corruption and undesirable behavior. Accepting these premises led Congress to conclude that a federal ban on the production and sale of alcohol would go a long way toward reducing crime and addressing a variety of other social problems. Within a decade, however, Americans discovered that the criminally enforced prohibition of alcohol produced harmful side effects. The rise of black markets empowered organized crime to an unprecedented degree. In some of America's largest cities, local governments had been heavily corrupted by the influence of organized crime. The black market provided minors with easy access to bootlegged alcohol, which was frequently of poor quality and unsafe to drink. Faced with the disastrous consequences of Prohibition, Congress decided in 1933 to repeal the Volstead Act. Since that time, the government has implemented the much more successful policy of focusing law enforcement efforts on irresponsible alcohol users who endanger the rights of others.

Unfortunately, current drug policy fails to take into account the lessons of Prohibition. The law regards all users as abusers, and the result has been the creation of an unnecessary class of lawbreakers. According to the FBI's Uniform Crime Report, more than 734,000 individuals were arrested on marijuana charges in 2000. This number far exceeds the total number of arrestees for all violent crimes combined, including murder, rape, robbery, and aggravated assault. Eighty-eight percent of those arrested were charged with possession only. Convicted marijuana offenders are denied federal financial student aid, welfare, and food stamps, and may be removed from public housing. In many cases, those convicted are automatically stripped of their driving privileges, even if the offense is not driving related. In several states, marijuana offenders may receive maximum sentences of life in prison. The cost to the taxpayer of enforcing marijuana prohibition is staggering -- over $10 billion annually.

The harsh nature of punishments for marijuana offenses is even more disturbing if one considers the racial bias of the war on drugs. According to data collected by the National Household Survey, on an annual basis the overall difference between drug use by blacks and whites is quite narrow. However, a recent national study found that African Americans are arrested for marijuana offenses at higher rates than whites in 90% of 700 U.S. counties investigated. In 64% of these counties, the African American arrest rate for marijuana violations was more than twice the arrest rate for whites. Questions of racial bias affect the integrity of investigations, arrests, and prosecutorial discretion. If we truly aspire to the ideal of "Justice for All," then these unjust racial disparities are unacceptable outcomes for the American justice system.

The rationale for continuing this draconian policy of marijuana prohibition is unclear. Statistical evidence shows that marijuana use follows a pattern very similar to that of alcohol. Most marijuana users do so responsibly, in a safe, recreational context. These people lead normal, productive lives -- pursuing careers, raising families, and participating in civic life. In addition, marijuana has proven benefits in the treatment of numerous diseases, such as providing a valuable means of pain management for terminally ill patients. In either of these contexts, there is no rational justification for criminally enforced prohibitions. These unnecessary arrests and incarcerations serve only to crowd prisons, backlog the judicial system, and distract law enforcement officials from pursuing terrorists and other violent criminals.

New Mexico's 2001 state-commissioned Drug Policy Advisory Group determined that marijuana decriminalization "will result in greater availability of resources to respond to more serious crimes without any increased risks to public safety." This finding is backed by the successful implementation of such policies in twelve states. The state governments of Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, and Oregon approved these measures after the National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse recommended that Congress adopt a national policy of marijuana decriminalization. A recent CNN/Time magazine poll indicates overwhelming public support for this approach, with 72% of Americans favoring fines as a maximum penalty for minor marijuana offenses, and 80% approving of marijuana used for medical purposes.

As a nation, we must work to implement a drug policy that removes responsible recreational users and medical users of marijuana from the criminal justice system, in order to redirect resources toward the following goals:

Enforce penalties for those who provide marijuana to minors.
Enforce penalties for those who endanger the rights of others through irresponsible use, such as driving under the influence.
Develop drug treatment programs focused on rehabilitation, rather than incarceration.
Support the efforts of state governments in developing innovative approaches to drug policy.
Improve drug education by emphasizing science over scare tactics.
Implement a Department of Justice program that would review the records of, and consider for sentence reduction or release, inmates convicted for nonviolent marijuana offenses.
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  -Kucinich: Marijuana Decriminalization Flabbergasted  Mar-05-07 06:19 PM   #0 
  - K&R n/t  ms liberty   Mar-05-07 06:23 PM   #1 
  - Dennis! nt.  Warren Stupidity   Mar-05-07 06:25 PM   #2 
  - That should lock up the coveted hacky sack vote!  Forkboy   Mar-05-07 06:26 PM   #3 
  - If we could only harness the power?  Flabbergasted   Mar-05-07 06:27 PM   #4 
  - Make it retroactive  AtomicKitten   Mar-05-07 06:30 PM   #5 
  - which is one of its listed goals  Marnieworld   Mar-06-07 11:21 AM   #23 
  - Excellent policy proposal!  app_farmer_rb   Mar-05-07 06:33 PM   #6 
  - Not on the fringe at all. It's only labeled as fringe by the M$M, and too  greyhound1966   Mar-06-07 01:59 PM   #32 
  - Fucking Right.  ellisonz   Mar-05-07 07:06 PM   #7 
  - Fantastic to read....  LynzM   Mar-05-07 07:08 PM   #8 
  - We came close to doing this in the 70's  Qutzupalotl   Mar-05-07 07:23 PM   #9 
  - He wants to blow up your computer and arrest you for copying files, too.  Commie Pinko Dirtbag   Mar-08-07 11:19 AM   #41 
  - Rational  Steve_DeShazer   Mar-05-07 07:26 PM   #10 
  - so thats why Willie supports him......  ikhor   Mar-05-07 09:22 PM   #11 
  - But he's not electable.  blackops   Mar-05-07 10:55 PM   #12 
  - Caucus for him anyway  eridani   Mar-06-07 03:14 AM   #13 
     - exactly (n/t)  app_farmer_rb   Mar-06-07 07:54 AM   #16 
  - Well Done  josewelder   Mar-06-07 05:48 AM   #14 
  - Agree with him  Ninja Jordan   Mar-06-07 07:00 AM   #15 
  - great policy statement  no_to_war_economy   Mar-06-07 08:01 AM   #17 
  - Now they have to emphasize the wasted tax money that is used to  jwirr   Mar-06-07 08:03 AM   #18 
  - That's not even mentioning the other benefits  Prophet 451   Mar-06-07 08:23 AM   #19 
  - K&R  redqueen   Mar-06-07 09:10 AM   #20 
  - One good thing about decriminalization  libodem   Mar-06-07 11:16 AM   #21 
  - Three cheers for Dennis.  Kerry2008   Mar-06-07 11:20 AM   #22 
  - Anything illegal will always be dangerous  IronLionZion   Mar-06-07 11:27 AM   #24 
  - Obviously pot isn't totally harmless.  Kerry2008   Mar-06-07 11:45 AM   #27 
     - Yes, it is totally harmless. In over 5000 years of recorded human history  greyhound1966   Mar-06-07 02:06 PM   #33 
        - With enemies like that...  FatDave   Mar-06-07 04:49 PM   #39 
  - I like it..  Learn2Swim   Mar-06-07 11:28 AM   #25 
  - Dennis Kucinich makes a lot of sense,  Uncle Joe   Mar-06-07 11:37 AM   #26 
  - The only good one!  Mrspeeker   Mar-06-07 11:49 AM   #28 
  - kick and recommend  terip64   Mar-06-07 12:39 PM   #29 
  - It will never happen unless the pugs are driven into a hole  ooglymoogly   Mar-06-07 01:02 PM   #30 
  - Kucinich as Veep for Gore? I could live with that.  greyhound1966   Mar-06-07 02:12 PM   #34 
  - Never have partaken a weed, but have a progressive peripheral  indepat   Mar-06-07 01:40 PM   #31 
  - Save small farms, inhale  jaksavage   Mar-06-07 02:24 PM   #35 
  - Another primary vote for Dennis here.  SOS   Mar-06-07 03:26 PM   #36 
  - r&r  mikelgb   Mar-06-07 03:36 PM   #37 
  - God I wish this would really happen!!!! n/t  whereismyparty   Mar-06-07 04:07 PM   #38 
  - kick  Cobalt Violet   Mar-08-07 10:59 AM   #40 
 

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