How Much More Public Support Does Medical Marijuana Really Need?
CNN hosted an interview with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday which featured democratically elected questions courtesy of the popular website Digg.com. Unsurprisingly, one of the top questions was about marijuana policy reform. Here is her response (itâs the 3rd question):
Obviously, Pelosi is very supportive of medical marijuana and despite her pessimism about achieving full-scale legalization, she didnât actually say she opposed it. Ideologically, Iâd have to say this was pretty good coming from the Speaker of the House. But, as Paul Armentano points out, Pelosiâs advice to supporters of medical marijuana just doesnât add up. She laments Congressâ intransigence on the issue and encourages constituents to contact their representatives, as though this is all just a matter of showing politicians where the people stand.
Alas, we kinda tried that already. Public support for medical marijuana has been overwhelming for a long time. Reformers are 9-1 when it comes to passing state-level medical marijuana laws at the ballot box. State legislatures in Hawaii, New Mexico and Rhode Island have passed laws to protect patients, drawing praise from constituents. The only memorable instance of a politician being damaged for his position on medical marijuana involved Bob Barr, who lost his House seat following attacks for opposing medical marijuana. Heâs come around since then.
What, other than legalizing medical marijuana in a dozen states, could the people possibly do to show the politicians in Washington, D.C. that weâre serious about this? You want us to go legalize medical marijuana everywhere else in America? Weâll do it. You want more research proving that it works? Let us know when youâre done reading what weâve already given you, and weâll gladly send the rest. Worried about the message to young people? Teenage use is down in states with medical marijuana laws.
You see, our feet are tired. Our throats are hoarse. Our keyboards are cracking, our sharpies are dry and weâre almost out of posterboard. With all of that in mind, Nancy Pelosi, since you do agree with us and youâre the Speaker of House now, we were hoping there might be something else you could do.
Obviously, Pelosi is very supportive of medical marijuana and despite her pessimism about achieving full-scale legalization, she didnât actually say she opposed it. Ideologically, Iâd have to say this was pretty good coming from the Speaker of the House. But, as Paul Armentano points out, Pelosiâs advice to supporters of medical marijuana just doesnât add up. She laments Congressâ intransigence on the issue and encourages constituents to contact their representatives, as though this is all just a matter of showing politicians where the people stand.
Alas, we kinda tried that already. Public support for medical marijuana has been overwhelming for a long time. Reformers are 9-1 when it comes to passing state-level medical marijuana laws at the ballot box. State legislatures in Hawaii, New Mexico and Rhode Island have passed laws to protect patients, drawing praise from constituents. The only memorable instance of a politician being damaged for his position on medical marijuana involved Bob Barr, who lost his House seat following attacks for opposing medical marijuana. Heâs come around since then.
What, other than legalizing medical marijuana in a dozen states, could the people possibly do to show the politicians in Washington, D.C. that weâre serious about this? You want us to go legalize medical marijuana everywhere else in America? Weâll do it. You want more research proving that it works? Let us know when youâre done reading what weâve already given you, and weâll gladly send the rest. Worried about the message to young people? Teenage use is down in states with medical marijuana laws.
You see, our feet are tired. Our throats are hoarse. Our keyboards are cracking, our sharpies are dry and weâre almost out of posterboard. With all of that in mind, Nancy Pelosi, since you do agree with us and youâre the Speaker of House now, we were hoping there might be something else you could do.
Weekly: This Week in History
Events and quotes of note from this week's drug policy events of years past.
Australia: Strong Support for Medical Marijuana, Needle Exchange Programs, National Survey Finds
Australians showed strong support for medical marijuana and harm reduction measures in a national survey. Marijuana legalization? Not so much, at least not yet.
Law Enforcement: LEAP Barred From Asian-American Cops Meeting in Virginia
Somebody at the National Asian Peace Officers Association conference this week didn't want their members to hear from anti-prohibitionist cops. LEAP wants to know who and why.
Feature: California Attorney General Issues Medical Marijuana Guidelines -- Mostly Good But Some Problems, Say Advocates
After more than a decade of conflict and confusion over California's medical marijuana laws, state Attorney General Jerry Brown Monday issued a series of guidelines for patients, providers, and police designed to specify just what is and is not allowable under the law.
Death Penalty: More Executions in Iran, Saudi Arabia
This month, Iran has once again led the way in executing drug offenders.
Harm Reduction: Funds Begin to Flow to DC Needle Exchange Programs
For a decade, Congress has barred the city of Washington, DC, from spending money to fund needle exchange programs in an effort to slow the spread of HIV/AIDS. That ban was lifted earlier this year, and now the money is beginning to flow.
Europe: Scottish Heroin Crackdown Sparks Violent Crime Increase
Police in Scotland engineered a crackdown on heroin in Dundee, only to find they had created a crime wave.