cannabisnews.com: Dopey Days in America 





Dopey Days in America 
Posted by CN Staff on June 10, 2003 at 08:29:14 PT
By Duncan Campbell in Los Angeles
Source: Guardian Unlimited
The reports leading up to the sentencing last week of Ed Rosenthal, the "guru of ganja" in San Francisco, suggested variously that he faced 60 years, 100 years or life inside for the offence of growing marijuana plants for medical use in an Oakland warehouse. In the event, he was sentenced to just one day, which he had already served. No one seriously believed that Rosenthal was going down for 100 years, even in these mad times when another California resident is serving 50 years for shoplifting some videos. But the prosecution were hoping for a sentence of five years and other medical marijuana growers in the state whose cases received less prominence are indeed already serving those kinds of sentences. 
What was intriguing about the Rosenthal case was the clash between California and the federal government over the issue. California is one of nine states that recognise medical usages of marijuana in one form or another but all 42 prosecutions connected to medical use and all six raids of medical marijuana clubs have taken place in California. At issue is not only whether marijuana should be allowed for medical use but also how much independence a state should have in taking a path opposed by the federal government; California voted to allow the use of medical marijuana in 1996 but the government argues that federal law over-rides a state's wishes. The Bush administration came to power championing the rights of the state against the interference of big government but does not want to extend a state's rights on this issue. California has a Democratic party governor - at least for the next few months - and Democratic party control of the house of representatives and senate. It voted overwhelmingly for Al Gore in 2000. This has led some people to suggest that the state is being targeted by the attorney general, John Ashcroft, and President Bush as a kind of payback for its apostasy. But even if one believed this, the prosecutions are hard to understand. Why the FBI is being used to pursue the proponents of medical marijuana at a time when the country's terror alert status seems to waver frantically between code orange, crimson and puce is something possibly only a psychologist could tell us. But the derisory sentence given to Ed Rosenthal - similar to a libel award of a penny in the British courts - must surely now raise the odd eyebrow back in Washington. LA's new - well, newish - chief of police, William Bratton, has not shied away from speaking his mind since he came to LA. I have seen him address three public meetings now and one of the most interesting things he has said was that there were far too many people in prison for drugs offences and that this was partly the fault of the "foolishness" of the mandatory minimum sentence laws related to drugs. These are the laws that send some marijuana users away for much longer times than rapists or child molesters and which currently account for the jailing of 400,000 people in the US. Less publicised last week was the suggestion from the US surgeon general that it would be no bad thing if tobacco was banned. To which Philip Morris USA, the tobacco giant, responded quite reasonably that prohibition had been tried before in the US and had been "a disaster". So we have a senior judge in San Francisco and the chief of police in LA effectively saying that the drugs laws are a nonsense and one of the country's largest corporations stating that prohibition was a disaster. It would be reassuring for the people currently doing 20 years for growing marijuana to imagine that this conjunction of the executive and judicial arm of law enforcement with big business might herald a national awakening about the medieval nature of the current drugs laws. But don't hold your breath. Or - if you do - don't inhale. Note: The token sentence given to a California marijuana grower exposes the clash between that state's lenient approach to drugs and the federal government's medieval one, writes Duncan Campbell.Source: Guardian Unlimited, The (UK)Author: Duncan Campbell in Los AngelesPublished: Tuesday, June 10, 2003Copyright: 2003 Guardian Newspapers LimitedContact: letters guardian.co.ukWebsite: http://www.guardian.co.uk/Related Articles & Web Site:Ed Rosenthal's Pictures & Articles http://freedomtoexhale.com/trialpics.htmTwist Ends Medical Marijuana Casehttp://cannabisnews.com/news/thread16545.shtmlGuru's Tirade on Marijuana Earns Respect http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread16540.shtml 
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Comment #1 posted by afterburner on June 10, 2003 at 11:07:07 PT:
Dopey Days? Puh-leeze!
Less publicised last week was the suggestion from the US surgeon general that it would be no bad thing if tobacco was banned. To which Philip Morris USA, the tobacco giant, responded quite reasonably that prohibition had been tried before in the US and had been "a disaster". Make no mistake the US Department of Health and Human Services wants to control everything you put into your body, just like the Canadian Ministry of Health. Freedom of choice is not on their agenda: first, demonize cannabis, then, tobacco, then alcohol or coffee. How much Big Brother do you want? Prohibition of alcohol has been tried, failed and repealed. Prohibition II of cannabis has been tried, failed, but resists repeal. Prohibition III has been tried in incremental ways (smoke-free workplaces and public buildings, demonizing tobacco smokers and driving the side-stream smoke onto the street), has not yet failed, and has opponents in high places. In the cradle of free enterprise will arbitrary micro-management from Federal Health agencies defeat the profit-making potential of the purveyors of legal psychotropic agents (tobacco, alcohol, coffee, tea, chocolate)?ego transcendence follows ego destruction when the individual again has the God-given right protected by medical and religious freedom to decide what to put into his/her body.
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