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Pot Policy at The Federal Level

vta

Active member
Veteran
Pot Policy at The Federal Level
By Paul Armentano, NORML
Source: AlterNet

USA -- We've had our celebrations; now the real work begins.
In Massachusetts, where 65 percent of voters mandated an end to minor marijuana possession arrests, police and pundits are already calling on lawmakers to amend -- or even repeal -- the new law. Therefore, if you reside in Massachusetts, it is critical that you contact your state elected officials, as well as Democrat Gov. Deval Patrick and Attorney General Martha Coakley, and demand that they fully implement the will of 1,938,366 registered voters of the commonwealth of Massachusetts who voted "yes" on 2.

As for the rest of us, now is the time to make your voice heard federally. The election of Barack Obama, coupled with Democrat control of both the House and the Senate, presents a unique and critical opportunity for federal marijuana law reform. Voters on Election Day demonstrated overwhelmingly that they favor political reform in this country, and that reform includes new directions in marijuana policy.

Obama's transition team has established a website - http://change.gov/page/s/ofthepeople - asking for "our ideas" and "help" to "solve the biggest challenges facing our country." Unfortunately, neither the 'war on drugs' nor 'marijuana' appears on the "the agenda."

It's up to us -- the cannabis community -- to make it part of the agenda.

Please contact the Office of President Elect Obama and demand that our next President engages in a national dialogue on marijuana policy. Below are three suggested ways Obama can take immediate, practical steps to reform America's antiquated and punitive pot laws:

1. President Obama must uphold his campaign promise to cease the federal arrest and prosecution of (state) law-abiding medical cannabis patients and dispensaries by appointing leaders at the US Drug Enforcement Administration, the US Department of Justice, and the US Attorney General's office who will respect the will of the voters in the thirteen states that have legalized the physician-supervised use of medicinal marijuana.

2. President Obama should use the power of the bully pulpit to reframe the drug policy debate from one of criminal policy to one of public health. Obama can stimulate this change by appointing directors to the Office of National Drug Control Policy who possess professional backgrounds in public health, addiction, and treatment rather than in law enforcement.

3. President Obama should follow up on statements he made earlier in his career in favor of the decriminalization of marijuana by adults by calling for the creation of a bi-partisan Presidential Commission to review the budgetary, social, and health costs associated with federal marijuana prohibition, and to make progressive recommendations for future policy changes.

On Election Day, voters in Massachusetts, Michigan, and throughout the country gave President Elect Obama and the incoming Congress a mandate to end the Bush drug war doctrine. Now let's get down to business to assure that our message is implemented.
 
G

guest

Sent in by me:

I'm a documented example of marijuana being able to reverse type 2 diabetes.

I've been arrested twice now.

The first time I was arrested for collecting petition signatures for proposal #1 in Michigan.

The second time was about a month later for growing my medicine.

I'm being forced by the federal government to have diabetes.

Please help. We voted for you in the hope that you would be the one to end this nightmare.
 
M

Micro420

Did my part. Even though Im not thrilled of Obama

Change?

How about changing the drug laws in this country. Tax dollars are wasted on prosecution for which there will be no control of. Its like water trying to go up a mountain. In all seriousness these senseless drug laws need to be wipe out or reform. Legalize marijuana and change the other laws so it will put these drug dealers out of business.
 
G

guest

It isn't even in the list of existing priorities on that site.

You have to write it in.

It will slide for years if we don't remind him now.
 

jonezin

Member
I wrote in Medical Marijuana and asked that he please keep his word.

I just got done watching a program about him on Bio. They said he used to do drugs. Cocaine, marijuana and drank beer. I knew that he smoked weed before, but I wasn't aware that he had ever used cocaine. Not that I care. Maybe that's beneficial to us. I don't see how it can hurt.
 

SweetNightmare

Active member
The fact alone that he had this site put up just amazes me. I wrote about decriminalization of all drugs... especially ending the war on MMJ and was pushing towards full-scale taxation to eliminate gangs and violence to due drugs...
 

10k

burnt out og'er
Veteran
jonezin said:
I am thrilled with Obama. I don't want to start an argument, but it makes no sense to me how people that care about marijuana could possibly have wanted McCain to win. Did you see the video of him being asked about medical marijuana use? Where he responded by saying that his "colleagues" have informed him that there's better alternatives, prescription drugs for example? He specifically said prescription drugs. Personally I think we are WAY better off with Obama as far as marijuana policy goes. Obama said that if it takes changes in the laws at the federal level to allow the medical use of marijuana then that's what will happen. Or something to that effect.

A WORD OF CAUTION...
This is a good thread concerning our common cause of legalizing medical mj,
Lets keep it on topic and NOT turn it into a partisan platform which would only turn the thread to shit and cause it to be closed or binned. PLEASE no more ranting about McCain or other such partisan bullcrap. Further partisan complaining or bickering back and forth is pointless and will be split & binned from this thread, or worse yet, cause the threads closure...get it. The election is over.
Now is the time to communicate our concerns to the new Obama administration in a constructive manner.
 

HerbGlaze

Eugene Oregon
Veteran
SweetNightmare said:
The fact alone that he had this site put up just amazes me. I wrote about decriminalization of all drugs... especially ending the war on MMJ and was pushing towards full-scale taxation to eliminate gangs and violence to due drugs...

Legalizing other drugs is idiotic, just an opinion.

Btw, I sent in my 2 cents on the DEA raiding patients under PROP 215,SB-420
And added they shouldn't raid us when the bad stuff is right under there nose the pharmicies handing out drugs equal or stronger to heroin its self!
I AM SO BAKED.
 

SDOG

Member
IDEA! why dont we check off healthcare and talk about medical marijuana? I checked off healthcare then also put in Drug war for another reason then gave my explanation. I think its awesome this site is put up. It gives us internetz users a little advantage to contact his staff. I am sure they have someone who reports to them just like the congressman do with their emails.
 
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zingablack

livin my way the high way
Veteran
this is what i wrote. i plan on writing again about mmj and the raids, but for now i left it at decrim then legalizing our wonderful plant. tell me what you think


Hello,

I agree with one of President-Elect Obamas statements. The war on drugs has been a failure. It has put many innocent people in jail for committing harmless crimes. I'm not talking about hard drugs such as Meth, Heroin, etc, I'm speaking of Marijuana. This is a plant that has literally thousands of medical and industrial possibilities. Not only that but it has been proven to be less harmful than legal drugs like alcohol. Because of Barack's admitted Cannabis use he must know how harmless it really is. I'm very grateful that Obama had the nerve to admit he "inhaled". The reason that this statement made me excited is it shows a man that can face the reality of his actions. Which I believe is a great quality, but what about the 750,000 out of 850,000 people that have to face a reality that includes hard prison time and permanently throwing their lives off course because of a simple Marijuana possession. Like one of the great presidents before you said, The Punishment Should Fit the Crime. In the case of marijuana the punishment is severely more harsh than the crime. I believe that decriminalization is the first step, but ultimately I and many others think that it should be legalized. I for one cannot find a reason that Marijuana shouldn't be legal when tobacco is and kills hundreds of thousands of good Americans every year. Please take this into serious consideration because millions of Americans want to see this during this time of change.


i second the motion to not turn this into another politcal fight thread.
 

jonezin

Member
That sounds really good to me zingablack.

I didn't mean to post something that was gonna start an argument and said that in my post, but I'm going to go edit that or delete it. I was just pointing out what he said. If I offended anyone I apologize.
 
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zingablack

livin my way the high way
Veteran
Hey i dont think you need to edit it. everyone has their own opinion on who would be best. thats whats great about USA. free thinking. i just dont like constant flame wars because we have different ideas.
 

funker

Active member
kudos to everyone participating in the thread. i too cannot believe we are being asked for input, this is uncharted territory lol... also kudos to everyone for keeping it civil. jonezin i think its awesome u didn't vote for him but are willing to give input...

here is some of my letter:

You have already made history and I hope you continue to do so by sticking with your campaign pledge to end DEA and DOJ practices of violating the rights of medical marijuana patients who are in compliance with existing state laws concerning medical marijuana. The issue of medical marijuana should simply be a medical/healthcare issue without any interference from law enforcement.

I am not advocating making drugs such as cocaine, heroin and meth legal. I believe these drugs are too habit forming and destructive to be freely available for recreational use. However when users are imprisoned, stigmatized and ultimately broken by the prison system it creates a vicious circle of addiction, violence and despair. Nonviolent users of hard drugs should be diverted into quality treatment programs and not treated as criminals.

In the case of marijuana, it is utterly senseless that a plant which has been used in various forms for thousands of years should be demonized and its users treated like violent criminals (in many cases receiving harsher penalties than violent offenders). On the same day you swept to your historic victory, voters in Massachusetts overwhelmingly approved a law to decriminalize small amounts of marijuana for personal use. Michigan also passed a medical marijuana bill that will allow doctors to decide if marijuana is the best medication for a patient's condition.

The voice of the people is loud and clear. We are tired of listening to drug czars and law enforcement types spew regurgitated lies about a plant which has never caused a fatality and has numerous industrial uses as well. Not only is marijuana more effective against many common conditions than pharmaceuticals (well beyond the scope of the gravely sick and dying) it is also a demonstrably safer alternative for recreational use to alcohol and tobacco, two drugs which are perfectly legal in the US and are responsible for the deaths of millions of people.

The amount of money spent trying to eradicate a God-given plant in its unprocessed form is disgusting. Billions of dollars are spent every year in the "fight" against a plant; this is money that could be spent on things we seriously need like better infrastructure, healthcare and alternative energy. Legalized marijuana could also provide extra revenues to the Treasury without raising anyone's income taxes.

I implore you to reconsider our failed War on Drugs. Please come up with a more compassionate solution to the ravages of hard drugs and end the insane prohibition of marijuana.

No one should be rotting in prison or stigmatized over a non-lethal plant and sick people should not be denied medicine prescribed by a doctor, whether it is made by big pharma or not.

I hope the MPP people and NORML pick up on this and direct people to make input... We need to be polite but firm...I checked civil rights and healthcare as I feel MJ fits in both categories...

peace
 
G

guest

The more I think about it the more angry that I get.

The web site that asks for public input isn't even asking the question!

This is the method that our elected officials get controlled.

By leaving marijuana policy change off the list of issues these people can then claim that it isn't on the mind of voters.

Control the information flow and control the elected official.

Obama is being manipulated already.

We can't let that happen!!

During the entire election process pollsters never asked the question "is marijuana an issue that could change your vote?"

Yet the vote showed that it was a major issue for voters!

Don't let Obama get manipulated this way!
 
G

guest

funker said:
kudos to everyone participating in the thread. i too cannot believe we are being asked for input, this is uncharted territory lol... also kudos to everyone for keeping it civil. jonezin i think its awesome u didn't vote for him but are willing to give input...

here is some of my letter:



I hope the MPP people and NORML pick up on this and direct people to make input... We need to be polite but firm...I checked civil rights and healthcare as I feel MJ fits in both categories...

peace
If you didn't write in marijuana, then those two issues you checked will be counted as more important to you than marijuana policy reform.

We need to be very clear. Otherwise marijuana policy reform will be viewed as not important by the public.
 
G

guest

As I thought about it, I came to realize that the .gov site is manipulating the information flow to Obama. They do so by not listing marijuana policy reform as a "issue." This is in spite of the voters mandate from just a few days ago.

I just received this e-mail.

You see that government website for what it is. I have yet to see any
reform organization recommend using it, but many recommending:

http://www.2009transition.org/criminaljustice/

which does have specific subject areas that would fit our issues. As
the other organizations and I understand it that website will provide
input to the Obama transition team also, and may end up having more
respect than the government website.
 
G

guest

Here is another comment that I sent to the .gov web site:

It is shameful to see this attempt to control president elect Obama.

In every location that voters were allowed to choose, they voted 2 to 1 to
change marijuana policy.

This web page has left the issue off the list. In doing so, this web page
will tend to give president elect Obama the false impression that the issue
isn't important to the public.

This is manipulation of information flow to the president.
 

funker

Active member
i also wrote in "War on Drugs"...i feel that MJ is definitely a civil rights issue and healthcare issue as well...also let's not jump to conclusions about what they are going to do with the input...

i will be resending my letter to the other website as well...
 
G

guest

I'm just ticked off that I seem to be being conned by the government again.

And those responsible for "fixing" this information flow to the president elect need to have a spotlight and camera pointed at them.
 

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