From: True Activist
5-25-2013
The current battle over marijuana decriminalization is
beginning to gain attention from the general public, as well as state and
federal officials. No longer the platform of fringe activist groups, medical
marijuana is now legal in 18 states and the District of Columbia.
But it’s not only those suffering from chronic illnesses who have access to
legal marijuana; Colorado and Washington have both completely decriminalized
possession of marijuana (up to certain thresholds), setting a precedent for
state-level action on an potentially federal issue, reports the Washington
Post.
The tension between opposing state and federal efforts may soon come to a
head. A recent Pew Research poll indicates that a majority of Americans believe
marijuana should
be legalized. It appears that America may be approaching a watershed moment,
one that can trace its roots back to the fraught Prohibition era of the
1920s.
Prescription for Problems: Medical Marijuana vs. The Federal Government
The first medical marijuana bill in the U.S. was passed by California voters
in 1996. The proposition was created in response to a growing body of scientific
studies suggesting that THC, the primary psychoactive component in marijuana,
may help
relieve the symptoms of nausea, anxiety, glaucoma, and a host of symptoms
associated with certain cancers and HIV/AIDS. While voters backed this initial
proposition and the 17 other state-level initiatives to follow, the issue of
medical marijuana remains complicated due to the federal government’s policy
that physicians may not legally proscribe Schedule 1 drugs.
The substances classified as Schedule 1 are considered
dangerous and have no medical uses, according to the federal government.
They include heroin, LSD and yes, marijuana. In early 2013, a federal appeals
panel denied the reclassification of marijuana, disappointing legalization
advocates who hoped for greater leniency in federal enforcement of marijuana
laws. What remains is an ongoing tension between medical and decriminalized
marijuana states, and federal agents who’ve recently been told by the Obama
administration that enforcement is not a priority.
American Opinion Shifts on Decriminalization
The Washington Posts reported in April that acceptance of recreational and
medical marijuana is up from just 17 percent in 1991 to a whopping 52 percent.
The shift is mainly due to younger voters who are less likely to view marijuana
usage as a moral failing or otherwise social stigma. Groups like NORML (National
Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) are also very active in keeping
voters informed. Proverbial “stoner” movies and shows are becoming more
mainstream, with cable and Direct TV
specials making guys like Harold and Kumar, along with Michael Kelso (Ashton
Kutcher) household names.
Problematic Prohibition
Public favor for marijuana decriminalization continues to grow, much like the
major societal shifts that allowed prohibition to be repealed in the early
1930s. Americans began to see the futility of a law that many people were
disobeying, as well as the senseless crime that resulted from driving a popular
pursuit underground to the unregulated world of the black market. History has
shown that prohibition was not successful as a major public health initiative,
and actually helped boost the unsavory social conditions that it was trying to
eliminate.
Time will tell if the government and the American public will work together
to once again decriminalize this substance, but the cultural shift necessary for
such a change seems to have already occurred.
No comments:
Post a Comment