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Marijuana Advocates Point to Signs of Change
SAN FRANCISCO - On Monday, somewhere in New York City, 420 people will gather for High Times magazine's annual beauty pageant, a secretly located and sold-out event that its sponsor says will "turn the Big Apple into the Baked Apple and help us usher in a new era of marijuana freedom in America."
Marijuana grows under lights. "We've been on national cable news more in the first three months than we typically are in an entire year," said Bruce Mirken, the director of communications for the Marijuana Policy Project. (AFP/File/Robyn Beck)
They will not be the only ones partaking: April 20 has long been an unofficial day of celebration for marijuana fans, an occasion for campus smoke-outs, concerts and cannabis festivals. But some advocates of legal marijuana say this year's "high holiday" carries extra significance as they sense increasing momentum toward acceptance of the drug, either as medicine or entertainment.
"It is the biggest moment yet," said Ethan Nadelmann, the founder and executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance in Washington, who cited several national polls showing growing support for legalization. "There's a sense that the notion of legalizing marijuana is starting to cross the fringes into mainstream debate."
For Mr. Nadelmann and others like him, the signs of change are everywhere, from the nation's statehouses - where more than a dozen legislatures have taken up measures to allow some medical use of marijuana or some easing of penalties for recreational use - to its swimming pools, where an admission of marijuana use by the Olympic gold medalist Michael Phelps was largely forgiven with a shrug.
Long stigmatized as political poison, the marijuana movement has found new allies in prominent politicians, including Representatives Barney Frank, Democrat of Massachusetts, and Ron Paul, Republican of Texas, who co-wrote a bill last year to decrease federal penalties for possession and to give medical users new protections.
The bill failed, but with the recession prompting bulging budget deficits, some legislators in California and Massachusetts have gone further, suggesting that the drug could be legalized and taxed, a concept that has intrigued even such ideologically opposed pundits as Glenn Beck of Fox News and Jack Cafferty of CNN.
"Look, I'm a libertarian," Mr. Beck said on his Feb. 26 program. "You want to legalize marijuana, you want to legalize drugs - that's fine."
All of which has longtime proponents of the drug feeling oddly optimistic and even overexposed.
"We've been on national cable news more in the first three months than we typically are in an entire year," said Bruce Mirken, the director of communications for the Marijuana Policy Project, a reform group based in Washington. "And any time you've got Glenn Beck and Barney Frank agreeing on something, it's either a sign that change is impending or that the end times are here."
Beneficiaries of the moment include Norml, the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, which advocates legalization, and other groups like it. Norml says that its Web traffic and donations (sometimes in $4.20 increments) have surged, and that it will begin a television advertising campaign on Monday, which concludes with a plea, and an homage, to President Obama.
"Legalization," the advertisement says, "yes we can!"
That seems unlikely anytime soon. In a visit last week to Mexico, where drug violence has claimed thousands of lives and threatened to spill across the border, Mr. Obama said the United States must work to curb demand for drugs.
Still, pro-marijuana groups have applauded recent remarks by Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., who suggested that federal law enforcement resources would not be used to pursue legitimate medical marijuana users and outlets in California and a dozen other states that allow medical use of the drug. Court battles are also percolating. The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit heard arguments last Tuesday in San Francisco in a 2007 lawsuit challenging the government's official skepticism about medical uses of the drug.
But Allen F. St. Pierre, the executive director of Norml, said he had cautioned supporters that any legal changes that might occur would probably be incremental.
"The balancing act this year is trying to get our most active, most vocal supporters to be more realistic in their expectations in what the Obama administration is going to do," Mr. St. Pierre said.
For fans of the drug, perhaps the biggest indicator of changing attitudes is how widespread the observance of April 20 has become, including its use in marketing campaigns for stoner-movie openings (like last year's "Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantánamo Bay") and as a peg for marijuana-related television programming (like the G4 network's prime-time double bill Monday of "Super High Me" and "Half Baked").
Events tied to April 20 have "reached the tipping point in the last few years after being a completely underground phenomenon for a long time," said Steven Hager, the creative director and former editor of High Times. "And I think that's symptomatic of the fact that people's perception of marijuana is reaching a tipping point."
Mr. Hager said the significance of April 20 dates to a ritual begun in the early 1970s in which a group of Northern California teenagers smoked marijuana every day at 4:20 p.m. Word of the ritual spread and expanded to a yearly event in various places. Soon, marijuana aficionados were using "420" as a code for smoking and using it as a sign-off on fliers for concerts where the drug would be plentiful.
In recent years, the April 20 events have become so widespread that several colleges have urged students to just say no. At the University of Colorado, Boulder, where thousands of students regularly use the day to light up in the quad, administrators sent an e-mail message this month pleading with students not to "participate in unlawful activity that debases the reputation of your university and degree."
A similar warning was sent to students at the University of California, Santa Cruz - home of the Grateful Dead archives - which banned overnight guests at residence halls leading up to April 20.
None of which, of course, is expected to discourage the dozens of parties - large and small - planned for Monday, including the top-secret crowning of Ms. High Times.
In San Francisco, meanwhile, where a city supervisor, Ross Mirkarimi, suggested last week that the city should consider getting into the medical marijuana business as a provider, big crowds are expected to turn out at places like Hippie Hill, a drum-happy glade in Golden Gate Park.
A cloud of pungent smoke is also expected to be thick at concerts like one planned at the Fillmore rock club, where the outspoken pro-marijuana hip-hop group Cypress Hill is expected to take the stage at 4:20 p.m.
"You can see twice the amount of smoke as you do at a regular show," said B-Real, a rapper in the group. "And it's a great fragrance."



34 Comments so far
Show AllWhat's so bad about feeling good?
Can't have that!..It's the "pursuit of happiness" that keeps the corporate cash flowing. Once you catch the carrot, you have no more value, eh?
The United States is an extroverted nation. That's why we worship alcohol and cigarettes. Pot is a drug for introverts. Introverts sit around, giggling, gazing at their navels, listening to music and are not out hustling or starting wars. That's why they don't want you to have it.
Feeling good goes against all of our Puritan heritage. We are still very much a Puritan country, witness the series of witch hunts down the years, from the McCarthy trials to the paranoia against homosexuals. It's in our collective psyche. That's why Marijuana is so vilified, much more so than alcohol, or even speed or heroine. You can feel good without any side effects or addiction. THAT'S a no-no.
I see high times ahead.
It's time to be areal thorn in the sides of those who are against legalization. Bring up the cost. Bring up the corruption. Bring up the wasted lives for nothing but the use of a plant. Belittle the thinking of those who say "It sends the wrong message to our kids" by asking them what the message we send now is. It's essentially that we don't value letting you make your own decisions for your own life as an adult, and that we would rather see the kids themselves die on the street or have to deal with the police and jail rather than to help them if they need it. We would rather be judgmental and mean rather than to offer mental health help to anyone. Ask these pro-authoritarians if they LIKE spending the nearly $100 BILLION we spend on cannabis law enforcement every year, and ask them if they can think of any OTHER way to spend that much money. Ask them if they think that destroying the lives of 870,000 Americans every year for their use of a plant is a worthwhile thing.
It's time to undo the damage that these stupid laws have been doing to the country and our freedoms for the last nearly 100 years (CA first made cannabis illegal in 1913 so they could kick the Mexicans out). If there was ever a time when it started to look possible, this is it. If we let this chance go by, then we doom the next God only know how many generations to the same kind of stupidity that we have had to live with. We owe them more than that. And we owe ourselves to win this fight as well. It's time that we lived without this yoke around our necks.
And if the president can't allow us this, then let's find out WHY. I know it's just a political cheap shot on his part and cowardice, but it's time that we GET something for the trillions of ours that he is giving the already WAY too rich. How about if he leaves us alone for a change, and stops making us all criminals because we would rather do a plant than pills or alcohol? It's time to stop this BS and get back to freedom for a change.
Shout it from the roof tops, brotha!
Phenomenal post, WJM.
"It's time that we lived without this yoke around our necks."
a toke-yoke?
i wrote this back in '71 -
(or '72?)
so i fill my pipe with dope
hoping it will give me hope
as it does for a while
my mind is melted in a smile
then i try to work out how
to always be right here and now
with no yester nor tomorrow
no imagined future sorrow
Free the weed, free the people.
Outdoor I-ganic or chronic hydroponic.
Legalize it, liberate it, and let it grow.
In the name of the most high, JAH RastaFari!
Check out the decriminalization of ALL DRUGS in Portugal...very remarkable results........
http://www.cato.org/pubs/wtpapers/greenwald_whitepaper.pdf
I planted six Strawberry Cough clones in six 7 gallon Smart-Pots yesterday and they are under a 1000 watt metal halide light, 7/24.
In 3.5 weeks I will switch the lights to High Pressure Sodium, 2,600 watts 12 on 12 off each day.
6-7 weeks after that I'll harvest about a pound+ of killergreenbud.
10 weeks
4-5 hundred in electric bills
200 hundred for clones, dirt, food.
Equals about 18 ounces of the best weed in the world for about seven hundred dollars.
Hhhhhmmmmm.......happy 4:20
Got seed??
Howdy angryoldman,
I sure try not to, but I do now what you mean.
BC Seeds has shipped seeds to millions & millions of Americans with never one hassle. Never.
For your shopping convenience they take plastic.
aom, Right now they have 10packs of Train Wreck Feminized for $240.00. 8-9 would be female. If you had a safe place to plant you could expect 1-2 pounds per plant in early October......and on one let's say together, 'medical marijuana for personal use only....'
JiminyCricket!
Thanks...I've worked with BC before...very smart folks. Just thought things might be too tight now.
Mind if I send you a self-addressed box and some stamps? : )
Seventhson....
Things get lost in the mail and all,
On the other hand, if my sweet six
are finished by the end of June,
I'm going to New Mexico i think it's gonna
be for a Rainbow Gathering.
Their are different kinds of intelligence and
awareness, and RB gatherings are Grad Schools of life
and wisdom.
And if any CommonDreamer makes it,
well.........
Sugar Magnolia
Blossoms Blooming
That's awesome. I'm so baked I forgot what I wanted to say.
Oh yeah.
That's awesome!
they're going to legalise pot and hope we'll all get too stoned to worry about silly war crimes.
You say that like it's a bad thing. After all, it's not like the elite are going to allow any warcrime trials to go ahead... May as well get some good out of it.
Panama Red, Panama Red
Today in downtown Vancouver the BC Marijuana Party held a political rally. Outside the Art Gallery, the lawn was packed with thousands of people many of them smoking up.
The air for blocks around was sweet with the smell of Marijuana smoke.
The only police prescence I say was two bycycle cops who stopped at the other side of the road, watched a while , then rode on.
Now had that been a BEER garden with people drinking there very likely woudl have been more then a few brawls.
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One of the tidbits in regards to legalization is fairly important one: it would deny a revenue stream to the Mexican drug cartels who are turning that nation into a bad flashback of Pablo Escobar era Columbia. Prohibition is a godsend for criminals, and the mayhem in Mexico is merely the latest confirmation of such.
Of course, the Prison Industrial Complex will fight this tooth and nail, as marijuana prosecutions and imprisonments form a large hunk of their quite profitable business.
It well past time that the racist, Hearst / Anslinger led prohibition of marijuana become a sad episode of history.
Herer for president!
I feel quite tired of hoping for improvement in cannabis-laws, "improvement" meaning available and regulated legally. But I still agree, from the trickling hope in my weary heart, that hoping seems more realistic now than for a long time.
The biggest "harm-reduction" measure possible is the pot-ban gone. The most blatant case of punishment NOT fitting the activity ("crime") are cannabis laws. The harm-reduction ensuing from legalizing cannabis-use, when it finally happens, will be enormous. The public money saved and gained will be the least of harm reduced.
I'm sure you all agree. Just wanted to give my say. Some impressively clear and true postings here (WJM, Mordechai, angryoldman et al - and eze as always, maaan).
Tnx, old man, for the link on Portugal. Good one. The lesson there, valid across the board of western nations, seems to be: the more illegal, the higher drug use; the better regulation allowing use, the less use. So: when a ban is unenforceable, it increases the banned activity.
Dear god, the pot-ban is so stupid and harmful I wonder about the species I got my self entangled in...
FREE POT NOW!
FREE THOUGHT NOW!
POT MAKES PEACE.
"available and regulated legally"
agreed ... as long as the regulation is about the same as that for tomatoes or green beans ...
Well said. I cannot believe that in a sane society a PLANT could be declared illegal.
Taking the liberty of posting the Cato Institute's Executive Summary of the report on decriminalization in Portugal, by Glenn Greenwald - hope that's ok:
---
On July 1, 2001, a nationwide law in Portugal took effect that decriminalized all drugs, including cocaine and heroin. Under the new legal framework, all drugs were "decriminalized," not "legalized." Thus, drug possession for personal use and drug usage itself are still legally prohibited, but violations of those prohibitions are deemed to be exclusively administrative violations and are removed completely from the criminal realm. Drug trafficking continues to be prosecuted as a criminal offense.
While other states in the European Union have developed various forms of de facto decriminalization — whereby substances perceived to be less serious (such as cannabis) rarely lead to criminal prosecution — Portugal remains the only EU member state with a law explicitly declaring drugs to be "decriminalized." Because more than seven years have now elapsed since enactment of Portugal's decriminalization system, there are ample data enabling its effects to be assessed.
Notably, decriminalization has become increasingly popular in Portugal since 2001. Except for some far-right politicians, very few domestic political factions are agitating for a repeal of the 2001 law. And while there is a widespread perception that bureaucratic changes need to be made to Portugal's decriminalization framework to make it more efficient and effective, there is no real debate about whether drugs should once again be criminalized. More significantly, none of the nightmare scenarios touted by preenactment decriminalization opponents — from rampant increases in drug usage among the young to the transformation of Lisbon into a haven for "drug tourists" — has occurred.
The political consensus in favor of decriminalization is unsurprising in light of the relevant empirical data. Those data indicate that decriminalization has had no adverse effect on drug usage rates in Portugal, which, in numerous categories, are now among the lowest in the EU, particularly when compared with states with stringent criminalization regimes. Although postdecriminalization usage rates have remained roughly the same or even decreased slightly when compared with other EU states, drug-related pathologies — such as sexually transmitted diseases and deaths due to drug usage — have decreased dramatically. Drug policy experts attribute those positive trends to the enhanced ability of the Portuguese government to offer treatment programs to its citizens — enhancements made possible, for numerous reasons, by decriminalization.
This report will begin with an examination of the Portuguese decriminalization framework as set forth in law and in terms of how it functions in practice. Also examined is the political climate in Portugal both pre- and postdecriminalization with regard to drug policy, and the impetus that led that nation to adopt decriminalization.
The report then assesses Portuguese drug policy in the context of the EU's approach to drugs. The varying legal frameworks, as well as the overall trend toward liberalization, are examined to enable a meaningful comparative assessment between Portuguese data and data from other EU states.
The report also sets forth the data concerning drug-related trends in Portugal both pre- and postdecriminalization. The effects of decriminalization in Portugal are examined both in absolute terms and in comparisons with other states that continue to criminalize drugs, particularly within the EU.
The data show that, judged by virtually every metric, the Portuguese decriminalization framework has been a resounding success. Within this success lie self-evident lessons that should guide drug policy debates around the world.
*
Glenn Greenwald is a constitutional lawyer and a contributing writer at Salon. He has authored several books, including A Tragic Legacy (2007) and How Would a Patriot Act? (2006).
Who would be disappointed if marijuana were legalized?
Arms dealers.
Foreign drug lords and cartels.
Domestic street dealers, mobsters and thugs.
Big banks and the Business Roundtable.
The Prison industry.
The armed bureaucracy of the drug war.
Big Pharma.
Lawyers, politicians and anyone else who lies for a living.
Bravo!........... Encore!
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Every year, marijuana prohibition puts thousands of Americans in prison for a nonviolent, victimless crime that the last three US presidents have all committed.
Tell Obama and your elected representatives that it's time to legalize and regulate marijuana:
http://tinyurl.com/LegalizeTaxIt
It's time to end the ridiculous propaganda. Free the indica! The future is looking brighter on this front than in decades. Keep up the momentum.