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Showing posts with label marijuana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marijuana. Show all posts

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Governors-Elect Consider Cutting Drug Programs -- Why Not Legalize Pot

Florida's Republican Governor-Elect Rick Scott is cutting jobs in the Office of Drug Control created by former Governor Jeb Bush. South Dakota's Republican Governor-Elect Dennis Daugaard inherits from his predecessor a proposal to cut meth treatment programs.

I'll invite Mr. Newland to expound further. For now I'll just note that we could probably save a lot more in law enforcement and incracertation costs by legalizing marijuana. At least that's what televangelist Pat Robertson thinks.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Blog Readers Favor Legal Medical Marijuana 55%-45%

The latest Madville Times poll on Initiated Measure 13 drew a lot of eager readers' attention. I asked, "Do you support IM13, legalizing medical marijuana in South Dakota?" 200 of you voted (thank you!) and broke slightly in favor:

Yes
110 (55%)
No
90 (45%)
Votes: 200

The somewhat close result indicates either that readers of this humble blog aren't so ravingly liberal as you might think or that the issue of legalizing marijuana, even for medical purposes, doesn't break neatly along stereotypical liberal/conservative lines. Remember that one of the biggest advocates for IM 13, Bob Newland, is a red-in-tooth-and-claw libertarian who thinks the best government is just slightly more restrictive than the state of nature... and only during business hours.

I do sympathize with Mr. Newland on the issue of medical marijuana. I also enjoy the hay that can be made holding purported conservatives' feet to their own rhetorical fire: if you're all for government leaving us alone, and if you're incensed at the thought of government coming between you and your doctor, how can you not vote for IM13? You legalize medical marijuana, and you transfer power from government to doctors and patients. Those docs who dig dope can prescribe accordingly. Those docs who haven't come to that studied medical opinion can still direct their patients toward industrial pharmaceuticals and other non-herbal treatments. Why would any conservative want to see Congress, the Legislature, and the local sheriff making that decision instead of patients and their doctors?

By the way, I check stats from the government's Drug Abuse Warning Network and learn that nationwide in 2008, marijuana was responsible for 133,201 trips to the emergency room. Alcohol was responsible for 656,661 ER visits.

For deaths, I review this hefty DAWN report and count 1046 reported deaths linked to marijuana. The reporting metro areas include about 38% of the population, and DAWN notes some jurisdictions don't report marijuana as a specific cause of death. So multiply by 6: suppose there were really over 6000 marijuana-related deaths in 2008. The CDC reports that in 2007, alcohol was connected to 23,199 deaths.

And we don't even make you get a doctor's note to buy alcohol.

Friday, October 8, 2010

New Madville Times Poll: IM13 -- Legalize Medical Marijuana?

It's the last hour at the office. The long weekend is almost here. You don't really want to review that report from Marketing. Skip it! Do something really important: vote in the latest Madville Times poll!

This weekend's question: Do you support Initiated Measure 13, legalizing medical marijuana in South Dakota?

If you're not familiar with IM13, feel free to peruse the following resources before voting:
  1. the IM13 explanation in SD's official Ballot Question Pamphlet
  2. "pro" info from the South Dakota Coalition for Compassion
  3. "con" info from Vote No on 13
You can also get a whole heap of pro-IM13 discussion (and some spirited opposition in the comment section) from Bob Newland at the Decorum Forum.

Vote here in the right sidebar through Tuesday morning, 8 a.m. Then we'll talk about the results. Tell your friends, and vote now!

Sunday, July 25, 2010

VA on Medical Marijuana: Groovy, Man!

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs may be knocking the legs out from under South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley's position on medical marijuana. In his official ballot explanation for Initiated Measure 13, AG Jackley notes that the pot-related activities IM 13 would authorize remain illegal under federal law.

Enter the VA hospitals:

Patients treated at Veterans Affairs hospitals and clinics will be able to use medical marijuana in the 14 states where it's legal, according to new federal guidelines....

"If a veteran obtains and uses medical marijuana in a manner consistent with state law, testing positive for marijuana would not preclude the veteran from receiving opioids for pain management" in a VA facility, [V.A. Undersecretary for Health Dr. Robert A.] Petzel wrote. "The discretion to prescribe, or not prescribe, opioids in conjunction with medical marijuana, should be determined on clinical grounds" [Hope Yen, "Medical Marijuana to Be OK in Some VA Clinics," AP via Yahoo News, 2010.07.25].

This isn't the first time the Obama Administration has signaled a willingness to defer to states on medical marijuana. (Read that again, conservative friends: President Obama defers to states rights.) Of course, if President Obama believes marijuana laws aren't worth enforcing, he would do better for the rule of law by cowboying up and advocating outright abolition of those laws.

Jackley's ballot explanation may remain rechnically true, but if someone violates a federal law in the forest and the feds don't send agents to enforce it, does violation really make any noise?

Besides, why should Jackley make any noise about federal laws? He's all about states' rights—he should be defending South Dakotans' rights to challenge unjust federal laws, just as he's doing with his health care lawsuit... right?

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Pot-Luck Picnic at Sherman Park May 18 for Medical Marijuana

Are you tired of the federal government coming between you and your doctor? Then South DaCola recommends the Picnic 4 Patients, sponsored by the South Dakota Coalition for Compassion on Tuesday, May 18th, 6 p.m. at Sherman Park. Bring some hotdish, bring some beverages, and talk with friends about how to pas the medical marijuana "Safe Access Act" in November.

Coalition for Compassion organizer Emmett Reistroffer will be there, as will Vermillion mayoral candidate and freshly-pled pot-law violator Nick Severson.

Oddly, health care freedom crusader Gordon Howie has not scheduled an appearance.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Giebink Trades House Race for Police Chase

Looks like Greg Kniffen is on his own leading the Dem charge against Gene Abdallah and Roger Hunt in District 10:

A Sioux Falls attorney is in custody after she led a sheriff's deputy on a high-speed chase that reached 100 mph at one point.

The Minnehaha County Sheriff's Department says a deputy attempted to stop a speeding vehicle around 2 a.m. Friday on East 26th Street in Sioux Falls. The driver, Mary Ann Giebink, ran two stop signs along Six Mile Road and continued to speed through the Pine Lake Hills housing development [Kushida and Dunsmoor, "SF Attorney Arrested for DWI, Marijuana," KELOLand.com, 2010.05.07].

Giebink is technically still a Democratic candidate for the South Dakota House of Representatives. But "first DWI, aggravated eluding, speeding, stop sign violations and possession of marijuana" just don't make a good campaign slogan.

When it comes to booze and pot, I'm a big Nancy. But for Pete's sake, if you just have to get lit up, can you just do it at home?

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Update: $5000 bond, ankle monitor... and bad pix in jail stripes. District 10 Dems, fire up the Independent draft movement.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

D.C. on the Missouri: Notes on Pot and Other Vermillion Mayor Issues

Pot-smoking Vermillion mayoral candidate Nick Severson may want to check on D.C. politics. The city council of our nation's capital will vote today on legalizing medical marijuana. If it's good enough for Washington, it's good enough for Vermillion, right?

I followed up on yesterday's blog post by reading the USD Volante's coverage of Severson's arrest and other issues in his mayoral campaign. The guy actually sounds like a good candidate for the Teabaggers. Severson declines to identify with a political party, saying he wants to get "beyond the bickering of party politics." He wants to get everyone involved in city government. He wants to clean up the city—literally!—by tackling litter. And hey, when Severson advocates legalizing marijuana, he obviously advocates overthrowing the power of the federal government. Forget states' rights; Severson wants cities' rights. That's totally the Tea Party agenda... right?

Monday, May 3, 2010

Severson for Vermillion Mayor! Tax Pot! And Madison Gal Makes News!

KELO interviews Vermillion's "pot-smoking mayor" candidate Nick Severson... who apparently takes a break from composting in his suit by sitting down at his laptop in the middle of the yard. The woman in the street KELO finds to express something like support for Severson's candidacy is Madison native Kristen Ericsson:



Ericsson's sort-of, not-quite endorsement:

Community members say, they're also paying attention. Some even think his decision to stay in the race is a good one.

"Especially because he's willing to, continue his campaign and I think he's brave and I don't know, that's honorable in my opinion that he's not ashamed of what he did,” Vermillion resident Kristen Ericsson said.

Residents say the recent controversy might lure more voters to the polls.

"I dunno, I think with the university, and the young kids here, that might be a popular thing, so he has a good chance, if the students vote, I think so,” Ericsson said [Cherlene Richards, "Mayoral Candidate Arrested for Drugs," KELOLand.com, 2010.05.02].

So why do all the progressive thinkers move away from Madison?

Monday, October 19, 2009

Obama Justice: Prosecuting Medical Marijuana "Not a Good Use" of Feds' Time

Change Bob Newland can believe in: medical marijuana lives!

Federal drug agents won't pursue pot-smoking patients or their sanctioned suppliers in states that allow medical marijuana, under new legal guidelines to be issued Monday by the Obama administration.

Two Justice Department officials described the new policy to The Associated Press, saying prosecutors will be told it is not a good use of their time to arrest people who use or provide medical marijuana in strict compliance with state law [Devlin Barrett, "Feds to Issue New Medical Marijuana Policy," AP via Yahoo News, 2009.10.19].

Bob, when you get done with probation next year, consider putting a big Red Cross on the side of your wagon.

What do you think, everyone: is it time for my neighbor Gerry to bring out the medical marijuana legislation again? If we go that route, let's add an amendment to legalize industrial hemp (think cash crop, farm friends!).

-----------------
Update 11:20 CDT: Read the memo yourself, straight from the U.S. Department of Justice blog.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Newland Finds Gag Sentence "Tolerable"; Judge Delaney's Explanation Still Incomplete

I am pleased to see that Bob Newland isn't letting his year-long pot-silence sentence get him down. He says in a Decorum Forum post yesterday that he finds his sentence "tolerable."

I am also pleased to see Kevin Woster land an interview with Judge Jack Delaney to talk about that constitutionally questionable sentence. Alas, I remain less than satisfied with the judge's explanation of how this particular restriction of a guilty felon's rights passes constitutional muster.

His Honor makes a reasonable argument: Delaney tells Woster he wanted to impose a sentence that would "sting." And I'll agree, a punishment should feel like punishment. It should be sufficiently unpleasant to the convict to make him think thrice about engaging in the same criminal activity again.

But I can think of all sorts of "stinging" punishments—hang a guy upside for a month, cut off his left foot, force him to divorce his wife, deny him the right to attend church services—that might get the convict's attention but might not pass constitutional muster.

Judge Delaney is right that we deny criminals a wide array of rights as their punishment. But that doesn't logically establish that we can deny criminals any right we choose. Some rights are inalienable, even for the worst criminals. And denying a convict the right to protest the law under which the state has convicted him still feels like one of those rights.

--------------------------------
Just curious: How does Newland's sentence for marijuana possession compare with the sentences we dish out for drunk driving, a crime that poses an immediate threat to public safety? Have we banned any drunk drivers from arguing publicly that our DUI laws are too strict?

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Bob Newland Becomes Political Prisoner: Sentence Overlimits First Amendment Rights

Permit me a moment of agreement with Dakota War College: Judge John Delaney's sentence on marijuana advocate Bob Newland appears to include an unjust infringement on Newland's political rights.

To review: Newland pled guilty to felony pot possession. Yesterday, Judge Delaney issued the following sentence:
  1. 45 days in prison
  2. one year on probation
  3. no booze or other intoxicants for that year
  4. random searches
  5. weekly drug tests
  6. no public role in efforts to legalize marijuana for one year
Now I'm going to ignore the argument about whether pot should be illegal in the first place. Newland broke the law, he's now a felon, he's got punishment coming. Let's keep it simple and talk in general about what sort of punishment a felon should get. Prison time, fines, probation, searches, check-ins—those are all reasonable infringements on the liberty of a person who violates the law. (It is worth noting that Judge Delaney cut Newland some slack, suspending the $2000 fine in recognition of Newland's mostly empty pockets.)

But a restriction on political activity? And a restriction specific to the law broken? That seems to go too far. Certainly putting a man in prison entails restricting a man's ability to engage in political advocacy—he can't exactly go downtown to a rally or march on Washington—but it does not take away his voice. If a man is convicted under a law he considers unjust, should we really take away his right to argue publicly for the repeal of that law?

I can see a potential conflict of legal interest here. Suppose Newland chose to appeal his sentence. (Don't expect it: he seems resigned to his fate.) Suppose he wanted to argue that the law under which he was convicted is unconstitutional. Would not that contention, made on the public record in court, constitute advocacy for legalizing marijuana? Would not his very appeal thus constitute a violation of his probation? Something sounds unfair there.

Felons are still citizens. They still have a stake in society. If they want to be advocates for social reform and justice, we should let them speak. That doesn't mean the county or state is obliged to foot the bill for that communication or permit convicted murderers furloughs for every political protest and parade that comes along. But even in a prison cell, one can still think and communicate one's thoughts to others. Whether those thoughts are worth reading or listening to is up to the public. Wesley Cook (a.k.a. Mumia Abu-Jamal) committed crimes heinous enough to land himself on death row, yet he is permitted to publish books and commentaries from prison. Newland's trangressions earned him just 45 days in the pokey; why would a judge restrict his First Amendment rights (speech, assembly, press, and petition) for 320 days beyond the time he will be a guest of Pennington County?

The best legal punishment serves either to restore or to rehabilitate. In Newland's crime, there is no party to restore, no direct harm that must be paid back. And there is no rehabilitation in denying a man his voice, especially not on an issue that has given him purpose and direction for decades. For a man so dedicated to a cause, a blanket denial of his ability to work publicly for that cause is nothing but punitive, and I'm not sure that serves the interest of anyone in South Dakota.

Now Bob, don't go getting a big head. I'm not saying you are Martin Luther King, Jr. But in 1962, Dr. King was sentenced to 45 days in jail for protesting segregation laws in Albany, Georgia. To make Dr. King sit in jail for breaking a law is understandable. But to order King to take no public role in advocacy against segregation laws would have gone beyond strict law enforcement to outright political repression.

Or consider that case over in Minnesota where Judge John Rodenberg ordered the parents of Daniel Hauser to submit the boy for chemotherapy, against their religious wishes. The judge rightly could have sentenced the mother to jail time for subsequently fleeing the state to avoid the court order. But could he have also ordered that she take no public role in advocating the religious principles that motivated her actions? I should hope not. I disagree with her beliefs, and her beliefs put her son's life in danger, but even if she breaks the law, she retains a fundamental right to express those beliefs.

Bob Newland disagrees with a law. Newland broke that law. He will serve time for breaking that law. But for a year, he will also be a political prisoner, banned on penalty of further incarceration from challenging the state on its (as he sees it) unjust law.

I don't like what Bob's been smoking. But I like even less the political penalty we the people are imposing on him.

Monday, February 2, 2009

House Hears Testimony Tuesday on Medical Marijuana

Bob Newland sends out a preview of the testimony the South Dakota House Health and Human Services Committee will hear on HB 1127, a measure sponsored by our own Gerry Lange to legalize medical marijuana. Here's Bob's Sunday list of folks coming to speak in favor of HB 1127:

  • A former Denver detective who now lives in Sen. Abdallah’s district in Sioux Falls.
  • A 25-year-old student and champion cowgirl who suffers debilitating migraines.
  • A 23-year-old student who has lost a leg from cancer.
  • A 45-ish eastern South Dak. businessman who suffers a degenerative digestive disorder palliated by cannabis.
  • A rancher with AIDS who has done time for trying to sustain his own life.
  • The rancher’s doctor.
  • A former chairman of the MS Society, North Central States Chapter (8000 members).
  • At least one more member of the MS Society, NC Chapter
  • A 1990 Gulf War veteran, with nerve damage due to exposure to chemicals
  • A federally supplied medical marijuana patient, who gets a tin with 300 perfectly-rolled marijuana cigarettes each month. (For more information about the program under which she receives her medicine, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compassionate_Investigational_New_Drug_program)
Funny: the backers of medical marijuana don't sound like the evil, loopy dopesmokers Larry Long and and some DWC commenters would have you think they are. They sound like neighbors, folks who might deserve a fair hearing.