SMOKE DOPE AND SAVE THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, DUDE
Drug Abuse
Pubdate: Fri, 10 2009
Source: Independent (UK)
Copyright: 2009 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd.
Contact:
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Website: http://www.independent.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/209
Author: Guy Adams, in Los Angeles
Photo: There are claims that cannabis can rescue California from
financial crisis http://www.mapinc.org/images/CannabisEPA.jpg
Video: The TV Ad http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2tJNG5FGFq4
Cited: Marijuana Policy Project http://www.mpp.org/
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Marijuana - California)
SMOKE DOPE AND SAVE THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, DUDE
Activists Fund TV Ads That Claim Legalising Drug Could Solve Financial Crisis
It has been touted as a successful treatment for everything from
insomnia and depression to Parkinson's disease and multiple
sclerosis. Now supporters of legalised marijuana are making perhaps
their most extravagant claim yet: that the drug can solve
California's spiralling financial crisis.
A series of television ads was launched yesterday supporting a bill
by Democratic assemblyman Tom Ammiano that would regulate and tax the
sale of marijuana in the Golden State, where Arnold Schwarzenegger's
administration is in a $26bn (UKP 15.9bn) black hole.
The 30-second film features an "actual marijuana user". She is a
retired, 58-year-old civil servant called Nadine Herndon, shown in
front of her family portraits at home in Sacramento County, where she
began using the drug after suffering a series of strokes three years ago.
"Huge cuts to police, schools and healthcare are inevitable, due to
California's budget crisis. Even our state parks could be closed,"
she says. "But the Governor and legislature are ignoring millions of
Californians who want to pay taxes. We're marijuana users. Instead of
being treated like criminals for using a substance safer than
alcohol, we want to pay our fair share."
The move could attract widespread support in a state where some
regions never quite emerged from the Summer of Love. Medical
marijuana use was introduced in California by a majority vote in a
1996 referendum, and Mr Ammiano's bill calling for legalisation was
put before the legislature in February.
Highlighting the financial benefits of legalisation represents a
canny tactic. California has for years been unable to raise as much
tax as it spends, and its coffers finally ran dry last week, meaning
the government is now paying bills with IOU notes. On Monday Mr
Schwarzenegger's administration suffered the indignity of having its
credit rating downgraded to BBB.
Tens of thousands of public servants have been sacked due to the
crisis, and most others are being forced to take two unpaid days'
leave each month. Ms Herndon's advert, which was launched by the
Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), claims that taxing marijuana could
pay the salaries of 20,000 teachers.
That figure is based on a calculation by Betty Yee, the head of the
California tax collection board, who has said that $1bn per year
would be raised via a $50-per-ounce fee charged to retailers, plus an
additional $400m through sales tax. But marijuana advocates say
actual income could be much higher.
"All these figures are approximations. We are dealing with a
commodity that has been illegal for decades," said Bruce Mirken of
the MPP. "It isn't traded on the commodities market, and we have no
way of knowing how much is consumed. Everything is confused because
at present we have this illusion of illegality."
Lawyers would also be likely to benefit from any attempt to legalise
the drug. Though marijuana is supposedly available to any Californian
who can find a doctor willing, for a small fee, to sign a piece of
paper claiming they suffer from a condition such as insomnia or
"anxiety", it remains verboten under federal law.
Many dispensaries were warily tolerated by federal authorities under
the Bush regime, and Barack Obama's Attorney General Eric Holder has
said the new administration will tolerate medical marijuana so long
as it follows State law. But the White House has not outlined its
position on full legalisation, raising the spectre of a test lawsuit.
Culturally, the drug can also be highly divisive: away from major
cities such as Los Angeles and San Francisco, and some northern
regions where hippy culture remains commonplace, local authorities in
many small towns are less than tolerant towards users. A record
74,000 people were prosecuted for possession in 2007, the last year
for which figures are available.
The reluctance of some conservative classes to embrace legalised
marijuana prompted several television stations, including KTLA and
KABC, to drop Ms Herndon's advertisement last night, apparently
fearing it might offend viewers. The MPP accused them of "stifling
open debate".
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