Writing over at The Corner, Kevin Williamson points to the No on Proposition 19 campaign’s website, which has the following statement beneath the picture of a smashed up school bus:
Williamson’s retort is characteristically blunt and to the point:
California has real problems, and these busybodies are worried about, in their own words,passengers in cars who may be high. Not drivers — passengers. The only dangers presented by a stoned passenger are associated with an unscheduled stop at Jack in the Box.
Williamson is, of course, quite correct. For some it might be a bit surprising that a prominent writer at the nation’s preeminent conservative magazine would opine in favor of Prop 19, but National Review has actually been against the War on Drugs for some time now (even the great William F. Buckley, the magazines long-time editor and founder, was pro-legalization as was free-market economist Milton Friedman). And indeed, it’s interesting to see who has come out of the woodwork in support of Prop 19 and, even more interestingly, against the bill – which would legalize and regulate the sale and consumption of recreational marijuana in California.
I heard this story on NPR this morning which takes note of some of the stranger opponents of the proposition:
“My favorite strain these days has to be Dr. Walker’s Daze,” she says. “It’s a pretty epic mood elevator. You’re instantly happy, and you stay happy.”
De la Luz says she was excited at first to hear California was trying to legalize pot. “I thought it was a dream come true,” she says. “Then I read it and realized it was a nightmare.”
She’s now actively campaigning with her group “Stoners Against Prop 19.” She says the initiative would create too many restrictions: Californians would be able to legally possess, process, share or transport only one ounce of pot. And they would be able to grow it only in a 25-square-foot area. […]
“We’re kind of like anti-Wal-Mart and anti-McDonald’s,” she says. “So for them to try to sneak in and turn cannabis into a corporation, that’s disgusting.”
Or take pot-grower, Chris Wilson who worries that he’ll be taxed out of business:
“They’re going to tax the hell out of me,” Wilson says. “And I barely make it as it is. I’m just getting by. They’re taxing everybody they can, just because California is in debt. They see the money can be made, like unbelievable taxation, enough to push me out of business.”
And another grower who worries:
The libertarianism on display by these stoners and marijuana growers is a bit on the hypocritical side. For one thing, keeping something illegal by consigning it to black (or gray) markets is not the same thing as keeping something free and unregulated. Real people go to jail over marijuana. Full legalization is far more free regardless of limits on the amount someone can possess. For all the talk of freedom and choice, illegal or semi-legal marijuana is not good for either.
The growers are even more revealing: cartels always worry about legalization because it will inevitably lead to higher supply, increased access, and lower prices. In other words: it’s good for consumers and bad for producers who can’t compete. So of course pot farmers worry about falling prices – so do dealers everywhere when rumblings of an end to marijuana prohibition begin.
The unlikely supporters of Prop 19?
Cops:
Downing says marijuana is less harmful than alcohol or tobacco. And he says arresting people for possessing marijuana is a waste of time for police; he says instead, they should be solving violent crimes and targeting those controlling the black market.
“Marijuana provides 95 percent of the cartels’ profits,” says Downing, citing the hundreds of murders along the U.S.-Mexico border attributed to the drug cartels. “And they’re using the hundreds of thousands of gang members to bring about their distribution, their collections, their enforcement and their assassinations. We have a major, major violence problem, and if we take the cartels’ profits away, we’re going to start drying them up.”
And moms:
“Prohibition ended because of moms,” Jones says. “They knew the true danger from prohibition: violence, profits, illegality. This is an opportunity to end a failed policy.”
Jones says Proposition 19 would put marijuana sales “out of the hands of criminals and in the hands of those that will control cannabis away from children.”
It’s time to end the prohibition of marijuana once and for all, and bring the sale and consumption of marijuana into the legal market. After that we can have debates on possession levels, taxes, and regulations. The only people benefiting from this fight now are the dealers, while police, parents, and society as a whole pays the price. Right now the Prop 19 battle in California is a dead heat, and I don’t think we’ll know for sure until November 3rd whether the first real effort at curbing the egregious War on Drugs will be a victory or a failure.