Three senators want to stop federal law enforcement from interfering with legal pot

Pancreatic cancer surviror Mellody Gannon smokes medicinal marijuana. (Robert Galbraith/Reuters/The Atlantic)

Medical marijuana is legal in 23 states, but the drug remains illegal under federal law. Imagine a retired grandmother who is suffering terribly with a serious illness. Her doctor believes that marijuana might help. Her neighbors don’t mind if she fills a pot prescription: They overwhelmingly voted to give her that right. Sure enough, the woman finds that smoking weed lessens her suffering. Should the federal government be empowered to arrest her for consuming it?

Many in Congress think so. And while federal agents are unlikely to intervene in this sort of case because the optics would be so awful, the law allows for it.

But Senator Rand Paul, a Republican, and his Democratic colleagues, Senators Cory Booker and Kirsten Gillibrand, hope a legislative majority will endorse a less-callous approach. Tuesday, they are introducing a bipartisan bill that would “allow patients, doctors and businesses in states that have already passed medical-marijuana laws to participate in those programs without fear of federal prosecution.”

The bill is expected to divide Republicans. Senator Paul, his colleague Ted Cruz, and Governor Rick Perry, among others, have some regard for the 10th Amendment, which states that “the powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.” They also believe that states can act as laboratories of democracy: People in different regions can live under a system of their liking while acting as a model for other Americans as they weigh the best approach.

Other Republicans want the federal government to override the will of the people in various states. They argue that many people who get medical marijuana cards don’t really need the drug—it’s hardly unique among prescription medications in that sense—and they fear that the availability of medical marijuana will lead to full legalization, as it has in states including Colorado, Washington, and Oregon. They’re right to think so. Exaggerated notions of the harmfulness of marijuana cannot survive in a society where cancer patients consume it. And as exaggerated worries fade, support for prohibition plummets.

That isn’t because marijuana is harmless. Regular use is bad for one’s health. Some users become psychologically addicted. Long-term use carries unknown risks. There are prohibitionists who have a very clear understanding of the drug’s costs and benefits, and continue to staunchly oppose legalization of any kind. But most people who see the costs and benefits of marijuana clearly conclude that preventing other Americans from smoking it at the point of a gun is deeply immoral. Most people are unwilling to send SWAT teams into family homes, lock humans in cages, and enrich drug cartels all in the hopes that a War on Drugs that has failed for decades will improbably turn out to be successful in the end.

Tom Angell of Marijuana Majority, an advocacy group, sees this latest bill as evidence that popular opinion is influencing politicians. “The fact that two young Democrats with likely long political futures have teamed up with a probable 2016 Republican presidential candidate shows how medical marijuana is a nonpartisan, noncontroversial issue that draws support from across the spectrum,” he wrote.

Roughly half of Americans now favor outright legalization of recreational marijuana. The day isn’t far off when public opinion will have shifted enough to bring about a bill to that effect at the national level. That various states are experimenting with medicinal and recreational marijuana leaves us better prepared for that moment. Enabling those experiments is a step in a responsible direction.

6 thoughts on “Three senators want to stop federal law enforcement from interfering with legal pot

  1. I am a 50 year old woman who suffers with chronic pain daily 24/7. I am on disability. I have several things wrong Fybromyalgia (which does exist) 3 types of arthritis. 2 bad feet one which had 8 bones broke and also have a torn rotator cup and avasculer necrosis in left shoulder. Was sent to pain clinic and was treated like I was in prison. Of course they drug tested me and found marijuana and was told come back next month with none in my system and them they will give me my pain meds. Like dangling candy in front of a childs face. I cant even walk in morning without my pain meds. Needless to say i didnt go back. I have fell 3x this week alone. Ohio is suppose to have this on ballot in November. I would be willing to testify in front of Ohios goverment or federal goverment. I would like to see them live in my body for 24 hours.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. This is great… I’m concerned that nothing is being done for the rest of us in illegal states, we need something done on a federal level so all states will have the opportunity to experience the great healing ability of the plant. It’s really unfair we live in the United States “United”

    Like

  3. Reblogged this on alternative medicine or natural cures and commented:

    This is great… I’m concerned that nothing is being done for the rest of us in illegal states, we need something done on a federal level so all states will have the opportunity to experience the great healing ability of the plant. It’s really unfair we live in the United States “United”

    Like

  4. I’m sorry but this, ” That isn’t because marijuana is harmless. Regular use is bad for one’s health. Some users become psychologically addicted.. There are prohibitionists who have a very clear understanding of the drug’s costs and benefits, and continue to staunchly oppose legalization of any kind’. This is bull shit where is the evidence that Regular use is bad for ones health? What is considered regular use? What is the harm that comes from regular use? “Long-term use carries unknown risks” If the risks are unknown then how can this idiot claim it’s bad for your health. This is an example of someone thinking they have to give voice to both sides even when one side is based on lies, bigotry and plain old bull shit.

    Liked by 1 person

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