This week, the anti-marijuana
group Smart Approaches to Marijuana (SAM) is peddling its talking
points at a “drug summit” in Hawaii, warning of “big marijuana” in
a state where medical marijuana is regulated. According to a
special narcotics agent from the state that joined the summit, the
state legislature apparently saw more than 60 bills related to
marijuana presented this session. Only four made it out of
committee; those dealt with expanding who could recommend marijuana
for medical use, preventing evictions for being a medical marijuana
card-holder, and setting up task forces. It makes SAM happy.
From The Garden Island:
John Redman, executive director of Californians for
Drug-Free Youth and a member of SAM’s national team, said his
intent is not to vilify marijuana, but to encourage a real
discussion of unintended consequences before reforms or
legalization is considered.“We are really pleased after talking to legislators to see that
Hawaii is taking a very careful and cautious look,” Redman said.
“That is difficult for them because they are getting such political
pressure from people that want to legalize it and form a commercial
industry here. I think that would be devastating to your
islands.”
For the narcotics agent at the summit, Keith Kamita, the
legislative kibosh on legalizing marijuana wasn’t enough.
“Decriminalization is dead, and legalization is dead, but we still
have the resolutions,” he lamented. Six different bills to regulate
or legalize marijuana didn’t pass committee.
The Hawaii legislature is dominated by Democrats. There are only
eight Republican members, and just one in the state
senate.
from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1hiWdHg
via IFTTT