[Lnc-business] Marijuana Resolution - Request for Co-Sponsors
Ken Moellman
ken.moellman at lpky.org
Sun Dec 18 13:11:45 EST 2016
While you are providing AK feedback, I would like to suggest the removal
of a couple of things....
"Whereas, cannabis is less harmful than alcohol and tobacco;"
I don't like the use of "comparatives". Saying that cannabis is less
harmful than tobacco and alcohol only encourages the nanny-statists to
ban tobacco and alcohol. IMO, we should be framing all arguments from a
"people have the right to do what they want to do", not a "well those
guys are allowed to do that and that's worse."
"Whereas, existing cannabis laws have not had a significant impact on
cannabis availability;"
This should also be removed. There are many people who would use
cannabis as a medicinal who are forbidden from doing so. For that
matter, the DEA just reclassified/clarified CBD as Schedule I. It
suggests that the laws don't work anyway so why is there a need to
change them?
There are some other things I'd change, and re-arrange, but the two
above should be removed IMO.
---
Ken C. Moellman, Jr.
LNC Region 3 Alternate Representative
LPKY Judicial Committee
On 2016-12-18 09:08, Caryn Ann Harlos wrote:
> That is a fair point I will bring to Alaska's attention. Thanks!
>
> -Caryn Ann
>
> On Sun, Dec 18, 2016 at 6:29 AM Sam Goldstein <goldsteinatlarge at gmail.com> wrote:
> Caryn Ann,
>
> Other than being entirely too long, I cannot support any resolution that "calls on federal and state legislators to develop new programs". Our goal is to shrink government at all levels, not to increase it.
>
> Live free,
>
> Sam Goldstein
> Libertarian National Committee
> Member at Large
> 8925 N Meridian St, Ste 101
> Indianapolis IN 46260
> 317-850-0726 Phone
> 317-582-1773 Fax
>
> On Sun, Dec 18, 2016 at 3:01 AM, Caryn Ann Harlos <carynannharlos at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I withdrew this from the agenda and deferred to ask by email vote. The Alaska affiliate requested me to bring this before the LNC - requesting co-sponsors
>
> Whereas, cannabis is less harmful than alcohol and tobacco;
>
> Whereas, existing cannabis laws represent vast government over‐reach into the personal lives of American citizens and violate principles of personal liberty and choice;
>
> Whereas, existing cannabis laws have not had a significant impact on cannabis availability;
>
> Whereas, millions of peaceful Americans have been arrested, imprisoned, fined, or otherwise needlessly criminalized and stigmatized, potentially for life, because of their use of cannabis;
>
> Whereas, over $1 trillion have been spent nationally enforcing drug laws, including those pertaining to cannabis, since the War on Drugs was politically initiated by President Richard Nixon in the 1970s;
>
> Whereas, because of drug laws, including cannabis laws, the United States has become a nation of mass incarceration - imprisoning 2 million American citizens which represents the highest imprisonment rate of any nation on Earth and 25% the world's prisoners;
>
> Whereas, the enforcement of cannabis and other drugs laws has been racist and represents the new Jim Crow, disproportionately targeting and impacting people of color and minorities;
>
> Whereas, the Drug War's "asset seizure" program has raised over $13 billion for local police forces across the country, encouraging more cannabis and other drug arrests while funding the purchase of high tech military equipment for police, further militarizing their operations;
>
> Whereas, there is a long history of Drug War abusive police tactics including the murdering of unarmed, non‐violent, misidentified, and innocent people;
>
> Whereas, those arrested and accused of drug offenses, including cannabis offenses, are often compelled by police and prosecutors to serve as informants for investigations of potentially dangerous drug dealers or else face additional charges; this is a disrespectful and dangerous practice that can have lethal consequences for the accused and their families;
>
> Whereas, existing drug laws, including those criminalizing cannabis, have created an illegal market for drugs contributing to crime and violence‐ridden American neighborhoods while funding drug cartels operating in the U.S. and in other countries such as Mexico where their operations have thoroughly undermined civil society and inflicted unimaginable violence and corruption;
>
> Whereas, there is a widespread and accurate belief that the War on Drugs, including the war on cannabis, has been an abysmal failure, producing much more harm than good;
>
> Whereas, existing drug laws, including those criminalizing cannabis, and their unjust enforcement have caused many Americans to lose respect for law enforcement on all levels including prosecutors, judges, lawmakers, et.al [1].;
>
> Whereas, drug courts for cannabis offenders are no solution because they are fundamentally punitive in nature, assume cannabis users are drug abusers and criminals, and compel those accused of cannabis offenses to give up their rights as a condition of entering drug court in order to escape potentially worse sanctions; drug courts leave the accused at the mercy of court‐appointed coercive drug "counselors," who serve the court first and their "clients" second, and judges who can order them to jail without recourse;
>
> Whereas, decriminalization of cannabis is no solution because it fails to resolve the problems described above and because it continues to maintain two fundamental and indefensible fictions, namely, that cannabis is more harmful than alcohol and tobacco and that cannabis users are more of a threat to society and themselves than those who use alcohol and tobacco;
>
> Whereas, seven states, Colorado, Washington, Alaska, California, Nevada, Maine, and Massachusetts have voted to fully legalize cannabis, and more states are likely to follow, over 20 states have enacted medical cannabis laws;
>
> Whereas, the vast majority of Americans want prohibition to end as demonstrated by the fact that only five states in America still have full prohibition, all others have some form of legality or decriminalization;
>
> Whereas, an April 2, 2014, Pew Research Center poll found that 75% of Americans believe the use and sale of cannabis will eventually be legal in the United States nationwide;
>
> Whereas, legalizing cannabis is an important social issue, and a genuinely peaceful approach to cannabis and other currently illegal drugs must be based on freedom, harm reduction, and, in the case of actual drug abuse, free and readily available voluntary treatment - and not criminalization, criminal enforcement, or criminal punishment; And, whereas, cannabis for use by adults should never have been criminalized and we should act now to correct this wrong and all the many wrongs which have followed from it;
>
> * * * * * * Now, therefore, be it resolved that the Libertarian Party National Committee supports the full legalization of cannabis;
>
> Be it further resolved that the Libertarian Party National Committee supports and endorses the concurrent economic benefits arising from a fully legal market which would alleviate many of the problems described above while raising hundreds of millions of dollars in revenues which could be used to support needed programs, close budget gaps, or finance tax cuts;
>
> Be it further resolved that the Libertarian Party National Committee calls on police, prosecutors, and judges to focus on real crime and, until cannabis is legalized, use their discretion to stop arresting, prosecuting, and punishing non‐violent cannabis users and minor drug sellers;
>
> Be it further resolved that the Libertarian Party National Committee calls on our President, Congress, Governors, State Legislators, Federal and State Attorneys General, and other officials to undo the damage that has been done by federal and state cannabis and other drug laws by eliminating mandatory minimum sentences, releasing from prison and jail those convicted of non‐violent cannabis and other minor drug offenses, and expunging their criminal records.
>
> And, finally, be it resolved that the Libertarian Party National Committee supports the legalization of industrial hemp which can be grown containing minimal amounts of psycho‐active ingredients like THC and used to produce renewable food, oil, wax, resin, rope, cloth, paper and fuel in support of a sustainable full‐employment society; and furthermore, calls on federal and state legislators to develop new programs to encourage a decentralized family farm and community‐oriented approach to industrial hemp development as a means to a sustainable full‐employment society.
> --
>
> IN LIBERTY,
> CARYN ANN HARLOS
> Region 1 Representative, Libertarian National Committee (Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii, Kansas, Montana, Utah, Wyoming, Washington) - Caryn.Ann. Harlos at LP.org
> Communications Director, Libertarian Party of Colorado [2]
> Colorado State Coordinator, Libertarian Party Radical Caucus [3]
>
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