Friday, December 26, 2008

Weed in the Obama Administration

Via the Plank, Esquire's John R. Richardson mulls over Obama's policies on marijuana, ultimately settling on guarded optimism:
And two weeks ago, when the Obama team asked the public to vote on the top problems facing America, this was the public's No. 1 question: "Will you consider legalizing marijuana so that the government can regulate it, tax it, put age limits on it, and create millions of new jobs and a billion dollar industry right here in the U.S.?"

But alas, the answer from Camp Obama was -- as it has been for years -- a flat one-liner: "President-elect Obama is not in favor of the legalization of marijuana." And at least two of Obama's top people are drug-war supporters: Rahm Emanuel has been a long-time enemy of reform, and Joe Biden is a drug-war mainstay who helped create the position of "drug czar."
[Break]
Nevertheless, the marijuana community is guardedly optimistic. "Reformers will probably be disappointed that Obama is not going to go as far as they want, but we're probably not going to continue this mindless path of prohibition," NORML executive director Allen St. Pierre tells me.
With every passing day, it's getting harder to imagine a scenario where Obama has enough political capital to tackle a reform of marijuana laws, even six or seven years from now. Not to trivialize the ridiculousness of 60,000-85,000 people wasting away in jail because of selling weed, but with everything else going on in the country, it would essentially be a political vanity project that Obama can't afford.

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