Sunday, February 19, 2012

‘THERE’S NO QUESTION THAT OBAMA’S THE WORST PRESIDENT ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA’

I’ve often expressed my firm conviction that medical marijuana is one humongous con job to legalize pot. During the first two-plus years of the Obama administration, the DEA followed Attorney General Eric Holder’s policy to lay off the ‘medical’ marijuana growers and dispensers in those states that had legalized pot for medical use. Holder’s policy enforced my belief that Obama was the worst president since Jimmy Carter.

At the beginning of the current presidential election campaign, the administration suddenly did a complete turnaround and unleashed the DEA which it is once again raiding ‘medical’ pot dispensaries and busting ‘medical’ pot growers and distributors.

Now all the Obama adoring pot heads and marijuana legalization advocates are really pissed off, with many saying Obama is worse than George Bush. Rob Kampia, executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project, has gone so far as to say, "There's no question that Obama's the worst president on medical marijuana. He's gone from first to worst."

When lefties scream Obama’s worse than Bush, that’s really something! The turnaround almost makes me want to vote for Obama in November, but not quite. Lest we forget, the manufacture, distribution and possession of marijuana is a violation of federal laws that make no exception for medical purposes. Thus the Obama administration should never have ordered the DEA to lay off in the first place.

‘Obama’s War On Pot: In a shocking about-face, the administration has launched a government-wide crackdown on medical marijuana’ by Tim Dickinson is a long article in Rolling Stone (2-16-12) that bemoans the DEA’s crackdown on the ‘medical’ pot business. Here are some excerpts from the beginning of that article:

Back when he was running for president in 2008, Barack Obama insisted that medical marijuana was an issue best left to state and local governments. "I'm not going to be using Justice Department resources to try to circumvent state laws on this issue," he vowed, promising an end to the Bush administration's high-profile raids on providers of medical pot, which is legal in 16 states and the District of Columbia.

But over the past year, the Obama administration has quietly unleashed a multi¬agency crackdown on medical cannabis that goes far beyond anything undertaken by George W. Bush. The feds are busting growers who operate in full compliance with state laws, vowing to seize the property of anyone who dares to even rent to legal pot dispensaries, and threatening to imprison state employees responsible for regulating medical marijuana. With more than 100 raids on pot dispensaries during his first three years, Obama is now on pace to exceed Bush's record for medical-marijuana busts. "There's no question that Obama's the worst president on medical marijuana," says Rob Kampia, executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project. "He's gone from first to worst."

The federal crackdown imperils the medical care of the estimated 730,000 patients nationwide – many of them seriously ill or dying – who rely on state-sanctioned marijuana recommended by their doctors. In addition, drug experts warn, the White House's war on law-abiding providers of medical marijuana will only drum up business for real criminals. "The administration is going after legal dispensaries and state and local authorities in ways that are going to push this stuff back underground again," says Ethan Nadelmann, director of the Drug Policy Alliance. Gov. Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island, a former Republican senator who has urged the DEA to legalize medical marijuana, pulls no punches in describing the state of affairs produced by Obama's efforts to circumvent state law: "Utter chaos."

In its first two years, the Obama administration took a refreshingly sane approach to medical marijuana. Shortly after Obama took office, a senior drug-enforcement official pledged to Rolling Stone that the question of whether marijuana is medicine would now be determined by science, "not ideology." In March 2009, Attorney General Eric Holder emphasized that the Justice Department would only target medical-marijuana providers "who violate both federal and state law." The next morning, a headline in The New York Times read OBAMA ADMINISTRATION TO STOP RAIDS ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA DISPENSERS. While all forms of marijuana would remain strictly illegal under federal law – the DEA ranks cannabis as a Schedule I drug, on par with heroin – the feds would respect state protections for providers of medical pot. Framing the Obama administration's new approach, drug czar Gil Kerlikowske famously declared, "We're not at war with people in this country."

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