It's about damn time that Texas stopped creating life-long drug criminals of our teens
By Trey Rusk
Running Code 3
March 27, 2019
Texans caught with small amounts of marijuana could receive a fine rather than jail time under a bill that passed a state House committee.
I'm a retired cop and it's true that I hold conservative views but this is the right thing to do.
Currently any amount of marijuana possession in Texas is a criminal offense. For years the Texas courts have ruined futures for teens who have been caught experimenting with small amounts of marijuana.
The life long stain caused by one indiscretion have caused our children to be denied entrance into colleges, vocational studies, the military and not be able to obtain clearances for some government jobs.
I am not an advocate for possession of small amounts of marijuana. However, I believe the de-criminalization of small amounts of marijuana will free up our courts and police to do more important things.
State Representative Joe Moody of El Paso has filed HB-63 that would make less than an ounce of marijuana a civil penalty. The civil fine imposed could not be above $250 and no jail time. Members of the House Committee forwarded the bill with a vote of 5 to 4 in favor of the legislation.
I want to be clear about this topic. I believe marijuana can be a gateway drug for some people but I believe alcohol has ruined more lives than any other drug. At some point people are responsible for their own actions. The drug record associated with less than 1 ounce of marijuana needs to be eliminated.
The same stigma is not attached to the criminal charge of possession of alcohol by a minor. Why? Alcohol has been linked directly to the deaths of far more people than marijuana ever will be.
That's the way I see it.
EDITOR’S NOTE: While I am not overly opposed to this bill, I most certainly do not support it!
My heart really doesn’t bleed for 17, 18 and 19-year-old teens who knowingly break the law by using pot. There are consequences for breaking the law - although the Jussie Smollett case brings that into question – and those teens should be treated accordingly. Besides that, in Texas, those under 17 are handled as juveniles, so they will have no drug criminal record.
Moody’s bill also applies to adults and will only encourage the use of drugs, not discourage it. The path to hell is paved with the stones of good intentions. Moody is making it harder to fight the war on drugs.
Trey, it seems as though you have switched over to the wrong side in the war on drugs.
And that’s the way I see it.
2 comments:
BGB, I appreciate you're comment. Under an ounce of weed is not a class C misdemeanor in Texas. It is a class B misdemeanor. Kids and adults are still jailed for very small amounts.
The record shows up as "possession of a controlled substance" and as such ruins lives. Harris County has already made what I consider to be an unlawful exception by reducing the penalty for under 4 ounces of weed to community service. 4 ounces is a lot of weed.
I'm concerned about what we are doing to our teens. Alcohol has killed a lot more people than weed but prohibition didn't work. Because of state alcohol regulation through licensing, marijuana is easier to obtain for teens than alcohol.
That's the way I see it.
Yet the drug is legal now in many states. Doesn't make it right, but neither should it be allowed to hinder the future aspirations of an otherwise law abiding young citizen. Doesn't mean I like it. But marijuana has become so readily available, and at as I stated earlier, legal in many states...it seems kinda stupid to lock people up and/or give someone a criminal record over it. Let them pay a fine and move on with their lives.
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