Senate panel makes it clear: Committee decries pot in Idaho

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — In a historically conservative state that often opposes so many forms of federal involvement — from the health care law to endangered species acts — Idaho lawmakers are now looking for all the help they can get from Washington when it comes to enforcing the nation's drug laws. The Senate State Affairs Committee approved two anti-marijuana resolutions Wednesday, including one urging the government to enforce existing drug laws along borders with states that continue to relax marijuana statutes. "We are making a statement that we as a legislature, at this time, do not support the legalization of marijuana because of the impact we've seen in the other states around us," said Sen. Chuck Winder, R-Boise. Winder also is the chief sponsor of a resolution affirming the state's position against use of marijuana in any form, medically or otherwise. Both resolutions, merely symbolic policy gestures, are now headed to the Senate for debate before vetting begins in the Idaho House. But for a state that makes a habit of bucking the federal government, the appeal for strict enforcement of federal drug laws has some taking note. "In some instances we seek the federal government to come and enforce the law, and in other instances, we seem to decide we don't want the federal government to enforce the law in our state," Sen. Elliot Werk, D-Boise, said before the committee voted Wednesday. In recent years, Idaho lawmakers led the march in 2010 to sue in a failed attempt to overturn President Barack Obama's health care overhaul. Idaho legislators also blasted efforts by lawmakers in Washington, D.C., to require new "Real ID" drivers licenses that some saw as a privacy intrusion. This year, lawmakers are also considering beginning an effort to take over more than 16 million acres of federally managed land, on grounds that Idaho officials can do it better. But Winder said the drug proposals are a separate matter. "I think it's different because the federal government has the responsibility to provide law enforcement of interstate traffic of illegal drugs," he said. The resolutions making their way through the Idaho Capitol come as a counterpunch to recent developments in three neighboring states. Last fall, voters in Washington state and Colorado approved measures allowing recreational use of marijuana for adults. Oregon and Montana, meanwhile, each allow marijuana use for medical purposes. At a public hearing on the measures Wednesday, more than 150 people — including more than a dozen teens sporting red "Don't let Idaho go to pot" t-shirts — packed a Capitol auditorium to debate marijuana use. Some said they've considered moving to nearby states with looser marijuana laws, and representatives from the American Civil Liberties Union and Compassionate Idaho say the resolution builds barriers for people using marijuana for pain related to cancer and other illnesses. But law enforcement, some physicians and anti-drug groups backing the measure decried pot as a gateway drug that dangerously impairs users. "I am begging, and I am pleading you — on all four hands and knees — to find another way because marijuana is not the answer," said Nick Chaffin, a teen with the Bonneville Youth Development Council.
We've kept marijuana 100% illegal for more than seventy years and in all that time there hasn't been a single day when marijuana wasn't being bought, sold and used. Seven decades is long enough for us to experiment with this failed and deadly policy. We will NEVER end marijuana use in this country or any other!
Humans have used marijuana for more than ten thousand years, the notion that we could somehow end its use in our country is naive and unrealistic. All the prohibition has achieved is to create a situation of massive, insatiable demand combined with zero legal supply. And as we read in the news every day, this is a proven recipe for disaster.
We tried their way and it failed, now let's throw it out! END the federal marijuana prohibition and replace it with a system mirrored on our successful alcohol and tobacco laws. Let stores sell legally-grown marijuana to adults at prices low enough to prevent illegal competition, and let adults grow their own marijuana at home just as they're allowed to make their own home brew today.
It's madness to have teenagers fighting to retain the prohibition when it is the prohibition that puts drug dealers on the street and makes kids' lives LESS safe. Because of the prohibition every one of these young people is at risk of being pulled over and searched by the police just in case they might have some flowers of this plant on them. And every one of them is at risk of having their front doors smashed down by a SWAT team, their family pets shot and their walls ripped out all in the name of a prohibition that DOESN'T stop people using marijuana.
The federal marijuana prohibition makes children LESS safe and is BAD for America. We need to put the safety of our children FIRST and legalize marijuana like beer and wine.
"...But law enforcement, some physicians and anti-drug groups backing the measure decried pot as a gateway drug that dangerously impairs users..."
The level of ignorance in Idaho is astonishing. The gateway is PROHIBITION!! The same guy that sells you weed is also going to expose that user to harder drugs. Through the popularity of marijuana drug dealers are luring in kids into trying harder drugs. By taking marijuana out of that market you take away that exposure millions of kids currently have to harder dangerous drugs like crack or heroin. That kid that was begging to the committee doesn't have a clue that he's begging for the gangs and cartels to keep power over marijuana in their state and guess what, these gangs and cartels that you are so willingly throwing control over the industry to, don't care about your kids or any of us for that matter. They will use marijuana as a hook to get you and any other unsuspecting teen they can find to try harder drugs and and get you addicted and take all your money and your health. Prohibiting something does NOT equate to having control over that something; you are merely shoving it under the rug and pretending it doesn't exist. Well it does and it is not going away ever, so either you start to regulate and have control and power over the industry so you can really protect the kids or just let the gangs and cartels have at it and control the money and power that comes with the marijuana trade. It's sad to see those kids support something that is only causing them harm and putting them in danger. Civil leaders in Idaho should be ashamed for supporting this.Â
I love it..Â
Every two bit Sheriff in the backwoods bumpkin nation of Idaho has been saying they wont enforce Federal Gun laws anymore, and every two bit bumpkin Senator and Congressman has demanded the Feds just need to leave them and their state alone on healthcare too.....ÂAnd then suddenly a wee little plant that has never killed anyone has all the big tough states rights crowd crying and begging for Federal help to wipe the silly States bottom because they just shat themselves silly in fear over something so silly is is completely laughable.
My goodness.. to live in both such uncalled for fear, and complete ignorance that Idaho has as much marijuana floating around it as every other states. The ONLY practical difference at least for the moment between Colorado and Idaho, is miles.
Any moron can score weed in any town in Idaho in minutes if he is so inclined. After all, according to the US Agricultural dept, marijuana is Americas most valuable commodity crop. These clown representatives must live on a very different planet than the Idaho I lived in and out of for 20 years. Grass is everywhere, most of the 'people' (not the glass house congressmen) don't care much either way and have their own lives to live.
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Maybe this will end up like Congressman James Knox who demanded the Federal Government had no business in State Territory, time and time again. And on the day of the dispensary raids, minutes before the vote on recalling the states most popular vote in history (medical marijuana) Â He stands up and announces on the floor 'that God the Feds have came to save 'us'.
I'm not sure who 'us' was. Congressman Knox sold his stuff in the middle of the night and a journalist had to dig him up. Working in a Texas oilfield saying 'I had to leave Montana, I couldn't afford to live the anymore (he got elected on a jobs platform, spent his total time fighting marijuana). BUT, He said he would be back to represent the great State the nest session.. of course.. Oy vey.Â