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Opinion: Eric Holder’s drug war deception


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By Steve Kubby

While some are celebrating the recent remarks by attorney general Eric Holder at the American Bar Association convention in San Francisco, a more sober analysis is deeply disturbing.

It’s been eight months since Holder promised a decision on the federal response to Colorado and Washington legalizing weed. Instead of an answer, Holder offers us Drug War Lite. No let up in DEA raids, no mass release of nonviolent pot prisoners, no relief for medical marijuana growers or dispensaries, no end to arrests and prosecutions, but lighter sentences for some.

Holder even publicly acknowledged and praised U.S. attorney for Northern California, Melinda Haag, just prior to his remarks about the unintended consequences of the drug war, suggesting that the war against medical marijuana will continue unabated.

Steve Kubby

Steve Kubby

Haag has been an outspoken opponent of medical marijuana and has personally targeted some of the best run dispensaries in her jurisdiction, such as Harborside, Berkeley Patients’ Group and Richard Lee’s Blue Sky. Meanwhile, the Obama administration is only in its fifth year and yet it has conducted a record 170 DEA raids, resulting in 61 Federal indictments. Compare that to George W. Bush’s eight-year legacy of 40 DEA raids, resulting in one federal indictment.

“How dare the attorney general come to San Francisco and talk about drug policy and completely fail to address medical cannabis,” Steve DeAngelo, proprietor of what’s been billed as “the world’s largest pot shop,” told the Huffington Post. “Of all the reforms that should be made, certainly the first should be to get medicine into the hands of people who are suffering.

“Given that the entire country has been waiting for the administration to clarify their position on Colorado and Washington, I think the attorney general’s comments this morning were just a side-stepping of the central issue,” DeAngelo said.

Holder also observed that “too many people of color have been arrested.” Under the Obama administration, a larger percentage of people of color have been arrested than in Apartheid South Africa. How many more? According to the Prison Policy Initiative, incarceration rates of Apartheid South Africa, at its racist worst, are no contest. Under the Obama administration, the current incarceration rate is five times greater for people of color than at anytime in South Africa.

According to legal scholar Michelle Alexander, more African Americans are under correctional control today than were enslaved in 1850. Alexander’s book, “The New Jim Crow”, offers a devastating account of a legal system doing its job perfectly well. We have simply replaced one caste system (Jim Crow) for another one (imprisonment, parole, detention) that keeps the majority of minorities in a permanent state of disenfranchisement. Nothing in Eric Holder’s speech offers any real fix to the our current Jim Crow justice system.

Frankly, it’s embarrassing how major reform organizations are celebrating this phony “victory.” Until this Jim Crow justice system is scrapped and until cannabis is removed as a controlled substance, any talk about legal reform is just more of the same old lies and government deception.

Steve Kubby is a resident of South Lake Tahoe.

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Comments (6)
  1. DaveMan50 says - Posted: September 16, 2013

    Ya Steve, only the slow and dim took anything “they” say as truth. The Assistant fool from the DOJ, lay-ed out eight points they want strenuously enforced but are mostly Bull. His first three, no one objects to, but the last five are just dumb. Here’s what I wrote when I first read them.
    “No one in any cannabis supply store or dispensary ever sold other drugs. No one is violent. Guns are for self protection. Drugged driving is safer that the stupid people already out there. Growing on public land is caused by the prohibition. Environmental danger is the same as any farm. And the last one “preventing marijuana possession or use on federal property.” Federal conceit, like it is their land and not ours. Some how we let these people think they are the ultimate power. They are not, the people are. Below the people, is the local Sheriff. Then state law. Then Federal. The only power Federal has is with-holding our money.”

  2. John A says - Posted: September 16, 2013

    Only those who routinely smoke weed think we need to legalize marajuana and have dispensaries located all over every town. They also believe everyone has a medical need or excuse to buy weed and be stoned every day.
    My opinion is most of these people find it easy to get a marajuana card from doctors who are making fortunes on issuing them and not really acting as a medical professional for their patients.
    Granted there probably are some cases where marajuana helps some patients with relief for chemo therapy or rare illnesses where other remedies aren’t effective.
    But for many of us the thought of legalizing marajuana and allowing everyone to believe it’s alright to be stoned driving and working for others is not acceptable. NO – you don’t have the reflexes and abilities under the influence of pot in comparison to being sober.
    So what you do in your own home on your own time is fine with me – but don’t expect some of us to accept your being doped up as a normal behavior in public or on the job.

  3. Biggerpicture says - Posted: September 16, 2013

    Exactly John A.

    And those of us who support legalization of marijuana feel VERY strongly about NOT allowing everyone to believe it’s alright to be drunk driving and working for others is not acceptable. NO – you don’t have the reflexes and abilities under the influence of alcohol in comparison to being sober.

  4. cosa pescado says - Posted: September 16, 2013

    Actually John, the people who support legalization are the ones who don’t support our failed drug policy.
    The fear mongering argument of ‘we’ll have more stoned drivers and people at work’ is pretty weak and not supported by any evidence.

  5. John A says - Posted: September 17, 2013

    Actually Bigger and Cosa I have already many times experienced just what I was concerned about with having to let go employees and subcontractors thinking they could get away with being stoned on the job all day. There’s your evidence……..
    And I might add – I personally know about and have suffered from what simple drugs (marajuana )can lead to down the road. Marajuana isn’t the innocent and harmless drug you may believe it is in the long run.
    So if you insist on legalizing it – please find your own state to do it in – and we’ll come visit for the entertainment.

  6. Biggerpicture says - Posted: September 17, 2013

    I’m pretty sure over the years more people have been drunk at work than stoned. And alcohol is a MUCH more dangerous gateway drug.