Is Attorney General Eric Holder Serious About Enforcing the Marijuana Laws?

by on October 20, 2010 · 8 comments

in Civil Rights, Culture, Economy, Election

holdersmokesweed

Just released secret photo of Eric Holder relaxing with a marijuana cigarette. (See below*.)

When the majority says marijuana should not be a crime the law looses its legitimacy.

By Kevin Zeese / OpEdNews / October 18, 2010

It is hard to imagine that Eric Holder’s letter threatening to “vigorously enforce” federal law if California votes for legalization of marijuana is serious. It seems timed to manipulate voters in California, but in this year when political elites are hated it is likely to backfire and lead Californians to vote to end the failed marijuana war.

During one of the greatest failed experiments in American history, alcohol prohibition, a turning point was when New York told the federal government it would no longer enforce laws against alcohol. That left it to the federal government to enforce the law. Already “the feds” as they were derogatorily known were hated in rural areas where alcohol was often produced and the feds came in and disrupted their commerce. Then, the biggest urban area refused to enforce the law. The result, alcohol prohibition ended a few years later.

Attorney General Eric Holder last week promised :

“We will vigorously enforce the [Controlled Substances Act] against those individuals and organizations that possess, manufacture or distribute marijuana for recreational use, even if such activities are permitted under state law.”

Does he mean that the federal government will start enforcing laws against possession of marijuana? Or, be looking in people’s homes to see if they are growing or using marijuana? That they will be searching people’s backyards for their marijuana victory garden?

It is hard to believe that in a nation where half the murders go unsolved that the Department of Justice would make marijuana a priority after the people voted for legalization. It is hard to believe that an attorney general who decided not to enforce laws against torturers and lawyers who enabled torture would instead prosecute people for marijuana offenses. This is the same attorney general who is doing nothing while the greatest democracy crime since Watergate is going on hundreds of millions in anonymous donations to non-profit front group who are trying to influence campaigns in violation of election and tax laws.

The police and the courts depend on the cooperation of communities to keep order. If a majority of Californians vote for legalization of adult use and cultivation of marijuana what kind of legitimacy do the laws against marijuana have? Already, large numbers distrust law enforcement, the feds will have no legitimacy if they are enforcing a law the majority opposes.

I realize that Holder has the responsibility of enforcing federal law. But, continuing on autopilot with aggressive marijuana law enforcement is a disservice, indeed an injustice. Passage of Prop. 19 is an opportunity to begin a national discussion of how to better control marijuana. Prohibition has been a failure, the marijuana war has been expensive and damaging; there are better ways.

Proposition 19 is an opportunity for the lead law enforcement officer to help the country change direction to a more just and fair society. As long ago as 1972 a federal commission appointed by President Nixon, the National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse, recommended decriminalization of marijuana. And, this was restated in 1982 by a commission of the National Academy of Science in their report “An Analysis of Marijuana Policy” which urged consideration of legalization. The experts have said throughout the time of the marijuana war that it was the wrong approach, now the voters are showing they agree. This is an opportunity for leadership from the attorney general, leadership to a non-criminal approach to marijuana.

The U.S. criminal justice system is already seen by many as a system of injustice. Why? Because the United States with 5% of the world’s population has 25% of the world’s prisoners. One in 31 Americans is either behind bars, on probation or on parole, for African Americans it is one in 11 adults. This mass “criminal” population in “the land of the free” shows something is terribly wrong. What drives a system that results in 7 million Americans behind bars, on probation or parole? No doubt, one of the driving forces is the war on drugs, and marijuana is the driving force of the drug war with a marijuana arrest every 38 seconds, 840,000 annually.

Hopefully, Attorney General Holder will re-think his plan to escalate federal enforcement if a majority votes for ending criminal laws against marijuana. He should instead lead the nation to laws that are consistent with the essence of justice, i.e. being righteous and fair. Is it righteous or fair to enforce laws that the majority says should no longer exist?

Attorney General Holder America needs real justice leadership. We need a leader who will help the country face up to its mass incarceration problem and its misuse of law enforcement to incarcerate people who grow a plant or smoke an herb. Mr. Attorney General you can do better than just saying we’re going to ignore the people and keep arresting people for something they think should no longer be illegal.

Kevin Zeese is president of Common Sense for Drug Policy (http://www.csdp.org). Plus he is  is Executive Director of the Campaign for Fresh Air and Clean Politics (www.FreshAirCleanPolitics.net) whose projects include Voters for Peace.

* Photo of Eric Holder is satire.

{ 8 comments… read them below or add one }

Marisag October 20, 2010 at 6:41 pm

Seriously, they don’t have anything better to do than go after a bunch of stoners? Its really ridiculous that Marijuana is even a Schedule I drug in the first place…. while Meth and Cocaine are Schedule II. It’s all politics…. If it were all legalized, the war on drugs could end and millions of dollars now being spent on law enforcement, could be better spent on research to help alleviate addictions of all kinds…drug, alcohol, nicotine, food, gambling, sex, etc…. money much better spent.

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Chris Moore October 20, 2010 at 10:33 pm

This administration disappoints more every day, sadly.

Holder is one of the worst IMO.

I guess they think they can count on my vote vs. Palin or some other nut no matter what, but I may get perverse and write in Jethro Q. Walrustitty for the Silly Party.

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Frank Gormlie October 21, 2010 at 9:02 am

Yeah, Chris, I know what you mean. I’m so pissed at Holder ….! BUT! and this is a big but (no pun) – the alternative is worst. We cannot vote in the very same people who caused the problems that OBama is now facing – even though at this point, some of the problems are his. Voting is not all politics, and all politics is not just voting. Voting is the least we can do. Politics is so much more. It appears that Obama has been overridden by the Pentagon. Fortunately, neither Palin or Obama are running this year, even though a lot of voters will be voting on his record. The Right does not want progressives to vote, that is clear. Have you seen the Nevada GOP ads, telling Latinos to “teach the Democrats a lesson: don’t vote!”

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RB October 21, 2010 at 10:35 am

IMO, The people who caused the problems are Bush, Obama, both sides in Congress, most of the American public and all those who believe in unbridled consumption, spending, greed and debt.

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Chris Moore October 22, 2010 at 11:40 am

Oh, I agree, I will be voting this year as always for whoever I find least obnoxious.

Just a shame that the Obama admin seems to be bending over backwards to please people who will hate him regardless of what he does.

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bodysurferbob October 21, 2010 at 4:11 pm

cannot believe no one has caught the bogus pic of eric holder smokin’ a joint. good work you guys. sneaking stuff like that in … tryin’ to ruin people’s minds … eh?

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ilovetheoutdors October 22, 2010 at 9:09 am

bogus my butt , he was in front of me at the beach collective buying that jay.

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New Eric Holder Fan October 25, 2010 at 9:42 am

I love it. The same Eric Holder that sued Arizona.

I don’t believe the stuff about crime rates dropping, jobs, and reducing deficits. In reality I think people want to smoke and get high without having to hide their joint from the cops when they pass by.

To each their own.

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