[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 17 (Tuesday, February 5, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H345-H346]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LEGALIZING MARIJUANA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, since I was a high school student, I've
watched the escalation of the war on drugs, especially marijuana. I
slowly became aware of its widespread use. As a freshman legislator in
Oregon 40 years ago, my opinion was set by a hog farmer from eastern
Oregon who was a State representative named Stafford Hansell.
Stafford held the Oregon House, and the people crowded into the
gallery spellbound with his tutorial on marijuana and its comparison to
other addictive substances, both legal and illegal. This older
gentleman, who didn't smoke, didn't drink alcohol--let alone use
marijuana--made his case. He pointed out how tobacco was highly
addictive and killed hundreds of thousands of Americans per year. He
discussed alcohol, whose damaging properties had once led the country
into a foolish, costly and ultimately self-defeating experiment with
prohibition. Alcohol use was damaging for some, led to dependency for
many, while contributing to tens of thousands of highway deaths every
year, and serious health problems for countless others.
By the time Representative Hansell got to marijuana, he'd convinced
me that the bill he was advocating--two plant legalization--was not
just worthy of my support, which I was already inclined to do, but
something that I should advocate that Oregonians should be allowed this
choice, less damaging and addicting than tobacco.
We didn't legalize marijuana in 1973, although I was assured that if
the 22 of us who had voted for the bill had been supported by the
people who used it but voted no, the measure would have passed easily.
We did make Oregon the first State to decriminalize the use of
marijuana. Possession of a small amount was made a minor infraction,
treated like a traffic ticket. Today, 40 years later, the case is even
more compelling. Fourteen States have now decriminalized policies like
Oregon passed in 1973.
In 1996, California pioneered the legal use of medical marijuana
whose therapeutic qualities have long been known and employed. And
since then, 18 States and the District of Columbia have approved
medical marijuana initiatives, allowing its use to relieve chronic
pain, nausea, and other conditions. Notably, two-thirds of these
approvals were a result of voter initiatives.
Last fall, voters in Colorado and Washington approved adult
recreational use with 55 percent approval margins. Studies show that a
majority of Americans now agree that marijuana should be legalized. It
is time that the Federal Government revisit its policies. Drugs with
less serious classifications, like methamphetamine and cocaine, have
more serious health and behavioral impacts; yet marijuana retains its
Schedule I classification.
In 2011, two-thirds of a million people were arrested for using a
substance that millions use, many more have tried, and a majority of
Americans feel should be legal. Because there are stark racial
differences in enforcement and incarceration, there are wide
disparities in the legal treatment for communities of color versus
their white counterparts. Medical marijuana is
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widely accepted but subject to inherent conflict with Federal law that
is unfair, confusing and costly.
A bipartisan group of legislators is developing a comprehensive
package of legislation to clarify and reform outdated, ineffective, and
unwise Federal policies. In a time of great fiscal stress and a sea
change in opinion of voters, this is a unique opportunity to save money
on enforcement and incarceration, avoid unnecessary conflict and harsh
treatment of users, provide a framework for medical marijuana, and even
reduce the deficit--all by honoring the wish of two-thirds of Americans
to respect states' rights for marijuana, just like we do for alcohol.
I would invite my colleagues to join this effort in developing a
marijuana policy that makes sense for America today.
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