[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 128 (Tuesday, September 9, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H7299-H7300]
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.
[[Page H7300]]
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, there is much that Congress deals with
that seems intractable. We struggle with the great issues of war and
peace. We view climate change and its devastating impacts and are
paralyzed. We look at this still-simmering racial unrest and the
painful events of Ferguson, Missouri, and largely are ignoring the
underlying issues.
There is one area where government at the State and local level and
here in Congress can make things a little easier, a little more
sensible, and that is dealing with our failed policy of marijuana
prohibition.
There was a sad article on the front page of The Times yesterday
about a call center employee, paralyzed since he was 16 years old, who
was fired from his job because he used medical marijuana in a State
where it is legal, on his off-hours, at home at night, to control his
back spasms.
That had nothing to do with his job performance, yet this person was
terminated. There is a certain degree of hypocrisy, where someone
having a glass of wine at home is treated radically different.
This is just one small example of a much larger problem. The cost of
our failed prohibition causes untold damage to racial minorities,
especially African American young men who are much more likely to be
arrested and jailed, even though they use marijuana no more frequently
than young White men, jailed for something most Americans now think
should be legal.
That hypocrisy was on display with the NFL, who suspended a player
for a year for smoking marijuana, but remember, the wifebeater was
suspended for only two games until an even more graphic video of the
beating forced the NFL's hand because of the public outrage; yet this
is the same NFL that encourages--some would say pressures--players to
be pumped with shots and pills to dull their pain, which often leads to
serious consequences for these players later in life, especially
prescription drug dependency.
Remember, we have an epidemic of prescription drug abuse that kills
more people every year than heroin, methamphetamines, and cocaine
combined, and of course, no one has ever been killed from a marijuana
overdose.
We are wasting lives, law enforcement resources, and money when we
have more important issues to tackle. I am pleased that my State of
Oregon, which was the first State to decriminalize a small amount of
marijuana, now may become the next State to legalize adult use.
We have seen significant progress here in Congress to allow the
cultivation of industrial hemp, allow Kentucky tobacco farmers and
Oregon ranchers to grow hemp for products that are perfectly legal and
you can buy in any city in America.
We have helped rein in the Federal Government interference with the
23 States that allow over 1 million people to use medical marijuana.
People are picking up and moving to States that permit medical
marijuana to get access to the therapeutic benefits of marijuana, which
can reduce the violent epileptic seizures that torture their children.
It is time for us to do a reality check. Let's legalize, regulate,
and tax marijuana, and then get on to those bigger problems that need
our attention, like war and peace, the consequence of a failure to deal
with climate change, and the epidemic of prescription drug abuse that
is killing three or four Americans every hour. Let's get our priorities
straight.
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