[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 141 (Tuesday, September 29, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H6310]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LET STATES SET MARIJUANA POLICY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, amidst all the turmoil on the world
stage, I think many of us are still processing the visit from Pope
Francis last week, his call for us to care for the planet, for our
fellow man, for all of God's creatures.
In the background here on Capitol Hill, there is more than a little
turmoil in terms of what is going to happen after the resignation of
Speaker Boehner. There looks to be a little good news that we will
avert a government shutdown, at least for a few months, as we continue
to have the misdirected crusade to defund Planned Parenthood.
I have been focusing on the epidemic of deaths from prescription drug
abuse and heroin overdoses. Mr. Speaker, it is something that is
creating problems from Portland, Oregon, to Portland, Maine; yet, in
the midst of that epidemic, there was a stark symbol of our dysfunction
on something that most Americans now think should be legal.
There are over 200 million Americans that live in States where they
can get access to medical marijuana. Four States and the District of
Columbia have legalized adult use, and more States are going to be
voting on it again this year; yet we have arrested over 7 million
people over the last 10 years, costing billions of dollars.
It can turn lives upside down, particularly lives of young men of
color, especially African Americans, who are arrested many times more
often even though their use is the same as White young men. It fuels
that frustration that one can understand in the African American
community.
I would suggest that it is time for us to focus law enforcement
resources on real drug problems, deal with that epidemic of
prescription drug abuse and heroin overdose. Let's deal with making
sure that our children are safe rather than at risk from a vast
underground drug distribution network.
accounts, so this is an attractive source of revenue for people who
would like to rob them.
Let's let the States make their own policy until we reclassify
marijuana, frankly, no less dangerous than tobacco, which is completely
legal in every State. In the meantime, we should at least stay out of
the way, let States formulate their own policy, and have local
authorities deal with real problems, not creating unnecessary ones.
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