California
is seeking to legalize marijuana this November. You knew
it was just a matter of time before the signatures were
gathered, given the legalization of marijuana for medicinal
use passed in the state a few years back. Baby boomer �hippies�
turn 65 this year. If anybody is going to get marijuana
legalized, the �free love� generation is gonna get it done.�
But at who�s expense?
The
federal government still hasn�t decriminalized marijuana.
The state of California still hasn�t quite worked out all
the kinks on the prior piece of legislation and with medical
marijuana dispensers popping up on every corner faster than
liquor stores used to, municipalities were forced to regulate
�medical high� treatment.
Conflicts
over who really needs it versus who really wants it has
marginalized the intended consequences of the legislation
with a host of unintended consequences. California is not
ready to have the discussion about marijuana being legal
for recreational use, but the state�s financial crisis has
opened the door�and anything that can be taxed is fair game.
Pot included.
Prostitution
is next (but that�s another article). What really makes
Proposition 19 stranger than fiction is that the state chapter
of the NAACP has endorsed the referendum.
Since
when did legalizing marijuana become a civil rights issue?
We know, the past few years, the state NAACP has become
awfully proficient at endorsing ballot initiatives. Initiatives
that coincidentally fund independent expenditure campaigns
run by the chapter president�s consulting firm for hundreds
of thousands of dollars. Okay, this is America, where opportunity
abounds�no laws appear to be broken but the appearance of
impropriety of a state chapter civil rights group endorsing
initiatives its president is paid to run couldn�t be more
clear. But this is way out of bounds for the NAACP. The
only one that looks high on this endorsement is the NAACP.
Legalize marijuana, for real?
Now
I really don�t like criticizing the NAACP because it is
where my advocacy was born. It�s sort of like badmouthing
the ole neighborhood. It�s hard to talk about where you
came from, but sometimes you have to-to get the ole hood
to move out of the past into the future. So, I have critiqued
them in the past, and will in the future.
I
recently gave them a pass on an issue that clearly wasn�t
a civil rights issue, nor was it discrimination or a hate
crime. The Hallmark card, so-called �Black Hos� issue
(the talking card actually said �black holes, like holes
in the universe�), showed really how off base the NAACP
(Los Angeles chapter) has gotten in its advocacy. I can�t
give them a second pass.
The
NAACP tries to be everything to everybody. Legalizing marijuana
is not a civil rights issue. But armed with statistics,
the President of the California NAACP, Alice Huffman, rationalized
the endorsement by suggesting that because blacks (black
males in particular) are arrested more for weed stops even
though they smoke less weed.
Well,
blacks are stopped more for everything and arrested more
for everything. It�s a statewide racial profiling issue,
when stopped on violations equivalent to their white counterparts,
whites are diverted out of the criminal justice system and
blacks are directed (not diverted) into the criminal justice
system. Why doesn�t the California NAACP call out the statewide
racial profiling of blacks or black males? That�s a civil
rights issue. It�s one of those things that make you go,
hmmmm�for real. The statistics don�t lie, but NAACP put
emphasis on the wrong aspect. Black men are not going to
stop being pulled over, and are not going to stop being
arrested because marijuana is legalized.
What
will happen instead is that a host of unintended consequences
will occur that exceeds those that results from the medicinal
use law. Legalized marijuana will be sold to 21 year olds
and allow one ounce to be in their possession. Since the
new initiative prohibits smoking while driving, or smoking
with children in the car, instead of being stopped for �suspicion�
of DUIs (drinking under the influence), blacks will be stopped
on suspicion of SUIs (smoking under the influence). The
racial profiling will still continue. Consumption of alcohol
and drugs (and marijuana is a drug�no one refutes that)
occurs most where people are poorest, jobless and most depressed.
Has the NAACP calculated what the impact on our (black)
community, ones with highest unemployment, lowest incomes
and wealth ratios and the worst mental health care in the
state, will be-just from this perspective alone? Or has
Huffman only calculated how much money will be spent on
getting the ballot initiative passed?
Will
legalized marijuana become the new cigarette where instead
smokers smoking a pack a day, they smoke an ounce a day?�
Has Huffman been following the robberies and violence tied
to the medicinal use outlets? What legalization advocates
are not looking at is the access to marijuana. We know liquor
stores are gathering spots for illicit crime activity. Will
marijuana (head) shops replace liquor stores as the neighborhood
blight spot? Where will the tax money go, into the general
fund or to help community clinics and people with addictions?
I
haven�t raised this question with the slowness that occurs
with weed use and the impacts on our children with potheads
as parents (and grandparents-that�s scary). We know people
high on pot demonstrate erratic behavior. How do police
interpret that? Then there�s still the issue of the federal
government considering pot illegal. Seems to me if the NAACP
really wanted to be an advocate on this issue, it would
lobby federal decriminalization before the state
passes its initiative. I�m sorry�the California NAACP missed
it on this one.
In
conclusion, this legalize pot issue is about money�and not
the tax side. I�m sure this state president hasn�t
missed that since it is part of what she does as her business.
But the NAACP�s place in this debate is highly suspect and
badly positioned. The state president is well positioned,
however, which calls her motives for endorsing the initiative
into question. Maybe it�s me. But NAACP can�t be so high
they can�t see the downside greatly outweighs any contrived
upside to legalizing marijuana. I�m jus sayin.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad,
PhD is a national columnist and author of Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is AnthonySamad.com. Click here to contact Dr. Samad. |