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Iowa legislator’s opposition to legal use of marijuana lands him on “worst legislators” list

State Rep. Clel Baudler
State Rep. Clel Baudler

The Cedar Rapids Gazette has reported that an Iowa lawmaker is “proud” to have been included in the Marijuana Policy Project’s “Worst State Legislators of 2013.”

State Rep. Clel Baudler – a Republican, ranked the #7 worst legislator in the country – told the Gazette that he “will wear this as a badge of honor”.  Baudler opposes the legal use of marijuana and legislation that would allow Iowans with serious illnesses to use medical marijuana if their doctors recommend it.

Some states have legalized marijuana and the trend seems to be picking up steam.

The Marijuana Police Project released the top ten reasons to tax and regulate marijuana:

1. Prohibition has failed — marijuana use is mainstream and widespread. When the federal government first effectively prohibited marijuana in 1937, relatively few Americans had even heard of it. Today, according to 2010 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services data, 106 million Americans admit to having tried it (17.4 million in the last month), and every year, the Monitoring the Future survey finds that over 80% of high school seniors say marijuana is easy to obtain.

2. Prohibition is an immense waste of public resources, while marijuana taxation would bring in much-needed revenue. According to 2010 estimates by Harvard University economist Jeffrey Miron, replacing marijuana prohibition with a system of taxation and regulation would yield $17.4 billion in government savings and increased tax revenues.

hemp marijuana3. Arresting and prosecuting marijuana offenders prevents police from focusing on real crime. In Chicago alone, the police superintendent estimated officers spent 45,000 police hours on arrests for 10 grams or less of marijuana in a year. Meanwhile, FBI data shows that less than half of violent crimes and only 18% of property crimes were cleared nationwide in 2010.

4. Prohibition sends an incredible number of Americans through the criminal justice system, ruining countless lives. According to the FBI, since 1995, there have been more than 12 million U.S. marijuana arrests, with 853,838 in 2010 – significantly more than for all violent crimes combined. Eighty- eight percent of these arrests are for possession – not manufacture or distribution.

5. Marijuana laws are enforced unevenly. According to Jon Gettman, Ph.D., blacks are three times as likely to be arrested for marijuana possession than whites, despite the fact that use rates among African Americans are proportional to use rates among whites. While marijuana users who were not convicted have gone on to be president or Supreme Court justice, a criminal conviction can stand in the way of securing a job; getting housing; or receiving a professional license, student loans, food assistance, a driver’s license, a firearms permit, or the right to vote.

6. There is no evidence that imposing criminal penalties on marijuana use reduces its use. The National Research Council found that “perceived legal risk explains very little in the variance of individual drug use.” In 2008, the World Health Organization found that in the Netherlands, where adults are allowed to purchase and possess small amounts of marijuana, both teen and adult marijuana use is significantly lower than in the U.S., where marijuana is illegal.

7. Prohibition makes control impossible. Producers and sellers of marijuana are completely unregulated. Unlike licensed businesses that sell liquor or tobacco, marijuana sellers operate virtually anywhere and have no incentive not to sell to minors. Prohibition guarantees that marijuana cannot undergo quality control inspections for purity and potency, creating possible health hazards as a result of contamination by pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers, molds, fungi, or bacteria, as well as the lacing of marijuana with other drugs or formaldehyde. Under taxation and regulation, producers and sellers would be licensed and zoned accordingly.

8. Marijuana prohibition breeds violence. Currently, the only sellers of marijuana are criminals. As in 1920s Chicago, since disputes cannot be solved lawfully, violence is inevitable. According to the Atlantic, since 2006, more than 50,000 people have been killed in Mexican drug cartel-related violence. Those purchasing marijuana illegally also may face muggings and other violence.

9. Prohibition is bad for the environment. Because marijuana cultivation is illegal, unlicensed, and carries felony charges, it often takes place in environmentally damaging locations such as national parks and wilderness areas. Under taxation and regulation, marijuana sales would be relegated to regulated, licensed businesses, which would cultivate in legally zoned areas.

10. Marijuana is safer than alcohol. Unlike legal substances such as water, alcohol, Tylenol, and prescription opiates, marijuana has never caused a single medically documented overdose death in recorded history. Alcohol causes hundreds of overdose deaths each year, and in 2009 (the latest year for which data is available), the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 24,518 “alcohol- induced deaths.” The British government’s official scientific body on drug policy concluded that [legally regulated drugs] alcohol and tobacco are “significantly more harmful than marijuana.” American law treats alcohol as if it were safer than marijuana, encouraging people to drink.

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One word: Marinol.

And you’re not my doctor either.

You know what really makes me angry and sick is this. Let’s put it right out there on the table for all to see.

If God forbid, anyone of us is unfortunate enough to get cancer, NONE of us should have to go through Pals and Hepperly to relieve suffering. Pals is about effecting the law! He actively attempts to keep cannabis from cancer patients.

I mean really! How sick of human being do you have to be! I don’t care what Pals opinion is, he’s NOT my freakin’ doctor damn it!

“Ultimately though, it is not the decision of Kevin or any other law enforcement personnel. It is the decision of the people, as expressed through their representatives.”

Of course it is, but Kevin feels it is HIS decision to make, proving what a biased and disgusting individual he really is. He’s no doctor, but wants to play on eon TV.

He wants to employ himself and his friends at everyone else’s expense. This is not what a good human being does. This is a selfish, ignorant human being. Someone who thinks about himself at the expense of others.

@Peter L.-very good, reasonable post. Makes very good sense.

Not so fast cannabis criminals.

Our very own Sheriff Kevin Pals has made it very clear on this subject. He knows that cancer patients do not and will not benefit at all from marijuana. He knows you do not need to even talk to your doctor about such things as he has already made the decision for you. He has a high school diploma but more than that he has experience of how much marjuan can destroy lives. He’s seen thousands of lives destroyed though busts so he knows it’s bad. If it is somehow magically shown to help fight cancer that is water over the bridge. Kevin has spoken.

Well put Peter. And I went through cancer treatment and was deathly ill and if anything would have helped I would have taken it. If pot, as shown on the parenthood show, helps people going through chemo, NO ONE should withhold it.

“will wear this as a badge of honor”

Of course he does. Look into his eyes and see the smirk on his face. He’s laughing at US. If you happen to get cancer, God forbid, it would make him very happy, PROUD in fact, if he can make your life even more difficult. He’s happy to smirk at your suffering.

Last night i saw this clip on CNN. It is very interesting and not at all what I thought was coming:
http://www.cnn.com/2013/08/08/health/gupta-changed-mind-marijuana/index.html?hpt=he_t3

It will never be legal while we have a Republican governor in office. Won’t happen. We need to get Branstad out of office and replace him with someone who cares about alleviating Iowans’ suffering. Please do your part by voting.

I’ve experienced first-hand how cannabis soothes cancer patients (and even extends life by improving appetites). If you don’t believe in it, don’t use it. But please help us make it available to those with terminal/chronic illnesses. We’re not trying to take away your booze & cigarettes. It’s your right to use them. We would appreciate your support to make (at least medical) cannabis legal in Iowa.

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