To the Editor:
First, we had federal law, which said marijuana is illegal. But in the sixties the feds only went after the local growers a little and there were few arrests.
Then, through the seventies and eighties, pot was still illegal and we had planes and helicopters in the air making it a little harder to grow, but it was still profitable for many.
In 1996 California plus some other states decided to go against federal law and declare the smoking of pot for "medicinal purposes" legal. This "Medical Marijuana" campaign has continued since then despite federal laws and published letters from the AMA and the FDA stating that consuming all the poisons that are inseparable with the act of smoking pot is not medicinal at all. When California decided to ignore federal law the state's pot industry became ten times larger.
During the last 12 years, Mendocino County has taken it upon itself to oversee the regulation of marijuana laws for the county, which say 25 plants are OK (but nobody's looking). Then we had a handful of alleged "doctors" come into Mendocino County and sell tens of thousands of their recommendations, (not RX slips as were required), for pot growing.
When Mendocino County decided to ignore federal and state laws the pot industry again became ten times larger. Doesn't this make Mendocino County Board of Supervisors responsible for everything that has occurred since the county, in essence, said "To heck with federal and state Law"? Doesn't the Mendocino County Board of Supervisors and local law enforcement have some obligation for public safety?
Ignoring all the laws against growing pot made some local politicians very popular. It made the pot growers and many of our local officials very rich. I think all the people who got extremely rich from illegal pot growing owe a huge debt of thanks to the ones who made most of this possible, that's right, the little people. After all, more than seventy percent of the tens of billions of dollars in pot profits that now pour into Mendocino County every year come from young kids under the age of 18 from all across the country.
Here's a question. What if Measure B passes, and like before, the police don't enforce it and the growers don't obey it? Then what? Could it be that Mendocino County is letting this measure go through simply to transfer the responsibility for local drug dealing back on the shoulders of the state? Can all those officials in Mendocino County who profited from criminally mishandling illegal drug dealing for 12 years get away with if that easy?
We'll see.
Now we can all go back to forgetting about the little people.
Marc Parsley
Willits
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