New Answers on Marijuana From Trumps Attorney General Pick
The confirmation hearings for Senator Jefferson Beauregard Jim Bob Skeeter Bubba Sessions to become our next attorney general under Predator Trumputin featured a few pointed questions from senators concerned about federal enforcement of marijuana laws in their states.
Back in April Sessions had a blistering response to a witness in a hearing about the impact of state recreational marijuana legalization.
Did the Drug Czar of the United States of America express any opinion about the possible dangerous impacts of marijuana legalization in Colorado? he asked.
Sessions continued expressing the alternative facts that youll see cocaine and heroin increase and a huge increase in marijuana-related emergency room visits as well as accidents [and] traffic deaths related to marijuana because of marijuana legalization.
Were going to see more marijuana use and its not going to be good! Sessions intoned. I mean we need grown-ups in charge in Washington to say marijuana is not the kind of thing that ought to be legalized it ought not to be minimized that its in fact a very real danger I think one of [President Obamas] great failuresits been obvious to mehis lax treatment and comments on marijuana.
Like his boss Sessions wants to Make America Great Again which appears to have been sometime in the 1980s.
Its been obvious; Sessions droned on it reverses 20 years almost of hostility to drugs begun really when Nancy Reagan started the Just Say No program
If we go back into this path were going to regret it warned Sessions. Lives will be impacted families will be broken up children will be damaged and people may be psychologically impacted the rest of their lives with marijuana winding up with that hoary gateway drug alternative fact and if they go on to more serious drugs which tends to happen and deny it if you want to but it tends to happen therell be even greater causes.
Sessions closed with the biggest alternative fact of them all that this drug is dangerous you cannot play with it its not funny its not something to laugh about and trying to send that message with clarity that good people dont smoke marijuana.
Now Sessions has released his answers to written questions submitted by senators but his responses provide no new clarity for the marijuana industry and cannabis consumers.
Worse Sessions use of more alternative facts regarding his previous comments lead me to believe hes concealing his true intention to crack down on marijuana in order to get the job.
When asked about his good people dont smoke marijuana alternative fact Sessions replied My words have been grossly mischaracterized and taken out of context I was discussing the value of treating people for using dangerous and illegal drugs like marijuana and the context in which treatment is successful.
The context was the impact of state recreational marijuana legalization.
Sessions opened his remarks with statistics about the use of marijuana by high school kids and how much it declined in the Just Say No era. He spent a great deal of time chastising the Obama administration for not promoting this idea that marijuana is not dangerous and not recognizing the dangerous impacts of marijuana legalization in Colorado.
Nowhere in his remarks did Sessions discuss rehab or any sort of drug treatment facilities but if youd like to verify the context of his remarks for yourself thanks to C-Span you can:
Sessions was also coy about the future of the Cole Memorandum the Obama Department of Justices eight guidelines concerning federal prosecution of state-legal marijuana operations.
While I am generally familiar with the Cole memorandum Sessions wrote I am not privy to any internal Department of Justice data regarding the effectiveness and value of the policies contained within that memorandum I will certainly review and evaluate those policies.
He also reiterated a point he had made in his verbal testimony to the senate.
I will not commit to never enforcing federal law Sessions promised. Whether an arrest and investigation of an individual who may be violating the law is appropriate is a determination made in individual cases based on the sometimes unique circumstances surrounding those cases as well as the resources available at the time.
Scarce federal resources? Didnt President Obama say something about scarce federal resources when he ran for president in 2008 only to then preside over more DEA raids on medical marijuana providers than any president before him?
Sessions was also asked about the Rohrabacher Amendment a spending rider that prevents the Justice Department from using any federal funds to prosecute state-legal medical marijuana. He didnt know much about the amendment which expires in April and cannot be renewed but added a chilling comment that of course medical marijuana use is a small part of the growing commercial marijuana industry perhaps signaling that adult-use marijuana will be fair game for prosecution.
The Alabama senator concluded with his commitment like his predecessor Loretta Lynch to enforcing federal law with respect to marijuana although the exact balance of enforcement priorities is an ever-changing determination based on the circumstances and the resources available at the time.
Remember that Lynch couldnt enforce federal law in the medical states thanks to that Rohrabacher Amendment. However in her 18months as attorney general Lynch didnt cause any problems for the adult-use states either.
The senate is scheduled to vote on Sessions confirmation today though Democrats may try to delay the vote.
I think the man who said I believe the Department of Justice needs to be clear I think its really serious back in April is more believable than the same man polishing his résumé for a job promotion. The confirmation of Jeff Sessions as attorney general will be a nightmare for the marijuana industry.
Previously in Radical Rant: Marijuanas Imminent Trump-A-Palooza
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by Russ Belville at High Times