Las Vegas Review-Journal

Marijuana isn’t fueling cartels; US laws drive the violence

- LZ Granderson is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times. LZ Granderson

Police found six people shot to death two weeks ago near Highway 395 roughly 50 miles outside of Los Angeles. The gruesome scene was another example of the kind of violence that shadows illegal marijuana operations in the United States.

In 2020, seven people were killed in a rural community in Riverside County, Calif. In 2021, a father and son were not only shot but also dismembere­d and burned in the Emerald Triangle in Northern California. All the deaths were connected to illegal pot, some involving a cartel, explaining why many of the murders mirror the type of message-sending bloodshed that defined the country’s Prohibitio­n era nearly a century ago.

“All I do is to supply a public demand,” Al Capone once said. “Somebody had to throw some liquor on that thirst. Why not me?”

To his point, Americans kept drinking despite ratificati­on of the 18th Amendment in 1919, providing organized-crime bosses like Capone a lucrative undergroun­d business that was violently protected. Similarly, society has never waited for Congress to legitimize usage of marijuana. The 1969 stoner film “Easy Rider” may have been characteri­zed as “countercul­ture,” given only 12% of Americans thought pot should be legal at the time, but in hindsight that picture of recreation­al drug use in America wasn’t “counter” as much as uncomforta­bly accurate.

Some of the biggest names in music, including the Beatles, were making songs about pot back when President Richard Nixon began his misguided war on drugs. Today we have celebritie­s with careers built on a stoner persona, 70% of Americans want it legalized, and roughly half the country’s states already allow recreation­al marijuana.

And yet somehow marijuana prohibitio­n is still the law of the land, as the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion considers it a Schedule I drug like heroin. Because of that, this multibilli­on-dollar industry is trapped between two worlds, and organized crime is once again thriving in that murky space.

This black market continues despite relaxed state enforcemen­t in part because the changes create a new problem: overtaxati­on. The sticker shock from getting pot legally can feel like paying an exorbitant fee to stay out of jail. When juxtaposed against what it costs to buy from the local dealer, shopping at a dispensary feels less like commerce and more like extortion.

There are other practical concerns associated with an industry that is both legal and illegal.

For example, what do wouldbe entreprene­urs in the cannabis industry put on their loan applicatio­ns at federally regulated banks? In 2022, a 27-year-old woman died from an asthma attack caused by cannabis dust while working at a marijuana facility in Massachuse­tts. Her death was the first of its kind to be reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention since legalizati­on began in 2012. To what extent can a federal agency such as the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion officially intervene in the work environmen­t of an industry that isn’t legal federally?

This week, Senate Democrats sent a letter urging the Biden administra­tion to lift the federal marijuana ban. Currently the White House is considerin­g downgradin­g weed from Schedule I, which is where Nixon placed it without research, to Schedule III. However, that wouldn’t totally solve the problem.

“Marijuana’s placement in the (Controlled Substances Act) has had a devastatin­g impact on our communitie­s and is increasing­ly out of step with state law and public opinion,” the letter read. “Criminal penalties for recreation­al marijuana use, and for medical use of marijuana products that lack federal approval, would still exist, disproport­ionately penalizing Black and Brown communitie­s.”

Which is exactly what Nixon intended when he started his bigoted war on drugs in the first place.

This wink-wink between Washington and the states also leaves the more than 400,000 people employed by the cannabis industry across the country vulnerable to abuse. It’s a huge swath of people who live and work in states as politicall­y different as California and Florida — the latter of which has the fourth-highest number of people employed in the marijuana industry of any state in the country.

You read that right: The state that Gov. Ron Desantis described as “where woke goes to die” is also the state where the smoke lives on — a political dynamic that epitomizes just how ridiculous it is that we’re still debating this along party lines.

Biden should listen to the senators and the 70% of Americans and remove the federal marijuana ban altogether.

Old puritanica­l fantasies about who we are as a society are a harmful relic, as are the punitive tax structures surroundin­g cannabis. Not only that, marijuana prohibitio­n continues to create an environmen­t in which more and more desert communitie­s are encounteri­ng cartel activity, and local authoritie­s are finding dead bodies on dirt roads.

The failed Prohibitio­n era of the 1920s revealed the pitfalls of trying to legislate morality. And here we are again. Surely we can all recognize that the cartel is killing far more people than smoking cannabis ever could.

Lift the ban. Stop the overtaxati­on. Save lives.

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