Tuesday, January 2, 2018

California Dreaming Has Finally Become A Reality

Well, it's official now.  Cannabis is now fully legal for recreational use California, with the first legal recreational sales having begun on January 1, 2018.  The Golden State now joins seven other states and DC where recreational weed is currently legal to one degree or another, though medical use (now legal in a whoppoing 29 states now) has in fact been legal in California since 1996.

While Trump and especially Jeff Sessions are unlikely to take very kindly to this development, the fact remains that the proverbial dam has now finally broken, and the anti-legalization forces are becoming increasingly impotent despite the occasional rear-guard crackdown here and there.  Prohibition is quickly unraveling as we speak.  Legalization at the federal level has really become inevitable at this point--it's no longer a matter of if, but when.

Are there some flaws with California's system of legalization and regulation?  Yes, it's not perfect, but if we make the perfect the enemy of the good, we ultimately end up with neither.   For example, no matter how much we as both TSAP and Twenty-One Debunked loathe the 21 age limit, we nonetheless grudgingly supported it since we knew it would not have had a prayer of a chance at passing during the crucial years of 2012-2016.   Once the dust settles, though, and national legalization really is a foregone conclusion, we will increasingly take all states to task for not lowering the age limit for cannabis to 18, just as we currently take all states to task for not lowering the drinking age to 18 and recently some states and localities for raising the tobacco smoking age to 21.

Canada, for example, already plans to set it at 18 federally, while at the provincial level it will be 18 or 19 depending on the province, as is the case with alcohol.  Uruguay chose 18 as well.   And the Netherlands has set it at 18 since 1996.  No good reason why it should be any higher than 18 in what should be the land of the free as well.

In the meantime, we shall nonetheless rejoice at one of the very few bright spots in America's increasingly dark night of the soul that began on November 9, 2016 and began in earnest on January 20, 2017.

2 comments:

  1. A smoking age of 21 for Cannabis is oppressive. The youth rights movement should also confront progressives who have been supporting a tobacco smoking age of 21. In regards to Cannabis, Democrats should not elected when the possibility of lowering the Cannabis smoking age to 18-19 becomes a reality. The Democratic Party is more anti-youth rights than the Republican Party.

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