Weekly Opinion Editorial
SQ #788 A BAD IDEA!
by Steve Fair
The countdown to the primary is now at 20
days. June 26th will be here
before we know it. Automobile dealership
ads on every television news program in Oklahoma have been displaced by
political ads for statewide candidates- at least those who have the money to
run them. With so many voters undecided,
who knows whether the ads will work on not.
But it’s not just candidates on the primary ballot. On the primary ballot, Oklahomans will vote
on State Question #788, which if approved would allow so-called medical
marijuana use in the Sooner state.
First, the language in SQ #788 is such that it is not clear it would
legalize only medical marijuana. The
reason the issue is on the ballot is because a group that include former State
Representative Joe Dorman circulated an initiative petition to get it on the
ballot. The group claims that a majority
of Oklahomans support legalizing pot for medical use. Dr. Jean R. Hausheer,
the president of the Oklahoma state medical association, said at a recent forum
SQ #788 has issues and has too many loopholes.
While acknowledging that marijuana does help with chronic pain, she said
it came with possible addiction issues.
If SQ # 788
were approved, Oklahomans who gained a license could consume pot legally, possess
up to three ounces of marijuana, and four and half pounds of edible pot on
their person, own six plants and six seedlings, and have up to eight ounces in
their home.
Second, if SQ #788 is approved the state
legislature will take up the issues of legalization. Lawmakers would establish the criteria for growers
and dispensaries. That is a system ripe
for special interest paybacks by legislators.
Third, if SQ #788 is approved, Oklahoma
would become the first state to remove the ‘qualifying conditions committee.’ Proponents for legalization say if your doctor
believes medical marijuana is right for you, under this law you can get access
to it without the government having to approve the doc’s decision. That appeals to small government advocates,
but without oversight, abuse is sure to happen.
U.S. Senator
James Lankford, R-OKC, has taken a public position against SQ #788. “This state question is being
sold to Oklahomans as a compassionate medical marijuana bill by outside groups
that actually want access to recreational marijuana. Most of us have seen
first-hand the damage done to families and our communities from recreational
marijuana use. This is a moment when we should work to make our state stronger,
healthier and more economically sound, not more drug addicted and distracted.
No one will convince me that our families will be better if only more parents
and grandparents smoke more marijuana,” Lankford said. The Senator is right. This is a poorly written bill that would
result in ‘unintended consequences.”
This
issue makes for strange bedfellows.
Expect right and left wing millennials to support legalization and Baby Boomers
and Generation Xers to oppose. Whether
Okies will be legally lighting up a doobie depends on who gets out and votes on
the 26th.
2 comments:
If it is eventually legalized recreationally would it not, in your opinion, create a massive tax revenue for our state’s budget? Thousands of people from the border states of CO travel there to legally purchase large amounts then illegally cross back over state lines and sell to anyone at their own discretion. I have worked extensively in WY and CO’s oil/gas service industry and watched people who are seemingly rational in their behavior do that very thing. If rational people do it with the ease that I have seen how many more irrational people are? I am not saying I am for or against. I am just stating that it is hard to watch that much money, that could help our budget, run like a rushing river to CO’s whether we like it or not.
Make it make sense to me please because you know how our state/local government really works. I do not.
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