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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CO: OPED: Despite State Constitution, Medical Marijuana
Title:US CO: OPED: Despite State Constitution, Medical Marijuana
Published On:2012-01-22
Source:Gazette, The (Colorado Springs, CO)
Fetched On:2012-01-24 06:00:42
DESPITE STATE CONSTITUTION, MEDICAL MARIJUANA VIOLATES FEDERAL LAW

The Gazette's recent editorial (Jan. 13 - "Suthers should defend MMJ
law") lecturing me on my responsibilities as Colorado Attorney
General reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of the rule of law in America.

As Colorado's Attorney General I take an oath to uphold the U.S.
Constitution and the Colorado Constitution. As part of this job, I
frequently urge upon the state and federal courts a particular
interpretation of these constitutional documents. But the final word
on the meaning of the U.S. Constitution is the U.S. Supreme Court and
the final word on the meaning of the Colorado Constitution is the
Colorado Supreme Court. In a dispute on whether federal laws trump
state laws under the Supremacy Clause, the U.S. Supreme Court has the
final say.

In Gonzales v. Raich, the U.S. Supreme Court held that even when
marijuana is grown, distributed and consumed within a single state,
it does affect interstate commerce and is therefore subject to
federal regulation. While you or I may find this decision by a
majority that included Justice Antonin Scalia to be "judicial
activism," it is nonetheless the law of the land.

In Florida v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, scheduled
to be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court in March, the federal
government is citing Gonzales v. Raich and other similar cases to
argue that the Commerce Clause allows it to require every American to
buy health insurance or face an economic sanction.

My fellow attorneys general and I have successfully argued in a U.S.
District Court and the in 11th Circuit Court of Appeals that one's
failure to buy a particular product or service at the federal
government's direction is economic inactivity (unlike growing and
selling a crop) and therefore not subject to congressional regulation
under the Commerce Clause.

We argue that if the federal government is able to regulate your
economic decision making in such a manner, federalism is essentially dead.

Rather than having limited enumerated powers under Article I, Section
8, the federal government would have largely unbridled power in all
areas not addressed in the Bill of Rights.

But make no mistake about it: If the U.S. Supreme Court should
determine that the individual health insurance mandate is a proper
exercise of the commerce power by Congress, that will be the law of
the land and Americans will be left to pursue political remedies as
opposed to legal ones.

Such is the rule of law in America.

Because of the rule of law, until a change of policy by Congress,
medical marijuana remains in violation of federal law. The state
attorney general cannot change that.
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