Everybody Must Get Stoned
by Katharine Mieszkowski
Can
Californians help dig themselves out of their historic fiscal crisis
by getting high? Tom Ammiano thinks so, and he isn't smoking a thing.
On Feb. 23,
the California State Assembly member introduced legislation that
would regulate the cultivation and sale of marijuana, and then tax
it. By legalizing pot, the San Francisco lawmaker argues, the state
could reap huge new revenues. Currently pot is California's biggest
cash crop, with annual sales reaching $14 billion. Vegetables, the
state's second hottest agricultural product, take in a mere $5.7
billion. And California's famous grapes? A piddling $2.6 billion.
If passed,
the Marijuana
Control, Regulation and Education Act would give California
control of pot in a manner similar to alcohol, while prohibiting
its purchase to citizens under age 21. The state's tax collectors
estimate the measure would bring in about $1.3 billion in new revenues
a year.
Ammiano, a
former schoolteacher and stand-up comedian, has been one of the
most famous activists and politicians in San Francisco for decades.
In the late '70s, he jump-started the movement against the Briggs
Initiative, which would have banned gay teachers in California (he
appeared as himself in the film Milk), served on the San
Francisco Board of Education, and later was president of the San
Francisco Board of Supervisors. Salon recently spoke to him about
why he thinks making pot legit would have California smiling.
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the rest of the article
March
18, 2009
Copyright
© 2009 Salon
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