cannabisnews.com: Testing The Limits of Big Government





Testing The Limits of Big Government
Posted by CN Staff on December 02, 2004 at 09:18:59 PT
By Terry Eastland
Source: Weekly Standard
Ashcroft V. Raich, the "medical marijuana" case argued this week in the Supreme Court, is less about marijuana and its medical effects than it is about federal power--specifically the power of Congress to regulate interstate commerce. Liberals worry that a court that in recent years has somewhat limited that power will use Raich to make serious forward progress with its "new federalism agenda." To judge by the oral argument, however, no majority seems ready to do that. Yet if, as seems likely, Raich is decided on narrow grounds, the big issues the court will have finessed will undoubtedly return in subsequent cases.
Raich is a case from California, which passed a referendum authorizing the possession, manufacture, and distribution (for free) of marijuana for personal medical use under a doctor's supervision. Nine other states have similar laws, which exempt patients and their caregivers from criminal sanctions. Those laws, however, happen to be in conflict with a federal law, the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, which outlaws the manufacture, distribution, and possession of marijuana, making no exceptions for medical use. Raich is about that conflict. After two California women using marijuana under their doctor's care had their drug supplies seized by federal agents acting under the Controlled Substances Act, they sued, challenging the law as unconstitutional because it encompasses medical marijuana. The pith of their complaint is that the Article I clause authorizing Congress to "regulate commerce . . . among the several states" doesn't permit the comprehensive regulation of marijuana codified in the CSA. In other words, they ought to be able, consistent with California law, to use marijuana to relieve their pain. Raich is not an easy case if you (a conservative) think Congress regulates too much in the name of interstate commerce but you also want the federal government to war against illegal drugs. It is also not easy if you (a liberal) think there should be exemptions for medical marijuana but also believe there is virtually nothing the federal government can't regulate as interstate commerce. Only libertarians are at ease in thinking about Raich since they're against laws criminalizing drug use and the big federal government grown up since the New Deal, much of its foundation being laid by the commerce clause. Raich inevitably forces you to think about the line of New Deal commerce-clause cases culminating in Wickard v. Filburn (1942). Wickard is the famous case of an Ohio farmer who grew wheat to feed his livestock and to grind into flour for his family. It never left the farm. Yet the government had an interest in Roscoe Filburn's "local" farming because he produced more wheat than federal law allowed. Fined $117, Filburn sued, but lost his argument that Congress had no power to regulate his wheat production. The court said that his activity could be regulated because it had a "substantial effect" on the nation's commerce. How so? Because if other farmers followed his example, their personal wheat farming would reduce the national demand for wheat and thus its price--contrary to the government's regulatory scheme. Wickard yielded a commerce clause that placed no real limits on congressional power. Nine years ago, however, in the Lopez case from San Antonio challenging the Gun-Free School Zones Act, the court for the first time in more than a half-century found that the clause did limit Congress. Yet it didn't overrule Wickard. The problem that Raich presents for the justices is that if they follow Lopez, they probably have to side with the California plaintiffs. But if they do that, they probably have to confront Wickard, because the two cases are in serious tension. To judge by the oral argument, the justices are not anxious to side with the plaintiffs nor to overrule or seriously modify Wickard. That's why the smart betting is that they will muddle through, finding a way to side with the government. Left for another day will be what to do about a federalism jurisprudence that one must hope is not rendered further incoherent by the court's decision. TTerry Eastland is publisher of The Weekly Standard. This column originally appeared in the Dallas Morning News.Note: How the Supreme Court's ruling on medical marijuana will impact not just the drug war, but the judicial concept of federalism. Source: Weekly Standard, The (US)Author: Terry Eastland Published: December 02, 2004Copyright: 2004 The Weekly StandardContact: editor weeklystandard.comWebsite: http://www.weeklystandard.com/Related Articles & Web Site:Angel Raich v. Ashcroft Newshttp://freedomtoexhale.com/raich.htmSupreme Court Hears Oral Argument on MMJhttp://cannabisnews.com/news/thread19948.shtmlMedical Marijuana A States Choicehttp://cannabisnews.com/news/thread19947.shtml
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Comment #9 posted by siege on December 02, 2004 at 15:57:29 PT
Universer
I don't think he knows how to do any
 scientific investigation if he doze it is every little. and he just lets his mouth over load  his a** ....
 Bush Administration's communist tendencies from what I have heard from the people it don't sound good. 
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Comment #8 posted by Hope on December 02, 2004 at 14:27:31 PT
Thank you, Siege
That sounds like good news. I'm hoping and praying for her full recovery.
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Comment #7 posted by siege on December 02, 2004 at 14:17:03 PT
Hope 
Got a call the 29 and she said that it is going away and the doc. said it gotten smaller by [[3/10 of a CM]] ya good old MMJ and put it to the pigs in the US. we don't know when she will be coming home 
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Comment #6 posted by Hope on December 02, 2004 at 13:57:10 PT
Siege
How is your granddaughter doing?
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Comment #5 posted by Universer on December 02, 2004 at 11:57:39 PT
Siege
Regarding the column whose link you've posted below, that dude (Rodney Stubbs) is a nutcase. He writes:"A collective security system requires a collective form of governance. The collective forms of governance lead to the fall of the former Soviet Union. In short the form of governance advocated by Kofi Annan is Communism."Um? Leaps of logic, anyone? A collective security system -- like the Office of Homeland Security? Mr. Stubbs should be calling that newly formed department evidence of the Bush Administration's communist tendencies. And it is hogwash to connect collective security to collective government; we are not taxed equitably from nation-state to nation-state, so from where comes this collective government Mr. Stubbs fears?I don't know if you're fer it or agin' it, Siege, so this is in no way a personal attack on you -- in fact, thanks for posting this interesting article. But, like many raging jingoist anti-progressives, Mr. Stubbs is just flat-out wrong.P.S. Collective government didn't lead to the fall of the Soviet Union any more than it will lead to the fall of the Canadian Confederacy. A non-sustainable economy combined with decades of civil unrest had a lot to do with it too.
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Comment #4 posted by siege on December 02, 2004 at 11:35:12 PT
UNITED NATIONS DECLARES WAR ON AMERICA
http://www.newswithviews.com/Stubbs/rodney3.htm
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Comment #3 posted by Hope on December 02, 2004 at 10:57:03 PT
Swampie
So glad to hear things are going well for you. More power to you!
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Comment #2 posted by FoM on December 02, 2004 at 09:38:05 PT
Swampie
It's good to see. We've had a busy year around our place too. Have a great holiday season!
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Comment #1 posted by SWAMPIE on December 02, 2004 at 09:32:17 PT
happy holidays
I know you've all been wondering in we dropped off the face of the earth,not yet! Been working hard and haven't had access to a 'puter for awhile.Will try to be in touch more often.In the meantime,though,We wish EVERYONE a very happy holiday season and hope all are well.We have become very involved in our church and I am now the music director,so it takes up alot of my free time.Just thought you would like to know.I'll be in touch again soon....Love,Ken
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