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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
It's a pretty predictable career path - intern during the poli sci major in college, then get a staffer job in someone's district, get promoted to the capital staff, then maybe a legislative analyst or constituent PR rep for a few years, then Chief of Staff for someone, and get hooked up eventually with a county central committee, a campaign manager (that takes a cut of donations) and some fundraising types.
Real 'producers' in society rarely do that because by the point they have the time in their career (I've considered it) to look at doing something for the public good, they can't afford the pay cut or the BS of it all.
Local LEOs are backup and extra bodies for those other agencies as well as intelligence sources. Do not ignore 2nd order effects.
The Law of unintended consequences has not been repealed.
5% of the world's population and 25% of the world's prisoners! What a bunch of hooey!
All nannys, get a hobby.
Law Enforcement folk are generally conservative, so pot legalization compromises their personal ethical stances and makes them believe that they can no longer go after the 'bad guys' who sell pot.
Jan
If they want to not have the local deputies and police involved, to each their own, just don't cry about a generation of useless young adults.
This could also have a major long term economic effect on other crops that hemp competes with, e.g., cotton and man-made petro fabrics.
How about a bill making alcohol distillation for personal use legal, too?
And a bill to eliminate tax collection on certain weapons.
Then defund the BATF because it has no mission. (And shouldn't have had one since alcohol prohibition was repealed.)
1. Whether or not Marijuana is illegal represents a significant change in enforcement policy and training. So they care about that for a number of reasons.
2. Marijuana is a significant drug cartel/organized crime product. Decriminalizing Marijuana alters the income for the cartels, something they will not be happy about. Likely to cause them to lash out to either A: maintain the revenue or B: protest the lost revenue. Police are certainly going to care about that since either one means increased violence.
ANY change to drug laws, especially in border states directly affects the policing environment in a range of ways.
Marijuana should never have been treated the way it has been. As usual the lessons of history (Prohibition) were ignored, and now we will have problems unraveling from it.
Bottom line, for the police/sheriff/border patrol in border states especially, it could cause a dramatic change in their work environment, and not necessarily reducing their danger. So YES they care about the changes.