There’s a Surprising Obstacle to Legalizing Marijuana in New Jersey

There’s a Surprising Obstacle to Legalizing Marijuana in New Jersey

Ronald Rice (NJSenDems via Youtube)

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (D) campaigned on, among other things, a promise to legalize marijuana in his first 100 days in office. That didnt happen. It may not happen at all this year, and state Sen. Ronald Rice (D) is one major reason why.

Marijuana legalization advocates led by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Nicholas Scutari (D-Cumberland) and Senate President Steve Sweeney (D-Gloucester) filed a pair of bills this session,S 2702andS 2703that provide lawmakers a framework for legalization, but opposition from the likes of Rice has blunted forward momentum so far.

Rice represents part of Newark, a district more than half black, and is the head of the states Legislative Black Caucus. He is also a major anti-marijuana legalization advocate, with an array of arguments from the depths of Reefer Madness.

He most recently made headlineslast week with his hyperventilating warning that if pot is legalized, Garden Staters will be faced with the prospect of gasp! sex toys and oils with marijuana, and it could be happening right in his face.

If in fact we legalize recreational marijuana, right across the street from my office theyre going to put up stores, Rice told NJTV. They want to call them dispensaries, but theyre going to be stores that do retail selling cupcakes with marijuana, candies with marijuana, sex toys and oils with marijuana, lipsticks with marijuana, all those kinds of products that kids can get and people can get.

Its not clear why Rice thinks kids will be able to get marijuana products. When marijuana is legalized, it is only ever legalized for adults not kids.

He also made a muddled attempt to deploy thediscredited gateway theorythat marijuana use leads to hard drug use, arguing that, When you legalize marijuana recreationally, the number of people whove never used any type of drugs goes up substantially in terms of drug use. Say what?

Rice recognizes the devastating impact that racially biased marijuana law enforcement has on the states minority communities the New Jersey ACLU reported last year that between 2000 and 2013,black residents were arrested at a rate nearly three times that of whites, even though both groups used weed at similar rates but says the answer is decriminalization, not legalization.

He has even fileda billthis year that would decriminalize the possession of up to ten grams, but that would also enable the state to force some marijuana users into drug treatment.

I still want to deter people from doing something thats bad for them,Rice explained to Gothamist back in April. If you get too high, you die from it. It kills you directly if its too potent.

Of course, there is no known case of anyone dying from a marijuana overdose, but somebody forgot to let Rose on the secret.

In that same Gothamist interview, Rice unleashed aGish gallopof problems he claimed would be unleashed by legal (but not decriminalized?) marijuana: Babies born with THC in their brains, businesses desperate for workers who could pass drug tests, people cashing in food stamps to score weed, drug cartels getting in the legal pot businesses, an army of drug addicts as pot smokers escalate to harder drugs, and devastated inner cities, among other looming calamities.

Rice also took his anti-legalization views to Washington, DC on April ...

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