Obama administration to respect states' rights on medical pot; Will TN legalize?

Nashville Public Policy Examiner
That could at least partially change the parameters of debate over whether or not to legalize medicinal cannabis when the subject comes up for discussion again in the Tennessee Legislature later this session.
Senate Bill 209, sponsored by
Sen. Beverly Marrero, has been assigned to the Senate General Welfare, Health & Human Resources Committee. House Bill 368 has been assigned to the Public Health and Family Assistance Health Subcommittee of the Health and Human Resources Committee. It is sponsored by
Rep. Jeanne Richardson, D-Memphis.
In the past Tennessee lawmakers who oppose protecting medical marijuana-users from state and local prosecution have expressed concern that any move by the state to relax pot prohibition would invite federal intervention.
“The federal is what counts, does it not?” said
Rep. Joey Hensley, R-Hohenwald, during a November 2007 medical marijuana hearing. “I just don't understand how any state passes a law that is different than the federal.”
Proponents of medical marijuana are somewhat hopeful a shift in federal priorities away from targeting medical marijuana patients, dispensaries and doctors who prescribe the plant will give them a better starting point from which to advocate changing Tennessee law, which currently bans cannabis sale and use under any circumstance.
At the same time, they’re not overly optimistic or naïve: “It’s not like
facts or
evidence mattered to many of the people who were opposed to medical marijuana before, but hopefully at least the Obama administration is serious about this,” said one supporter.
Nashville Public Policy Examiner
A freelance writer since the Era of Big Government was over and an advocate since birth of pursuing happiness, Mark plied his trades across the...
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