By Jim Spencer
SpencerSpeaks.com
August 28, 2007
Mason Tvert doesn’t look like a stoner named Dude. On Monday night, as Denver City Council Chamber hosted more dreadlocks, male ponytails and, of course, guys wearing sunglasses than it usually does, Tvert looked for all the world like a narc among his faithful.
The troops might be wearing wrist bands with marijuana leaves embroidered on them or denim jackets with pictures of the “Zuni Zombies†on the back. The general, a chunky, round-faced fellow, opted for the corporate look.
Tvert’s pinstripe suit, burgundy tie and short, dark hair belied the stereotypes of what has thus-far been a remarkably successful drive to decriminalize small amounts of pot in
The City Council members who Tvert had forced into a corner over his latest voter initiative – a November ballot measure to make adult possession of small amounts of pot the police department’s lowest law enforcement priority – were furious.
Councilwoman Carol Boigon talked of “street theater.†Council President Michael Hancock accused Tvert of being a publicity hound.
He sure is. His offer last week to pull the latest pot initiative from the ballot if the mayor and council would declare dope less dangerous than alcohol and suspend marijuana arrests during the 2008 Democratic National Convention was manipulative dramatics designed to draw nothing more than headlines from the press and outrage from the council.
Monday night, Tvert predicted that both will make it easier to get folks to vote to de-emphasize arrests for pot possession.
“We’re getting attention early,†Tvert said after the council meeting adjourned. “The last time, no one paid attention until October.â€
“The last time†to which Tvert referred was when he convinced Denver voters to approve the decriminalization in the city of less than an ounce of dope for personal use by people 21 and over.
Last year, Tvert failed in an attempt to extend that same decriminalization statewide.
So he’s back in Dude-friendly
“I think we’ll win this when it comes to a vote in November,†Tvert said “If people (in
In truth, simple pot possession is already among the lowest priorities, the head of
“We’re not looking for people holding small amounts of marijuana,†Denver Police Capt. Chris Kroncke said. “We’re looking for people selling drugs.â€
Small amounts of pot possessed for personal use is no more than a “check box on a city ticket,†assistant city attorney David Broadwell added. It is, Broadwell continued, “a Class 2 Petty offense†that brings up to a $100 fine, plus court costs, but “no possibility of jail.â€
Nevertheless, Broadwell questioned the ability of the city to dictate non-enforcement of a state law, even if the November lowest-priority initiative passes.
Tvert said he’ll take his chances in court.
“
That will be another day’s fight. For now, Tvert and his Dudes and Dudettes will hit the campaign trail once more to fight for their right to party.
“We will demand a debate (over whether pot is more problematic than alcohol),†Tvert said.
Those who oppose the initiative, if they are smart, will argue that marijuana is addictive, debilitating and a gateway drug to harder substances. They’ll point out, as University of Colorado Health Sciences Center professor Tom Brewster did to the council, that de-emphasizing problems with pot makes it more attractive to kids.
But with a majority of
“We’re working hard to make this a safe city for all people,†Boigon complained Monday, looking at directly at Tvert. “You’re trying to make a joke out of the electoral process.â€
That could be. But on this night, the last laugh went to Dude.
Copyright 2007 by Jim Spencer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.




8 users commented in " Once More, Dude Gets His Day on the Ballot "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackWe’ve got far greater issues to be concerned about rather than someone holding a small amount of pot.
or a big amount of pot..or any drug for that matter….any Libertarian could give a rats ass what substances a person CHOOSES to put into their body…I really don’t care. What we do with our own bodies is our own CHOICE
Choose to do drugs..no government help of any kind.
The only plant I’ve ever smoked is the tobacco plant. But I’ve seen the hell of hardcore alcoholism from an in-law. I doubt marijuana could be that bad. But if it is a gateway drug, no sense making it easier for kids to get.
I voted for the medical marijuana law because I know that people dying of cancer are in dire pain, and who am I to say someone who is dying can’t alleviate their pain any way they wish.
For a few years I helped run a website to help find resources for grandparents who were raising their grandchildren. This was mostly because of substance abuse of their grown children. Noone ever menioned marijuana as a cause. There were a lot of meth babies, and substance abuse problems that started with prescription painkillers, etc. I wonder if the painkillers are a gateway drug for those with addictive tendencies?Maybe I should ask Rush Limbaugh.
Drugs seem to be in abundance in Hollywood now as well as the rest of the country.
Must have something to do with our southern border being wide open.
And the two border cops who tried to do something about it by shooting the drug smuggler are now in prison in Texas and the smuggler is free.
If this passes, I could go to Denver and feel comfortable enough to use a little pot without having to pay the ninety-some dollars the state wants every year to get a license for medical marijuana - which is a tad pricy when you only get SSDI. What a racket!
I hope to live long enough to see the government take its nose out of people’s private business, but I’m not optimistic.
Marijuana is no more a gateway drug than is St. Joseph’s Aspirin for Children. The only thing that could make marijuana a “gateway” drug is having laws that wrongly classify it as a drug similar to cocaine, heroin, etc. Our nation’s founders saw no need to criminalize marijuana (some of them grew it) or other drugs, and neither did King George III. Americans just don’t like freedom very much.
Whew, I love these posts. Gateway drug? bwahahahaahahahah…
Alchohol is so much worse, why not emphasize the difference with facts and not just “law enforcement” rhetoric? Is this is the same government calling for enforcement of grass laws, that turn a blind eye to the federal offense of aiding and abetting illegal aliens?
It’s too haaaard.. It’s not faaaaair….sniff sniff…poor illegals…. how about the poor American worker?
So now Grass is the culprit and the “law must be enforced”? My, how convenient…!
I’m glad the police say it’s a low priority, but don’t even grow two or three plants for personal use without a medical “hall pass”…or .. whew..
Then you beome a “drug dealer” and dealt with more harshly than an illegal alien that has committed rape on a 9 year old girl…these government people are corrupt. the system is broken..we need to dismantle it and rebuild….
Who’s with me?
Can I get an amen?
May God Bless,
Father O’Malley
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