The Fourth Wall page 3 NICHOLAS PASTURA On November 6, 2012, Colorado and Washington voters successfully legal- ized marijuana in their states. Initiative 502 in Washington and Amend- ment 64 in Colorado passed with strong support, with more people in Colo- rado voting to pass Amend- ment 64 than those who voted for President Obama (who won the state). Under the new laws, adults 21 and older will be able to legally purchase and possess up to an ounce of cannabis, and under the Colorado law, people will be able to pos- sess and grow up to 6 can- nabis plants. Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organiza- tion for the Reform of Ma- rijuana Laws (NORML), tions have forever changed the playing field regarding cannabis prohibition laws in America (and probably in large parts of the world, t00).” Under Federal law, though, marijuana still re- mains completely illegal. Will the passing of these new laws usher in a new form, or will the Federal government intervene? "The voters have spoken and we have to respect their will... This is a com- plicated process, but we intend to follow through. That said, federal law still says marijuana is an illegal drug, so don't break out the Cheetos or goldfish too quickly," said Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper. The Drug Enforcement Ad- ministration (DEA) was quick to comment on the voting results in a press statement. "The Drug En- forcement Administration's enforcement of the Con- trolled Substances Act re- mains unchanged," said the DEA. "In enacting the Controlled Substances Act, Congress determined that marijuana is a Schedule I control[ed] substance. The reviewing the ballot initia- tives and we have no addi- tional comment at this time." The Colorado U.S. Attorney’s Office also said that it’s position on mariju- ana remains “unchanged.” According to University of Denver law professor Sam Kamin, "The federal government could come in and seize assets. They could charge people crimi- nally. They could. send years. They have chosen, so far, not to do that....The federal government still criminalizes a lot of that behavior but has said it's not interested in individual users," said Kamin to CBSNews.com. The federal govern- ment has been unkind to medical marijuana opera- California. Under the Bush prosecution, and destruc- tion of medical marijuana vendors, were carried out. Under the Obama admin- istration these actions have increased. Many fear the same sort of government action may be in store for the legalization movement. There is always the pos- sibility, though, that de- spite past trends, the feder- al government may not in- terfere. Art Way, the Colo- rado senior drug policy manager for the Drug Poli- cy Alliance said, "We hope they will allow Colorado and Washington to be the laboratories of democracy." Even some lawmakers are hoping to keep the federal government out of it, urg- ing the federal government Led by Rep. Diana De- Gette, D-Colo., a group of congressmen have intro- duced the “Respect States' and Citizens' Rights Act." This bill is aimed at amending the Controlled Substance Act, to keep state marijuana law safe ment. Also, multiple other congressmen sent a letter to the Justice Department and Drug Enforcement Agency, asking them to respect citi- zens who follow state laws. Almost half of all states have made moves to legal- ize marijuana to some de- gree. Rhode Island and Maine may be taking up the issue of legalization in 2013. It seems that the Fed- eral Government will soon have to take a formal stance on states’ marijuana on the way it is,” said Ka- min. “It can't be a big in- dustry and a Federal crime at the same time.” Will the up for democracy? Will they adopt a more sensible approach to an issue that the War on Drugs has failed miserably to address, or will we just get more of the same? Watching the answer to these questions unfold over the following months and years will be fascinating, and make no mistake, it won’t be only the American public, but the entire world that is watching.