We may be a deeply divided nation, but there's one thing we agree on: pot.
In every state where it was on the November ballot, blue or red, cannabis reform passed.
Voters in Arizona, Montana, New Jersey and South Dakota approved marijuana for recreational use. In Mississippi and South Dakota, they approved medical use.
There are now 35 states where cannabis is legal for medical use, and 15 where it is legal for adult recreational use.
The only thing standing in the way of common-sense, nationwide cannabis regulation is the preposterous insistence of the federal government that marijuana is a dangerous drug with no medical use, on a par with heroin and LSD.
But that is starting to change.
Last week, the House of Representatives voted 228 to 164 to decriminalize cannabis. The measure would also expunge nonviolent marijuana convictions, redress some of the harm done to people of color by the failed war on drugs, and, of course, tax the stuff. Five Republicans and Michigan independent Justin Amash voted for it.
"The federal government has lied to the people of this country about marijuana for a generation," declared Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, the only Republican cosponsor of the bill. "We have seen a generation — particularly of Black and brown youth — locked up for offenses that should not have resulted in any incarceration whatsoever."