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An End to Marijuana Prohibition
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n1400/a01.html
Newshawk: Get Active! http://www.mapinc.org/how2.htm
Pubdate: Thu, 30 Sep 2004
Source: Anchorage Press (AK)
Section: Feature Article
Copyright: 2004 Anchorage Publishing, Inc.
Contact:
info@anchoragepress.com
Website: http://www.anchoragepress.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3078
Author: Ethan A Nadelmann
Note: Ethan A. Nadelmann is the founder and executive
director of the Drug
Policy Alliance. This article first appeared in National Review on
July 12.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420
(Cannabis - Popular)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm
(Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm
(Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?179
(Nadelmann, Ethan)
AN END TO MARIJUANA PROHIBITION
The Drive to Legalize Picks Up
Never before have so many Americans supported decriminalizing and
even legalizing marijuana.
Seventy-two percent say that for simple marijuana possession,
people should not be incarcerated but fined: the generally
accepted definition of "decriminalization." Even more
Americans support making marijuana legal for medical purposes.
Support for broader legalization ranges between 25 and 42 percent,
depending on how one asks the question.
Two of every five Americans - according to a 2003 Zogby poll - say
"the government should treat marijuana more or less the same
way it treats alcohol: It should regulate it, control it, tax it,
and only make it illegal for children."
Close to 100 million Americans - including more than half of those
between the ages of 18 and 50 - have tried marijuana at least
once. Military and police recruiters often have no choice
but to ignore past marijuana use by job seekers.
The public apparently feels the same way about presidential and
other political candidates. Al Gore, Bill Bradley and John
Kerry all say they smoked pot in days past. So did Bill
Clinton, with his notorious caveat. George W. Bush
won't deny he did. And ever more political, business,
religious, intellectual and other leaders plead guilty as well.
The debate over ending marijuana prohibition simmers just below
the surface of mainstream politics, crossing ideological and
partisan boundaries. Marijuana is no longer the symbol of
Sixties rebellion and Seventies permissiveness, and it's not just
liberals and libertarians who say it should be legal, as William
F. Buckley Jr. has demonstrated better than anyone.
As director of the country's leading drug-policy-reform
organization, I've had countless conversations with police and
prosecutors, judges and politicians, and hundreds of others who
quietly agree that the criminalization of marijuana is costly,
foolish and destructive. What's most needed now is
principled conservative leadership. Buckley has led the way,
and New Mexico's former governor, Gary Johnson, spoke out
courageously while in office.
How about others?
Marijuana prohibition is unique among American criminal laws.
No other law is both enforced so widely and harshly and yet deemed
unnecessary by such a substantial portion of the populace.
Police make about 700,000 arrests per year for marijuana offenses.
That's almost the same number as are arrested each year for
cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, Ecstasy, and all other illicit
drugs combined.
Roughly 600,000, or 87 percent, of marijuana arrests are for
nothing more than possession of small amounts.
Millions of Americans have never been arrested or convicted of any
criminal offense except this. Enforcing marijuana laws costs
an estimated $10-15 billion in direct costs alone.
Punishments range widely across the country, from modest fines to
a few days in jail to many years in prison.
Prosecutors often contend that no one goes to prison for simple
possession - - but tens, perhaps hundreds, of thousands of people
on probation and parole are locked up each year because their
urine tested positive for marijuana or because they were picked up
in possession of a joint.
Alabama currently locks up people convicted three times of
marijuana possession for 15 years to life. There are
probably - no firm estimates - 100,000 Americans behind bars
tonight for one marijuana offense or another.
And even for those who don't lose their freedom, simply being
arrested can be traumatic and costly.
A parent's marijuana use can be the basis for taking away her
children and putting them in foster care.
Foreign-born residents of the U.S. can be deported for a
marijuana offense no matter how long they have lived in this
country, no matter if their children are U.S. citizens, and
no matter how long they have been legally employed. More
than half the states revoke or suspend driver's licenses of people
arrested for marijuana possession even though they were not
driving at the time of arrest.
The federal Higher Education Act prohibits student loans to young
people convicted of any drug offense; all other criminal offenders
remain eligible.
This is clearly an overreaction on the part of government.
No drug is perfectly safe, and every psychoactive drug can be used
in ways that are problematic. The federal government has
spent billions of dollars on advertisements and anti-drug programs
that preach the dangers of marijuana - - that it's a gateway drug,
and addictive in its own right, and dramatically more potent than
it used to be, and responsible for all sorts of physical and
social diseases as well as international terrorism.
But the government has yet to repudiate the 1988 finding of the
Drug Enforcement Administration's own administrative law judge,
Francis Young, who concluded after extensive testimony that
"marijuana in its natural form is one of the safest
therapeutically active substances known to man."
Is marijuana a gateway drug? Yes, insofar as most Americans try
marijuana before they try other illicit drugs.
But no, insofar as the vast majority of Americans who have tried
marijuana have never gone on to try other illegal drugs, much less
get in trouble with them, and most have never even gone on to
become regular or problem marijuana users.
Trying to reduce heroin addiction by preventing marijuana use,
it's been said, is like trying to reduce motorcycle fatalities by
cracking down on bicycle riding. If marijuana did not exist,
there's little reason to believe that there would be less drug
abuse in the U.S.; indeed, its role would most likely be filled by
a more dangerous substance.
Is marijuana dramatically more potent today?
There's certainly a greater variety of high-quality marijuana
available today than 30 years ago. But anyone who smoked
marijuana in the 1970s and 1980s can recall smoking pot that was
just as strong as anything available today.
What's more, one needs to take only a few puffs of higher-potency
pot to get the desired effect, so there's less wear and tear on
the lungs.
Is marijuana addictive?
Yes, it can be, in that some people use it to excess, in ways that
are problematic for themselves and those around them, and find it
hard to stop. But marijuana may well be the least addictive
and least damaging of all commonly used psychoactive drugs,
including many that are now legal.
Most people who smoke marijuana never become dependent.
Withdrawal symptoms pale compared with those from other drugs.
No one has ever died from a marijuana overdose, which cannot be
said of most other drugs. Marijuana is not associated with
violent behavior and only minimally with reckless sexual behavior.
And even heavy marijuana smokers smoke only a fraction of what
cigarette addicts smoke.
Lung cancers involving only marijuana are rare.
The government's most recent claim is that marijuana abuse
accounts for more people entering treatment than any other illegal
drug. That shouldn't be surprising, given that tens of
millions of Americans smoke marijuana while only a few million use
all other illicit drugs.
But the claim is spurious nonetheless. Few Americans who
enter "treatment" for marijuana are addicted.
Fewer than one in five people entering drug treatment for
marijuana do so voluntarily. More than half were referred by
the criminal-justice system.
They go because they got caught with
a joint or failed a drug test at school or work ( typically for
having smoked marijuana days ago, not for being impaired ), or
because they were caught by a
law-enforcement officer - and attending a marijuana
"treatment" program is what's required to avoid
expulsion, dismissal, or incarceration. Many traditional
drug-treatment programs shamelessly participate in this charade to
preserve a profitable and captive client stream.
Even those who recoil at the "nanny state" telling
adults what they can or cannot sell to one another often make an
exception when it comes to marijuana - to "protect the
kids." This is a bad joke, as any teenager will attest.
The criminalization of marijuana for adults has not prevented
young people from having better access to marijuana than anyone
else. Even as marijuana's popularity has waxed and waned
since the 1970s, one statistic has remained constant: More than 80
percent of high-school students report it's easy to get.
Meanwhile, the government's exaggerations and outright dishonesty
easily backfire.
For every teen who refrains from trying marijuana because it's
illegal ( for adults ), another is tempted by its status as
"forbidden fruit." Many respond to the lies about
marijuana by disbelieving warnings about more dangerous drugs.
So much for protecting the kids by criminalizing the adults.
The debate over medical marijuana obviously colors the broader
debate over marijuana prohibition. Marijuana's medical
efficacy is no longer in serious dispute. Its use as a
medicine dates back thousands of years. Pharmaceutical
products containing marijuana's central ingredient, THC, are
legally sold in the U.S., and more are emerging.
Some people find the pill form satisfactory, and others consume it
in teas or baked products.
Most find smoking the easiest and most effective way to consume
this unusual medicine, but non-smoking consumption methods,
notably vaporizers, are emerging.
Federal law still prohibits medical marijuana.
But every state ballot initiative to legalize medical marijuana
has been approved, often by wide margins - in California,
Washington, Oregon, Alaska, Colorado, Nevada, Maine, and
Washington, D.C. State legislatures in Vermont, Hawaii, and
Maryland have followed suit, and many others are now considering
their own medical marijuana bills - including New York,
Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Illinois. Support is often
bipartisan, with Republican governors like Gary Johnson and
Maryland's Bob Ehrlich taking the lead. In New York's 2002
gubernatorial campaign, the conservative candidate of the
Independence party, Tom Golisano, surprised everyone by
campaigning heavily on this issue. The medical-marijuana
bill now before the New York legislature is backed not just by
leading Republicans but even by some Conservative party leaders.
The political battleground increasingly pits the White House -
first under Clinton and now Bush - against everyone else.
Majorities in virtually every state in the country would vote, if
given the chance, to legalize medical marijuana. Even
Congress is beginning to turn; last summer about two-thirds of
House Democrats and a dozen Republicans voted in favor of an
amendment co-sponsored by Republican Dana Rohrabacher to prohibit
federal funding of any Justice Department crackdowns on medical
marijuana in the states that had legalized it. ( Many more
Republicans privately expressed support, but were directed to vote
against. ) And federal courts have imposed limits on federal
aggression: first in Conant v. Walters, which now protects
the First Amendment rights of doctors and patients to discuss
medical marijuana, and more recently in Raich v. Ashcroft
and Santa Cruz v. Ashcroft, which determined that the
federal government's power to regulate interstate commerce does
not provide a basis for prohibiting medical-marijuana operations
that are entirely local and non-commercial. ( The Supreme
Court let the Conant decision stand, but has yet to consider the
others. )
State and local governments are increasingly involved in trying to
regulate medical marijuana, notwithstanding the federal
prohibition. California, Oregon, Hawaii, Alaska, Colorado
and Nevada have created confidential medical-marijuana patient
registries, which protect bona fide patients and caregivers from
arrest or prosecution. Some municipal governments are now
trying to figure out how to regulate production and distribution.
In California, where dozens of medical-marijuana programs now
operate openly, with tacit approval by local authorities, some
program directors are asking to be licensed and regulated.
Many state and local authorities, including law enforcement, favor
this but are intimidated by federal threats to arrest and
prosecute them for violating federal law.
The drug czar and DEA spokespersons recite the mantra that
"there is no such thing as medical marijuana," but the
claim is so specious on its face that it clearly undermines
federal credibility. The federal government currently
provides marijuana - from its own production site in Mississippi -
- to a few patients who years ago were recognized by the courts as
bona fide patients.
No one wants to debate those who have used marijuana for medical
purposes, be it Santa Cruz medical-marijuana hospice founder
Valerie Corral or National Review's Richard Brookhiser. Even
many federal officials quietly regret the assault on medical
marijuana.
When the DEA raided Corral's hospice in September 2002, one agent
was heard to say, "Maybe I'm going to think about getting
another job sometime soon."
The Anchorage Press, Anchorage AlaskaThe bigger battle, of course,
concerns whether marijuana prohibition will ultimately go the way
of alcohol Prohibition, replaced by a variety of state and local
tax and regulatory policies with modest federal involvement.
Dedicated prohibitionists see medical marijuana as the first step
down a slippery slope to full legalization. The voters who
approved the medical-marijuana ballot initiatives ( as well as the
wealthy men who helped fund the campaigns ) were roughly divided
between those who support broader legalization and those who
don't, but united in seeing the criminalization and persecution of
medical-marijuana patients as the most distasteful aspect of the
war on marijuana. ( This was a point that Buckley made
forcefully in his columns about the plight of Peter McWilliams,
who likely died because federal authorities effectively forbade
him to use marijuana as medicine. )
The medical-marijuana effort has probably aided the broader
anti-prohibitionist campaign in three ways. It helped
transform the face of marijuana in the media, from the
stereotypical rebel with long hair and tie-dyed shirt to an
ordinary middle-aged American struggling with MS or cancer or
AIDS. By winning first Proposition 215, the 1996
medical-marijuana ballot initiative in California, and then a
string of similar victories in other states, the nascent
drug-policy-reform movement demonstrated that it could win in the
big leagues of American politics.
And the emergence of successful models of medical-marijuana
control is likely to boost public confidence in the possibilities
and virtue of regulating nonmedical use as well.
In this regard, the history of Dutch policy on cannabis ( i.e.,
marijuana and hashish ) is instructive. The "coffee
shop" model in the Netherlands, where retail ( but not
wholesale ) sale of cannabis is de facto legal, was not legislated
into existence.
It evolved in fits and starts following the decriminalization of
cannabis by Parliament in 1976, as consumers, growers and
entrepreneurs negotiated and collaborated with local police,
prosecutors and other authorities to find an acceptable middle
ground policy. "Coffee shops" now operate
throughout the country, subject to local regulations.
Troublesome shops are shut down, and most are well integrated into
local city cultures.
Cannabis is no more popular than in the U.S. and other
Western countries, notwithstanding the effective absence of
criminal sanctions and controls.
Parallel developments are now underway in other countries.
Like the Dutch decriminalization law in 1976, California's Prop
215 in 1996 initiated a dialogue over how best to implement the
new law. The variety of outlets that have emerged - ranging
from pharmacy-like stores to medical "coffee shops" to
hospices, all of which provide marijuana only to people with a
patient ID card or doctor's recommendation - play a key role as
the most public symbol and manifestation of this dialogue.
More such outlets will likely pop up around the country as other
states legalize marijuana for medical purposes and then seek ways
to regulate distribution and access. And the question will
inevitably arise: If the emerging system is successful in
controlling production and distribution of marijuana for those
with a medical need, can it not also expand to provide for those
without medical need?
Millions of Americans use marijuana not just "for fun"
but because they find it useful for many of the same reasons that
people drink alcohol or take pharmaceutical drugs.
It's akin to the beer, glass of wine, or cocktail at the end of
the workday, or the prescribed drug to alleviate depression or
anxiety, or the sleeping pill, or the aid to sexual function and
pleasure.
More and more Americans are apt to describe some or all of their
marijuana use as "medical" as the definition of that
term evolves and broadens.
Their anecdotal experiences are increasingly backed by new
scientific research into marijuana's essential ingredients, the
cannabinoids. Last year, a subsidiary of The Lancet,
Britain's leading medical journal, speculated whether marijuana
might soon emerge as the "aspirin of the 21st century,"
providing a wide array of medical benefits at low cost to diverse
populations.
Perhaps the expansion of the medical-control model provides the
best answer - - at least in the U.S. - to the question of
how best to reduce the substantial costs and harms of marijuana
prohibition without inviting significant increases in real drug
abuse.
It's analogous to the evolution of many pharmaceutical drugs from
prescription to over-the-counter, but with stricter controls still
in place.
It's also an incrementalist approach to reform that can provide
both the control and the reassurance that cautious politicians and
voters desire.
In 1931, with public support for alcohol Prohibition rapidly
waning, President Hoover released the report of the Wickersham
Commission. The report included a devastating critique of
Prohibition's failures and costly consequences, but the
commissioners, apparently fearful of getting out too far ahead of
public opinion, opposed repeal.
Franklin P. Adams of the New York World neatly summed up
their findings:
Prohibition is an awful flop.
We like it.
It can't stop what it's meant to stop.
We like it.
It's left a trail of graft and slime
It don't prohibit worth a dime
It's filled our land with vice and crime,
Nevertheless, we're for it.
Two years later, federal alcohol Prohibition was history.
What support there is for marijuana prohibition would likely end
quickly absent the billions of dollars spent annually by federal
and other governments to prop it up. All those
anti-marijuana ads pretend to be about reducing drug abuse, but in
fact, their basic purpose is sustaining popular support for the
war on marijuana.
What's needed now are conservative politicians willing to say
enough is enough: Tens of billions of taxpayer dollars down the
drain each year. People losing their jobs, their property
and their freedom for nothing more than possessing a joint or
growing a few marijuana plants.
And all for what? To send a message?
To keep pretending that we're protecting our children?
Alcohol Prohibition made a lot more sense than marijuana
prohibition does today - and it, too, was a disaster.
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