Pubdate: Mon, 15 Apr 2002
Source: Cincinnati Post (OH)
Copyright: 2002 The Cincinnati Post
Contact:  http://www.cincypost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/87
Author: Deroy Murdock

U.S. SHOULD LEGALIZE MARIJUANA

NEW YORK - New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has become the latest 
leader to gain prominence for having smoked marijuana. On April 9, the 
National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws ( www.NORML.org) 
unveiled a $500,000 ad campaign that highlights what Bloomberg said when 
New York magazine asked him last summer if he ever smoked grass: ''You bet 
I did. And I enjoyed it.''

NORML's ads lampoon the War on Marijuana, a big-government debacle that 
deserves to be laughed into oblivion. Fittingly enough, many politicians 
grin at their own marijuana use.

Ex-president Bill Clinton famously yucked it up when he revealed that he 
smoked pot, ''but I didn't inhale.''

As the April 9 New York Daily News noted, Gov. George Pataki said, ''yes, I 
did inhale,'' after he and some Columbia Law School pals toked up. 
Previously, they had eaten baked beans cooked with marijuana.

Rep. Dana Rohrbacher, a California Republican, quipped on ''Politically 
Incorrect'' that in the 1960s, ''I did everything but drink the bong water.''

Former House speaker Newt Gingrich told The Economist that he smoked pot 
while studying in the 1970s. To do so, Gingrich said, ''was a sign that we 
were alive and in graduate school in that era.''

Despite drug warriors' claims, marijuana does not necessarily demolish 
young people's life prospects. In fact, Americans evidently can smoke 
grass, then wind up in governors' mansions, the U.S. Congress and even the 
White House. Bloomberg, who was a multi-billionaire media tycoon before 
Gotham's voters sent him to City Hall, recalled his zany days at a Johns 
Hopkins University fraternity in the early 1960s. As he explains in his 
autobiography, ''Bloomberg by Bloomberg:'' ''Maybe all that enjoyable 
'wasted' time had long-term benefits after all.''

While politicos chuckle at their own ''youthful experimentation'' with 
marijuana, it's no laughing matter for many Americans who conduct such 
''experiments'' today. They often suffer, though less from hemp than from 
handcuffs.

The NYPD's arrests for possession and/or public smoking of marijuana have 
swelled from 1,362 in 1993 to 50,830 in 2000, equal to 15 percent of that 
year's total arrests. (NORML correctly advocates citations and fines to 
apprehension for public smoking.) In 2000, 734,498 Americans were arrested 
nationwide for breaking marijuana laws, 646,042 of them for mere possession.

Using U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics data, the Marijuana Policy Project 
calculates that 37,500 federal, state and local inmates were imprisoned for 
cannabis violations in 1998, 15,400 of them for possession alone. At an 
average cost of $20,000 each, government spent $750 million to incarcerate 
these offenders. The project estimates that the War on Marijuana costs 
taxpayers $9.2 billion annually.

Every law enforcement asset arrayed against non-violent potheads is one 
less asset that can be deployed against al-Qaida sleeper cells.

Officials high and low should accept a simple fact: U.S. adults enjoy 
marijuana. Some 69.7 million Americans over 18 at least have tried it, 
while 19 million adults say they have smoked pot within the last year.

And why not? Marijuana can enhance music, fine dining and long walks on 
secluded beaches. If consenting adults wish to spark up and watch ''The 
Simpsons'' inside a private home, that should be as lawful as doing so 
after sipping red wine.

Naturally, those who light up, then head for the highway should be 
prosecuted for driving under the influence. Ditto those who operate heavy 
machinery while stoned.

But when it comes to policing grown-ups at leisure, the War on Marijuana is 
sillier than a weed-fueled giggle.

The same government that permits Americans to soften the edges of modern 
life with Xanax, Tylenol PM, Lotto and Jagermeister immediately should put 
a match to the entire anti-pot project. If marijuana amuses the mayor of 
America's premier city, it should be available to entertain adults in 
Anytown, USA.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart