Pubdate: Tue, 26 Apr 2005
Source: Post, The (Ohio U, OH Edu)
Copyright: 2005 The Post
Contact: http://thepost.baker.ohiou.edu/letter.php
Website: http://thepost.baker.ohiou.edu/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1269
Author: Brian J. Mcfillen, Indiana University
Cited: Marijuana Policy Project ( www.mpp.org )
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

REPUBLICANS MUST CONTINUE TO COALESCE

Last week, I received a letter from Milton Friedman. Not a
personal letter, unfortunately --no "Brian, How's it hanging? Best,
Milty" -just a mass mailing. Still, I was pretty jazzed.

And what did Milton Friedman -father of monetarism, founder (after
Hayek) of neo-liberal economics, Nobel Prize winner, adviser to Nixon
and Reagan, shaper of the economic policy that brought America out of
stagflation and into the 21st century with the world's third-highest
per capita income (after Luxembourg), one of the lowest unemployment
levels of all industrialized countries and an inflation rate of just
1.6 percent in 2002 ("CIA World Factbook") -what did THAT Milton
Friedman want of me?

He wanted me to help legalize pot.

Well, not precisely. The message asked its recipients to sign an open
letter supporting a study by Boston University Professor Jeffrey Miron
titled "The Budgetary Implications of Marijuana Prohibition in the
United States" which, to quote, "finds that replacing marijuana
prohibition with a system of taxation and regulation would save the
United States $7.7 billion per year and might generate as much as $6.2
billion annually in tax revenue." The effort is being coordinated by a
group called the Marijuana Policy Project, which is seeking to gather
up a host of economists -and, apparently, at least one half-whacked
political scientist -to start an "open and honest debate about this
issue." Milton is its celebrity spokesperson.

You might be saying, "I thought he was a conservative." But the
association of Milton Friedman with marijuana legalization is nothing
new -he has supported a variety of libertarian causes. However, it
does say something about the political right in terms of its
perception and its future.

Milton is not alone on the right in supporting socially liberal
policies. William F. Buckley also has advocated marijuana legalization
(National Review, June 29, 2004). Michele Zipp, Playgirl
editor-in-chief, came out of the closet as a Republican in March -and
claims to have been fired for it two weeks later (Drudge Report, March
21). And Arthur Finkelstein, veteran Republican campaign adviser,
married his male partner in a civil ceremony three weeks ago (New York
Times, April 9). These are hardly model examples of conservative orthodoxy.

The Republican Party is going to have to take this into account. At
the moment, with the presidency and two congressional majorities, the
GOP is riding high (no pun intended -OK, a little pun), but its 2004
victories were the result of a vigorous effort at alliance-building.
At the Republican Convention, moderates John McCain, Rudy Giuliani and
Arnold Schwarzenegger were marshaled to deliver a very clear message:
Republicans -libertarians, moderates, conservatives, religious right
- -may disagree on many things, but they must unite to support the
government's campaign against terrorism and its state sponsors.

Democrats faced the same challenge in aligning their factions behind
Kerry, and they had, perhaps, an easier message to sell ("He's not
Bush"). But Kerry failed to capitalize on it and tried to pitch to
both liberals and moderates simultaneously, often contradicting
himself. Meanwhile Bush used the GOP's common cause successfully to
ensure moderate support while offering goodies to the religious right.

This worked through Super Tuesday, but now that they are in power,
many of the GOP's representatives seem to forget they're heading a
coalition -not a homogeneously conservative party -and from Schiavo to
censorship, they are spending moderates' goodwill faster than virtual
poker chips. Someone should warn them they'll need nonconservatives
again in 2006, not to mention 2008.

But, as for me, I have to go.

Milton called. He needs a ride to Taco Bell. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake