Pubdate: Tue, 16 Jun 2009
Source: Hartford Advocate (CT)
Page: front cover
Copyright: 2009 New Mass. Media, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.hartfordadvocate.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/182
Author: Mike Miliard
Note: This story first appeared in the Boston Phoenix.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

THE MARIJUANA QUESTION

Is Now The Time To Legalize Pot?

The Obama administration, already overtaxed with two foreign 
campaigns, made headlines when it waved a white flag in a fight much 
closer to home. Gil Kerlikowske, the White House's newly minted 
director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy -- the 
so-called drug czar -- called for an end to the "War on Drugs."

Granted, Kerlikowske wasn't signaling an intention to lay down arms 
and pick up a pack of E-Z Widers. His was a semantic shift -- a 
pledge to abandon gung-ho fighting words and imprisonment in favor of 
treatment. But it was newsworthy nonetheless. As Bruce Mirken, 
communications director of the Marijuana Policy Project -- the 
biggest pot-policy-reform group in the country -- puts it: "Can you 
imagine [Bush administration czar] John Walters saying that? The 
Earth would open up!"

It wouldn't be surprising if Kerlikowske's speech was actually a 
subtle testing of the political landscape surrounding the marijuana 
question, as we find ourselves, quite suddenly, at a pivotal moment 
in the push for pot legalization. The horrific violence of Mexican 
cartels, which make perhaps as much as 75 percent of their money from 
marijuana (in Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard's estimation), 
has started ebbing across our Southwestern borders. The budget 
meltdown in California has led state pols -- even, once unthinkably, 
GOP governor Arnold Schwarzenegger -- to reconsider the tax revenues 
($14 billion, according to Time) that could be harvested from the 
Golden State's biggest cash crop. Politicians, no longer confined to 
the left and libertarian right, are increasingly willing to say that 
legalization makes sense.

Nearly every day offers another object lesson in the merits of 
marijuana reform. And the American people seem to be noticing. At 
least four polls in the past three months have shown a greater uptick 
in the public's receptiveness to legalization than ever before. One 
Zogby poll released last month found that 52 percent felt pot should 
be regulated and taxed. Among the more than 13,000 questions 
submitted to President Barack Obama's online town hall in March, the 
Los Angeles Times reported, the top six questions in the "budget" 
category had to do with legalizing and taxing pot (thanks in part to 
prodding from groups such as NORML, the National Organization for the 
Reform of Marijuana Laws).

So far, the president -- who supported decriminalization when running 
for Senate in 2004, but not when running for president in 2008 -- 
hasn't exactly been a profile in courage. (His answer, at that town 
hall, to the question of taxing marijuana was wincingly flippant.) 
But that may not matter all that much. "Obama is against gay 
marriage, at least nominally, yet that issue is moving forward, too," 
statistician Nate Silver, founder of fivethirtyeight.com, told me. 
"Once one state does something, then other states start to think about it."

Even if Obama isn't yet bumping Pineapple Express to the top of his 
Netflix queue, then, this much seems clear: The thoughtfulness he's 
brought to Washington -- zealots out, pragmatists in -- is evident. 
And suddenly, whether his fingerprints are on it directly or not, 
"change" may be more than just a buzzword.

As seen in a steady spate of headlines over the past six months, 
we're talking about the failed drug war and the ever-widening 
patchwork of individual state laws with a measure of honesty and 
common sense that's not been heard since the 1970s.

None of which is to say the trend is inexorable. But this may be the 
moment. If we don't see an end to marijuana prohibition in the next 
decade or so, it's reasonable to say that there's a fair chance it'll 
never happen. And that, as some are wont to say, would be an enormous 
harshing of one's mellow.

Yes we cannabis

In the '70s, as a member of the Massachusetts House of 
Representatives, Barney Frank filed a bill that sought to allow 
possession and use of small amounts of marijuana. It went nowhere.

Then last April, as a U.S. congressman, he co-sponsored, with Ron 
Paul, the Personal Use of Marijuana by Responsible Adults Act of 
2008, which would have lifted federal penalties for possessing 3.5 
ounces or less. That bill never made it to committee. This past 
month, though, Frank and Paul introduced another bill that did reach 
the committee stage, the Industrial Hemp Farming Act of 2009, which 
would end the ban on cultivation of non-psychoactive hemp.

"I think people have gotten more skeptical of government 
intervention," says Frank. "And I think people have seen the 
ineffectiveness of the all-out-war approach to all this. Third, we 
have concerns about the costs, about overcrowded prisons and 
overstretched law enforcement. So I think things are moving. But the 
basic thing is that Americans are better understanding now of 
personal freedoms."

"A lot of things are being put on the table that people couldn't 
imagine until just recently," says Ethan Nadelmann, founder and 
executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, which seeks an end to 
the worldwide war on drugs. "I would not have predicted five months 
ago that we'd have this explosion of sentiment. I'm stunned."

Mirken, too, is cautiously optimistic that we may be laying the 
groundwork for substantial progress. "We'll know for sure five years 
from now," he says. "But there's certainly much more intense interest 
in and discussion of whether our marijuana laws make any sense than 
I've seen since I was a kid -- i.e., when Nixon was president."

Indeed, back in the heydaze of Cheech and Chong, the prospects for 
legalization looked promising. "There were a bunch of states that 
passed decriminalization statutes in the '70s," says Mirken, 
including New York, Colorado, and even Mississippi. "Then basically 
everything ground to a halt in the Reagan era. The pendulum had swung 
in one direction in the '60s and '70s and then swung back."

It may have swung back yet again -- perhaps for good this time. "Back 
then [in the '70s, pro-legalization] public opinion never topped more 
than 30 percent," says Nadelmann. "And there was a whole generation 
that didn't know the difference between marijuana and heroin. Now, 
support is topping 30 percent nationally."

"We're not yet there, but look at the number of states who voted for 
medical marijuana," says Frank. "Then you had the referendum in 
Massachusetts last year over the objection of almost all 
law-enforcement people. There is movement."

The green economy

"Rock Band" enthusiasts with bongs aren't the only ones taking note. 
More than 40 percent of Americans have tried marijuana, according to 
the National Institute on Drug Abuse. By NORML's tally, as many as 15 
million people smoke at least once a month. That's a pretty 
substantial market, and one that could bring in a goodly amount of 
tax revenue -- a fact that hasn't been lost on those seeking rational 
solutions to our nation's financial woes.

"When you're staring at the sort of budget deficits that governments 
at all levels are looking at right now, that clarifies the mind a 
great deal," says Mirken. "And it does, I think, begin to strike 
people as pretty absurd that we have this huge industry that is 
effectively tax exempt!"

California assemblyman Tom Ammiano made news in February when he 
introduced a bill that would essentially treat pot like alcohol: 
legalize it, tax it, and allow adults 21 and over to purchase and use 
it. Soon after, the state's Board of Equalization announced that the 
bill's proposed levy of $50 per ounce could put as much as $1.3 
billion a year into government coffers.

"I think it's not time for that," Schwarzenegger said in response. 
"But I think it's time for a debate."

"He's far and away the highest-placed politician in recent memory 
who's dared to broach the subject at all," says Harvard economist 
Jeffrey Miron of Schwarzenegger. "He said, 'I'm not in favor of it, 
but let's discuss it.' Well, why are you gonna discuss it when you're 
so sure it's a bad idea? He clearly does think it might be a good idea."

Miron is the author of a 2005 study titled "The Budgetary 
Implications of Marijuana Prohibition." In it, he looks at the money 
that could be saved by local, state, and federal governments by the 
cessation of prohibition, and that could be gained by taxing pot at 
rates comparable with those levied on other vices.

"Overall, my numbers are something like $12 billion would be saved 
from not enforcing marijuana laws," says Miron, "and $7 billion could 
be collected in revenue, assuming it's taxed at something like the 
rates on alcohol and tobacco."

The numbers are "not totally trivial," he concedes. "But when we're 
looking at a $1.84 trillion deficit, a net of $15 to $20 billion 
seems like a rounding error."

For that reason, he doesn't foresee legalization for tax revenue 
alone. "I think that would be a reinforcing effect, but I think 
there's got to be more of an attitude [shift] that, if people can do 
something without harming other people, it shouldn't matter what that 
thing is. I think if people don't feel comfortable with it for some 
broader perspective, $15 billion isn't going to change their minds."

Muy caliente

If dollar signs don't convince the anti-pot lobby, then how about the 
fact that Mexican drug cartels are appropriating public land in 
Western states to grow bushels of marijuana? Or the fact that ever 
more U.S. officials, from Homeland Security Secretary Janet 
Napolitano to Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mike Mullen, are fearing 
spillover of the cartels' grisly violence -- more than 6,000 murders 
last year -- into Tuscon and El Paso?

"If drugs were legal, that would not be happening," says Dan Baum, 
whose 1997 book, Smoke and Mirrors: The War on Drugs and the Politics 
of Failure (Back Bay), is considered one of the best chronicles of 
the drug war's litany of failures. "It's a misapprehension of the 
truth to say that the violence in Mexico is because of American 
appetite for drugs. It's not the appetite for drugs -- it's the 
prohibition that's causing the violence."

Certainly, these cartels traffic in some very bad stuff: heroin, 
methamphetamine, cocaine. But, says Nadelmann, "half of the Mexican 
drug gangs' revenue comes from marijuana. Legalizing marijuana is a 
pretty powerful way of depriving these gangsters of revenue -- the 
same way we took Al Capone and those guys out."

Prohibitionists are at a loss for a coherent argument when it comes 
to the cartels, argues Mirken. "They'll say really dumb things like 
'Legalizing marijuana isn't going to make these gangs turn into 
law-abiding citizens.' No, of course not! It will make them 
irrelevant! Just like you don't need bootleggers when you have Anheuser-Busch."

More and more credible people are echoing the sentiment. In January, 
Arizona Attorney General Goddard opined that legalization "could 
certainly cut the legs out of some of these criminal activities." In 
February, former presidents Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de Leon of Mexico, 
Fernando Henrique Cardoso of Brazil, and Cesar Gaviria of Colombia 
gathered at the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy and 
called for decriminalization, decrying the fact that "current 
policies are based on prejudices and fears and not on results."

Former Mexican president Vicente Fox put it plainly: "I believe it's 
time to open the debate over legalizing drugs."

That debate, at least, is happening in earnest. What it leads to is 
another matter. In the meantime, says Mirken, "We are effectively 
subsidizing these horrible Mexican gangs by handing them the marijuana market."

Poll position

Of course, it's not just Mexican presidents who are honest about 
drugs. American ones can also be pretty, er, blunt. "I inhaled 
frequently," then-candidate Obama admitted last year when asked if he 
had ever smoked pot. "That was the point."

To see how far we've come, consider the fact that, just 17 years ago, 
candidate Bill Clinton felt compelled to fudge his answer to that 
same question with his own infamous equivocation. Or that, 22 years 
ago, Douglas Ginsburg's admission to smoking pot cost him a Supreme Court seat.

People are much more comfortable with the idea of smoking marijuana 
than they once were. The media may have brewed up a tempest in a 
teapot when Michael Phelps was photographed with a bong held to his 
lips, but most Americans couldn't give a fig.

"I do think it's begun to sink in for people now that the last three 
presidents have smoked marijuana," says Mirken. "As has the governor 
of California, the mayor of New York City, the guy [Phelps] who's won 
more Olympic gold medals than anyone on the planet."

Meanwhile, more and more people polled are comfortable expressing 
pro-legalization sentiments. "We've seen the numbers jump quite 
dramatically in the past six months to a year," says Nadelmann. "It's 
really quite something."

In February, Silver looked at the results of three polls (Rasmussen, 
CBS, Zogby) on fivethirtyeight.com, each of which found 40 percent or 
more of respondents supporting legalization. That "may be 
significant" he allowed, but cautioned against over-exuberance.

"On issues like this, yes, there are trends, but they're not 
necessarily inevitable," he says now. "If you were looking at the 
world in the 1960s, you may well have guessed that, by 2009, you'd be 
able to smoke pot legally."

But that didn't happen. After the '70s came the '80s. A crack 
epidemic. A crime wave. Nancy Reagan and "Just Say No." Moods can 
change. And if the pot issue moves unduly forward, wonders Silver, 
"Will the Republicans try to create a backlash on that and say, 
'We've gone too far?' I think it's not totally out of the question, 
if the economy stays in the dumps for a period of months or years," 
he adds, "that the crime rate may increase again and that may work 
against legalization and harm that momentum a bit."

But generational shifts happen. And now, with most people under the 
age of 65 probably at least familiar with the pungent smoky odor, the 
trend should continue toward increased acceptance. Writing on 
fivethirtyeight.com, Silver predicted that "we'll need to see a 
supermajority of Americans" favoring legalization before politicians 
would be emboldened enough to press the issue.

He crunched the numbers and figured that, assuming the trend kept 
heading northward, we could reach 60 percent or so sometime in the 
next 13 years, predicts Silver. "I feel comfortable with 2022."

Trapped in the closet

In the past decade and a half, 13 states have legalized medical 
marijuana, a steady drip that is somewhat analogous -- in its 
suddenness and once-seeming-improbability -- to the snowballing 
momentum of gay-marriage rulings over the past several months.

"There's a powerful analogy between the gay-rights movement and the 
marijuana-law-reform movement," says Nadelmann. "Part of it is about 
a principle -- that people should not be punished for what they do in 
their own home or their own personal lives. The other point is that 
there's an element of 'coming out' that is pivotal to the whole 
process of decriminalizing and ultimately legalizing the behavior."

Atlantic writer Andrew Sullivan has done a fine job of hammering this 
point again and again over the past couple months on his blog The 
Daily Dish (andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com), both with his own 
thoughtful analysis and in a series of posts tagged "The Cannabis 
Closet," in which he publishes mostly anonymous responses from his 
readers. "Contract manager with a government agency [and] Treasurer 
for the PTA" one describes himself. "If I got busted, I'd lose a 
lot," writes another.

"I truly believe that if marijuana users felt as emboldened to come 
out as gay and lesbian people did some years ago," says Nadelmann, 
"marijuana prohibition would come crashing down very quickly." The 
problem is that "it's hard to get people to come out of the closet 
about something that does remain a crime."

There are "millions of Americans who smoke marijuana for whom it's 
not a problem, who are part of the middle class, who are well-off, 
who are role models," says Mirken. Most people know this. Yet still 
the caricature persists of the feckless stoner, slack-jawed and 
speckled with Pringles crumbs. As long as the sorts of people who 
write into Sullivan's blog can't come out and correct that stereotype 
- -- as Mirken says, "The only people who end up coming out are the 
ones who show up at the hemp fests and get in trouble" -- the battle 
for wider acceptance will be a hard slog.

Slowly, state by state, that may be changing. One Massachusetts 
reader e-mailed the Daily Dish to say that the Bay State's recent 
decriminalization "has also allowed me to 'come out' publicly as a 
smoker. When I go out for drinks with co-workers and they comment on 
my lack of drinks, I simply say that I prefer marijuana because it's 
less debilitating (at least for me). This still takes people aback a 
bit, but they'll get used to it."

. or get off the pot

Whether our representatives in Washington will be brave enough to 
embrace this emerging political sentiment remains to be seen. "While 
in general I don't think the criticism that 'Politicians are lagging 
the public in enlightenment' is accurate," says Frank, "I do think 
it's true in this case."

Does he wish his colleagues in the House and Senate would be more 
outspoken? "Oh, of course. But I wish I could eat more and not gain 
weight. I wish a lot of things."

Because of their clear majority and Obama's abiding popularity, the 
Democrats may now be encouraged to move swiftly on everything from 
health care to the environment. But it seems true, so far, that few 
are inclined to start singing Peter Tosh songs. "They're in power 
now, and they feel like they have a lot to lose," says Silver. "The 
Democrats are gonna be reluctant to spend a lot of political capital 
on it -- especially at a national level."

Nonetheless, Nadelmann reports of his private meetings on Capitol 
Hill, "in frank conversation, the willingness of members of Congress 
to say, 'Of course you're right, of course this makes sense,' is 
growing. Before, they'd be scared to say it."

As for help from the White House, don't count on it -- yet. Sullivan 
called Obama's guffawing dismissal of the pot question at that online 
town hall "pathetic." ("I'm tired of having the Prohibition issue 
treated as if it's trivial or a joke," he wrote. "It is neither.") 
But others have suggested that timing is everything.

"I think partly it needs a term-limited president," says Miron, who 
believes the only reason Schwarzenegger feels intrepid enough to 
broach the subject in California is that he's a lame duck. He says he 
could envision Obama taking the reins on the issue "at a minimum, in 
the middle or at the end of [his] second term, assuming he gets re-elected."

Until then, we can take solace in politicians like Senator Jim Webb, 
a Democrat from Virginia, whose bold and sweeping prison-reform bill, 
the National Criminal Justice Commission Act of 2009, was introduced 
in March. Calling our jails a "disgrace" -- and noting that the 
number of incarcerated drug offenders has increased 1,200 percent 
since 1980 -- Webb has in the process become one of the 
highest-profile politicians to signal his openness to marijuana 
legalization. "Nothing," he's said, "should be off the table."

Adds Frank: "I guess it's better to be on the table than under the table."

Reefer madness

Marijuana abuse does carry some health risks, after all. There are 
plenty of law-and-order types out there who simply believe, as "South 
Park"'s Mr. Mackey says, that "drugs are bad, mmkay?"

"Marijuana prohibition is a powerful drug in and of itself, and one 
to which we are heavily addicted," says Baum. "Marijuana [illegality] 
has tremendous political power, and I think we're going to give that 
up very reluctantly.

"Cops love [pot prohibition]," he continues. "Pot smokers and pot 
dealers don't shoot back; they're easy to bust and you get all this 
money from the Feds for drug prohibition. Schools like it because it 
gives a concrete bit of evidence you can use to get rid of and 
isolate and punish a troublesome or rebellious kid. When you start 
peeling it back, marijuana prohibition serves a great many powerful interests."

Indeed, the "drug-war industrial complex is not to be sneezed at," 
says Mirken, who points out that the pushback has already started. 
"Marijuana potency surpasses 10 percent," the headline of an alarmist 
cnn.com article warned a few weeks ago.

In January, before he withdrew his name from consideration for 
surgeon general, CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta penned an op-ed for Time 
titled "Why I Would Vote No On Pot." In it, the neurosurgeon argued 
that the damage marijuana might do to one's lungs or short-term 
memory essentially outweighed the fact that "permissive legalization, 
accompanied by stringent regulations and penalties, can cut down on 
illegal-drug trafficking and make communities safer."

Even liberal blogger Matthew Yglesias (yglesias.thinkprogress.org), 
while receptive to decriminalization, confessed to fearing "the 
creation of a legal marijuana industry with lobbyists and advertising 
aimed at creating as many problem pot smokers as possible." Light UP 
at the end of the tunnel

Certainly, some of these fears may have merit. Just as certainly, the 
pro-pot side has plenty of valid points of its own. So let's hash it out.

"One of the most hideous things about the drug war is not only the 
imprisonment, and not only the civil-liberties [violations]," says 
Baum. "It's the way it shut down debate. It created forbidden speech 
in the U.S. And I am delighted to see that changing."

"It feels like a sea change," says Nadelmann of the past six months. 
"The credibility and stature of the people speaking out. The 
reception we're getting from legislators. The interest of the media."

At the same time, however, he's well aware that "it's a little like 
surfing: we're riding a wave right now like we've never seen before. 
That wave's gonna crash, things will quiet down, we'll be way ahead, 
and then we'll have to ride the next wave."

Ultimately, whether it's in 2016 or 2022 -- or even sooner -- the 
endgame of pot advocates is to abolish federal prohibition, just as 
was done with alcohol in 1933, and to allow states to draft their own 
laws -- whatever they may be.

"That may mean that Mississippi stays dry for another 30 years, as 
was the case with alcohol," explains Nadelmann. "It may mean that 
California or Nevada allow marijuana to be sold 'round the clock in 
corner stores. And it may mean that some other state allows marijuana 
to be sold legally, but only in the equivalent of the New Hampshire 
or Utah state-licensed liquor outlets."

It's important to keep pressing the issue. Crawford notes that he and 
his fellow activists have been redoubling their efforts lately. 
Otherwise, he says, there's no telling when "this window may be 
gone." And as anyone forced by prohibition to smoke on the sly knows, 
it's best to keep the window open.

This story first appeared in the Boston Phoenix.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom