Pubdate: Sun, 11 Jan 2009
Source: Daily Press (Newport News,VA)
Copyright: 2009 The Daily Press
Contact:  http://www.dailypress.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/585
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

SO MANY CRIMINALS?

It's Time For A Frank, Calm Discussion About Decriminalizing Marijuana

January 11, 2009

On Election Day, voters in Massachusetts took what they think will be 
a step forward for their state: They decriminalized possession of 
small amounts of marijuana.

Before you brush that off with, "Well, that's Massachusetts for you," 
consider that this is a state with not only a liberal bent but a 
strong Puritan streak. This is a place where you can't buy wine in a 
grocery store or pick up beer in a 7-Eleven.

By two to one, voters decided that possessing less than an ounce of 
marijuana will net a civil fine of $100 and no criminal record (and, 
for young offenders, a required drug-education program and community 
service). The laws on growing and trafficking in marijuana are 
unchanged. But unless the state legislature overturns the ballot 
initiative, the penalty for possession will be, for adults, bigger 
than a parking ticket, smaller than a misdemeanor.

And when the bill takes effect, what will happen? The Bay State will 
not fall into the clutches of evil and sin, any more than the 
Netherlands' enlightened drug policy has caused the prosperous, 
upright Dutch to sink into the sea.

But thousands of hours of police time will be freed up, the 
equivalent of adding a lot of bodies to police forces. Court dockets 
will be stripped of thousands of cases, clearing the way for cases 
involving real crimes. Thousands of people won't find their futures 
compromised by criminal records. And defiance of the law won't be 
bred by putting otherwise law-abiding citizens in a bind, where an 
activity they don't believe is wrong lands them on the wrong side of 
the criminal code.

Maybe it's time for Virginia to consider reaping some of those 
benefits. It's at least worth opening the discussion and talking 
about drugs and the law, what works and what doesn't, what people 
want and what they don't.

Along those lines, this has to be factored in: When it comes to 
marijuana, there is a gap between what the law says and what people 
do, or at least try. In a recent national survey, most adults under 
the age of 55 said they'd used illegal drugs at some point in their 
lives. And that's not a relic of long-gone psychedelic days: Drug use 
was as common among twenty-somethings as forty-somethings. The trend 
shows no signs of stopping: One in six 18- to 25-year-olds said 
they'd used marijuana in the last month.

And while it's apparent that the war on drugs consumes massive 
resources and sustains the livelihoods of criminals without stopping 
either supply or demand, we justify it because some substances are so 
dangerous.

When it comes to distinguishing what behavior is legal from what is 
not, the line isn't always as bright as we'd like. In the beginning 
of the 20th century, Coca-Cola was spiked and tonics laced with opium 
were sold over the counter -- and America was consumed by a 
juggernaut of industry, not a stupor of inebriation. The nation tried 
prohibiting alcohol; that produced widespread defiance, crime and 
bullet-riddled bodies. Today, the pharmaceutical industry reaps big 
profits from some powerful addictive substances; others are banned.

It's time to discuss how a rational drug policy should make rational 
distinctions among drugs. And recognize that marijuana is not the 
same as crack.

It's time to discuss whether a society that allows people to choose 
some mood-altering substances -- not just the obvious and 
ever-present alcohol but very common (with a cooperative physician) 
prescription drugs -- should be a society that lets them decide for 
themselves about the mood-altering substance of marijuana.

It's time to talk about the fiscal price we pay for criminalizing 
marijuana. In 2007, police in Virginia arrested 35,196 people for 
drug offenses. The majority, 19,606, were for marijuana. That's a lot 
of law enforcement resources.

It might be time to go a step further than even Tax-achusetts, and 
think about the implications of the current policy of ceding the 
marijuana supply chain to violent hoodlums. What if we regulated -- 
and taxed -- it instead? If those surveys about marijuana use are 
valid, that could turn out to be a lucrative source of tax revenue. 
Again, like alcohol.

Would decriminalizing marijuana lead to wider use? More addiction? 
The psychological and physiological dimensions of drug use make it 
hard to say. Alcohol is a problem for some people, but most manage it 
well and in moderation. Narcotic painkillers are a boon to most 
people, and push a few down a dark hole. For some people, some drugs 
are addictive, and some drugs are more likely to be destructive. This 
isn't to suggest decriminalizing the more dangerous ones, such as 
heroin, crystal meth or cocaine in any form.

But if the risk of addiction was a good enough reason to outlaw a 
substance, we'd ban alcohol, tobacco and some prescription drugs. Nor 
is the risk of other forms of physical harm, or we'd yank those 
substances off the shelves, along with junk food.

Millions of Americans have used marijuana, and it's obvious that they 
haven't been turned into addicts. What they have been turned into is 
law-breakers. It's time to talk -- rationally, openly, calmly -- 
about not making a crime out of an adult's decision to use one 
mood-altering substance rather than another.

Drug arrests in 2007

Gloucester County: 436

Hampton: 1,840

Isle of Wight County: 78

James City County: 270

Mathews County: 28

Middlesex County: 66

Newport News: 2,054

Poquoson: 54

Williamsburg: 124

York County: 306
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom