URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v13/n421/a08.html
Newshawk: Kirk
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Tue, 20 Aug 2013
Source: Patriot-News, The (PA)
Copyright: 2013 The Patriot-News
Contact: http://www.pennlive.com/mailforms/patriotletters/
Website: http://www.pennlive.com/patriotnews/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1630
Author: Cynthia Tucker
Note: Cynthia Tucker is a syndicated columnist. Her work appears on Tuesday.
IT'S TIME TO LEGALIZE POT
Since his first year in office, President Barack Obama has drawn
scathing critiques from a handful of prominent black critics, mostly
for his failure to pursue an explicit "black" agenda aimed at
ameliorating the legacy of racism.
Usually, I disagree with those critics, who are unrealistic about the
limits of the presidency, unfair in their assessments of Obama's
broader agenda and, most important, bizarrely naive about the
tightrope he walks as the first black man to win the office. If he
announced a "black" agenda, the rest of his presidency would be
swallowed up by the ensuing controversy.
But there is one area where I believe Obama has failed black America:
He has done next to nothing to rein in the so-called war on drugs.
After decades of hyper-punitive policies that have excommunicated
thousands of black men from the economic mainstream, Obama might have
begun to substantially wind down his era's Prohibition.
Now, Attorney General Eric Holder is drawing praise for announcing a
new policy intended to curb the fanatical, yet futile, drug war.
Speaking to the American Bar Association recently, Holder said he
would limit the use of mandatory minimum sentences that have resulted
in long prison stretches for low-level offenders.
Tough mandatory sentences became popular years ago, when violent
crime was still rising and prosecutors and politicians salved public
fear by backing stiffer penalties -- even for non-violent crimes. The
result has been a staggering increase in the prison population. The
United States accounts for about 5 percent of the world's people but
nearly 25 percent of its prison inmates.
Discriminatory enforcement has exacerbated the problem of draconian
drug laws, and Holder knows all too well that racial bias remains
pervasive in the criminal justice system. In his speech, he pointed
to research that found "black male offenders have received sentences
nearly 20 percent longer than those imposed on white males convicted
of similar crimes."
But Holder's new policy, even if it works as well as he hopes, would
do precious little to scale back the staggeringly expensive and
unbelievably destructive drug war. For one thing, the beneficiaries
of his new policy represent a high percentage of the federal prison
population but a tiny portion of the prison population overall. Most
inmates are in state facilities.
President Obama can't change marijuana policy at the state level, but
he could use his bully pulpit to move states into the 21st century.
Holder is hardly taking a bold step. Crime has declined so steeply
over the last 15 years that there is very little political risk in
shorter sentences for drug offenses. Spurred by overcrowded prisons
and tight state budgets, even conservative governors and state
legislators have begun to back away from imposing draconian prison sentences.
In Georgia, for example, Republican Gov. Nathan Deal and a
GOP-dominated legislature have already pushed through significant
criminal justice reform, including lesser punishments for low-level
drug offenders.
If the Obama administration really wanted to leave a legacy of a
fairer criminal justice system, it would decriminalize marijuana use
at the federal level. Such a policy could help black citizens
disproportionately without the controversy of an explicit "black" agenda.
The American Civil Liberties Union reported in June that black
Americans are almost four times more likely to be arrested for
marijuana possession than white people, even though blacks and whites
use the drug at about the same rate.
Obama can't change marijuana policy at the state level, but he could
use his bully pulpit to move recalcitrant state authorities into the
21st century. According to an April Washington Post poll, 52 percent
of Americans believe it should be legal. Indeed, voters in Colorado
and Washington state have voted to legalize recreational use.
How has the Obama administration reacted to those states? By
insisting on keeping the federal government's preposterous policy
that bans marijuana for all purposes and even prohibits scientific
research on cannabis. That's puzzling and unfortunate, especially
since the president has freely admitted using marijuana as a
teenager. While he managed to escape the long arm of the law, many
black men have not.
Obama knows that, and it's disappointing that he has done so very
little about it.
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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