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May 10, 2005Conservatives Finally Coming Around on Marijuana Decriminalization?By Andrew DobbsToday I was doing my usual blog check, which includes a conservative source in the National Review, and I came across a fascinating headline. The story, by confirmed right-wing moralist Rich Lowry, was linked under "The Government is Waging a War on Pot." Click through and the subtitle says "Wrong drug, wrong war." I heartily agree. Here's some choice quotes from the story:
Notice that none other than the Lynne Cheney/Newt Gingrich/Conservative think tank AEI is now on the side of decriminalization. Here's a quote from the abstract of the aforementioned study:
Less jail? More treatment? Access to methadone? Jeez, what kind of conservatives are these guys? They sound like a warmed over Ralph Nader. The fact of the matter is that decriminalization is an issue that conservatives, liberals and most importantly libertarians can really come together on. Conservatives and libertarians should be aghast at government involvement in private, relatively harmless activity (marijuana is the fourth most commonly used drug in America-- right behind caffine, alcohol and nicotine. Alcohol kills 100,000 people a year, nicotine 400,000. Marijuana kills maybe a dozen). Liberals should stand against the economic destruction that criminialization wreaks on minority and poor communities. It is time for serious thinkers to agree that the prohibition of marijuana and the persecution of its casual users is a waste of our time, our money and our dignity. Even Texas has a decriminalization bill up this year (one ounce or less of marijana would now be a Class C misdemeanor-- like a traffic fine), and the bill passed out of committee unanimously. Now that we crazy hippie types that have supported decriminalization for years have some Republican allies, who knows what can happen? Posted by Andrew Dobbs at May 10, 2005 05:46 PM | TrackBack
Comments
I wouldn't take this to be any indication of a sea change among conservatives. The National Review has long been an advocate of marijuana decriminalization, and even broader drug decriminalization. William F. Buckley has long been an outspoken critic of the War on Drugs, dating back to when he still headed up the magazine. Last summer, National Review had a cover story on marijuana decriminalization, and they invited the president of a prominent drug policy reform and decriminalization organization to write the article. However, there hasn't been much in the way of strong support or sympathy from other conservatives or others on the Right before, and I don't imagine it will come around now in any dramatic way. That being said, there does seem to be a growing overall public receptiveness to decriminalization, with medical marijuana being the thin end of the wedge. As a result, we will probably see more and more people on both sides be a little more willing to publicly advocate for this issue in years to come. Posted by: Ramey at May 10, 2005 06:34 PMI'd also add that the absurdity of the War on Drugs not only extends to the fact that enforcement resources and efforts are focused so overwhelmingly on the least harmful of drugs, but that related policies such as the now commonplace drug testing by private employers are equally ridiculous. Urine testing, the most widely used form of testing, is only really effective for testing marijuana use. Harder drugs, such as cocaine and heroin, only produce detectable byproducts for a matter of days, versus marijuana, which can be detected up to a few months later for a regular user. Yet, it should be obvious to anyone that recreational marijuana use on one's own time has little to no relevance to job performance, and at the very least, has much less relevance than cocaine, heroin, or even alcohol abuse. In fact, the only comprehensive study done on regular users of marijuana and work performance showed that regular users actually were paid more, promoted more, and received better performance evaluations than their non-using cohorts. Not to say that this correlation has anything to do with marijuana use, but that at the very least, marijuana use has no correlation to poor performance. Posted by: Ramey at May 10, 2005 06:43 PMCurrent Texas laws: http://www.norml.org/index.cfm?wtm_view=&Group_ID=4566 Moreover, 98 percent of the 50,000 marijuna arrests (in Texas each year) are for possession, not for sale. In Texas, the Dutton bill might get voted on: http://www.mapinc.org/newsnorml/v05/n648/a05.html http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/cgi-bin/db2www/tlo/billhist/actions.d2w/report?LEG=79&SESS=R&CHAMBER=H&BILLTYPE=B&BILLSUFFIX=00254 It would reduce penalties to class C misdemeanors. The fiscal note for HB 254 says it is revenue neutral given the reduction in fines - offset by reduced incarceration costs. My gut feeling is that this might be too conservative. Posted by: Jim D at May 10, 2005 08:05 PMThe Dutton bill did not get put on the House floor, so it's dead. But it was unanimously voted out of committee, with even Mary Denny and Debbie Riddle voting for it. See also my post from yesterday on conservatives against "overcriminalization." Sure, some of it's corporate shilling, but the relevant themes are flat out opposite of historic tough on crime rhetoric, and worthy, at least, of note. Posted by: Scott at May 12, 2005 11:06 AM
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