News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: OPED: Confessions of a Pragmatic Dope Smoker |
Title: | US PA: OPED: Confessions of a Pragmatic Dope Smoker |
Published On: | 2009-06-08 |
Source: | Philadelphia Daily News (PA) |
Fetched On: | 2009-06-09 04:03:45 |
CONFESSIONS OF A PRAGMATIC DOPE SMOKER
SOME ARGUE, and I'm one of them, that we're entering a new progressive
era like the one from 1900 to 1920 that followed the excesses of the
robber barons and the Gilded Age.
That period saw the rise of a school of philosophy called Pragmatism.
The point was to move beyond ideology and pure power, and look out the
window to see how people actually lived their lives and to figure out
practical ways to make it all work better.
Recently, I heard Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug
Policy Alliance, give a speech at the annual meeting of the
Pennsylvania Prison Society, an organization that works to make sense
of the absurdities of our state's prison system.
Nadelmann, a pragmatist of the first order, ran down the problems with
our failed drug war, especially the ridiculous prohibition of marijuana.
He spoke of the ultimate nonsensical reality of teens in school saying
it's easier for them to obtain marijuana than to obtain alcohol. The
drug war, it seems, actually makes it easier for kids to get pot,
while the legal regulation of liquor makes obtaining that substance
more difficult.
In some cases, parents who want dope get their kids to buy it for
them. Or kids are toking on a joint in their bedroom with a wet bath
towel under the door, while across the hall their parents are hitting
on a pipe with another wet towel under their door.
Nadelmann says that the issue of marijuana in America has suddenly
collided with our economic woes, and the result is the opening of a
pragmatic window. People are looking out that window and realizing
marijuana is not the evil scourge it's been made out to be.
We've gotten to the point that, in California, Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger is publicly encouraging open discussion of marijuana
legalization. This is happening for two very good reasons: Northern
California is the pot-growing capital of America, and the state is
going bankrupt in the economic downturn. As was the case when
Prohibition was ended in 1933, the fact that people are doing the
stuff anyway makes the notion of legalizing it, regulating it and
taxing it look pretty darn good.
There's nothing like an economic disaster to focus the mind to change
an epic bad situation - so could it be that dope can actually save
California?
Nadelmann says the marijuana issue is like gay rights in the '70s when
people like Harvey Milk in San Francisco urged gay people to make
themselves known as responsible citizens and political actors. So he
urges people to come out and declare their pot use. President Obama
has done it, as have other politicians wanting to get beyond the
stupidity of "but I didn't inhale."
OK . . . I like to smoke pot now and then with friends.
To me, it's an innocuous substance, less dangerous than alcohol, but
something that can be abused, especially by kids. If I smoke too much,
I get slow and sluggish in the mind. If I'm high and try to read, I
find myself reading the same paragraph six or seven times. It's impossible.
So I responsibly self-manage, and don't keep it in the house, lest I
get the munchies late at night and gain 15 pounds. I do it sparingly
and responsibly - and it's a positive in my life.
As citizens of a free society, Nadelmann says, we should have the
right to put into our bodies whatever we wish. Sales can and should be
regulated, especially in relation to kids.
Production and sales should be taxed heavily. If you use a substance
and harm others by, say, driving a car irresponsibly, you should
suffer the consequences.
But all we see and hear, Nadelmann points out, is drug-war propaganda.
We don't hear about citizens who use drugs and maintain a responsible
life.
And they're out there. For obvious reasons, they don't want to talk to
reporters. So, we only hear about drug abusers on skid row and in prison.
AT THIS time of pragmatic social reckoning, we need to learn to accept
reality and to create a drug regulation structure that actually makes
sense rather than continue as we have for too long to try to sustain
something that's unsustainable.
Not only could we raise tax revenues at a time we desperately need
them, we would unburden our police departments, courts and prisons of
a massive and costly problem that could better be dealt with as a
social and medical issue.
All it takes is courage from our leaders.
SOME ARGUE, and I'm one of them, that we're entering a new progressive
era like the one from 1900 to 1920 that followed the excesses of the
robber barons and the Gilded Age.
That period saw the rise of a school of philosophy called Pragmatism.
The point was to move beyond ideology and pure power, and look out the
window to see how people actually lived their lives and to figure out
practical ways to make it all work better.
Recently, I heard Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug
Policy Alliance, give a speech at the annual meeting of the
Pennsylvania Prison Society, an organization that works to make sense
of the absurdities of our state's prison system.
Nadelmann, a pragmatist of the first order, ran down the problems with
our failed drug war, especially the ridiculous prohibition of marijuana.
He spoke of the ultimate nonsensical reality of teens in school saying
it's easier for them to obtain marijuana than to obtain alcohol. The
drug war, it seems, actually makes it easier for kids to get pot,
while the legal regulation of liquor makes obtaining that substance
more difficult.
In some cases, parents who want dope get their kids to buy it for
them. Or kids are toking on a joint in their bedroom with a wet bath
towel under the door, while across the hall their parents are hitting
on a pipe with another wet towel under their door.
Nadelmann says that the issue of marijuana in America has suddenly
collided with our economic woes, and the result is the opening of a
pragmatic window. People are looking out that window and realizing
marijuana is not the evil scourge it's been made out to be.
We've gotten to the point that, in California, Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger is publicly encouraging open discussion of marijuana
legalization. This is happening for two very good reasons: Northern
California is the pot-growing capital of America, and the state is
going bankrupt in the economic downturn. As was the case when
Prohibition was ended in 1933, the fact that people are doing the
stuff anyway makes the notion of legalizing it, regulating it and
taxing it look pretty darn good.
There's nothing like an economic disaster to focus the mind to change
an epic bad situation - so could it be that dope can actually save
California?
Nadelmann says the marijuana issue is like gay rights in the '70s when
people like Harvey Milk in San Francisco urged gay people to make
themselves known as responsible citizens and political actors. So he
urges people to come out and declare their pot use. President Obama
has done it, as have other politicians wanting to get beyond the
stupidity of "but I didn't inhale."
OK . . . I like to smoke pot now and then with friends.
To me, it's an innocuous substance, less dangerous than alcohol, but
something that can be abused, especially by kids. If I smoke too much,
I get slow and sluggish in the mind. If I'm high and try to read, I
find myself reading the same paragraph six or seven times. It's impossible.
So I responsibly self-manage, and don't keep it in the house, lest I
get the munchies late at night and gain 15 pounds. I do it sparingly
and responsibly - and it's a positive in my life.
As citizens of a free society, Nadelmann says, we should have the
right to put into our bodies whatever we wish. Sales can and should be
regulated, especially in relation to kids.
Production and sales should be taxed heavily. If you use a substance
and harm others by, say, driving a car irresponsibly, you should
suffer the consequences.
But all we see and hear, Nadelmann points out, is drug-war propaganda.
We don't hear about citizens who use drugs and maintain a responsible
life.
And they're out there. For obvious reasons, they don't want to talk to
reporters. So, we only hear about drug abusers on skid row and in prison.
AT THIS time of pragmatic social reckoning, we need to learn to accept
reality and to create a drug regulation structure that actually makes
sense rather than continue as we have for too long to try to sustain
something that's unsustainable.
Not only could we raise tax revenues at a time we desperately need
them, we would unburden our police departments, courts and prisons of
a massive and costly problem that could better be dealt with as a
social and medical issue.
All it takes is courage from our leaders.
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