Posted on 02/06/2009 9:15:57 AM PST by bassmaner
And then President Obama, and then George W. Bush, and then Bill Clinton . . .
Michael Phelps, the aquatic icon who won eight gold medals at the 2008 Olympics, has violated the law. When a photograph of him smoking a bongful of marijuana was published, he admitted the crime. The same crime for which the better part of a million people were arrested last year.
Shouldnt Phelps be charged? Along with President Obama and his two predecessors, all of whom, it seems, used illegal drugs? If not, perhaps it is time to have a serious debate about the drug laws.
Of course, Michael Phelps immediately apologized for his poor judgment. Attention turned to his sponsors, since their contracts include the usual moral clauses, which protect their investment in celebrities who behave foolishly, if not actually immorally. Happily for Phelpss bank account, some of his big-money backers, including Speedo, Hilton, and Omega, accepted his apology. Subway and Visa havent been talking, but dont look like they are going to jump. Kelloggs, so far in the minority, announced it would drop Phelps.
But if marijuana use is so horrid as to warrant criminalization, why are we wasting time discussing whether Phelps will be able to keep his endorsement deals? Shouldnt he be prosecutedjust like millions of other Americans, whose lives have been ruined by criminal convictions for smoking pot?
In 2007, 872,721 Americans were arrested for marijuana violations, 775,138 of them for possession. Some number of the latter undoubtedly were caught growing or selling and were charged with lesser offenses, but, in any case, hundreds of thousands of Americans ended up in jail for doing precisely what Michael Phelps did: lighting up. Roughly three-quarters of those arrested for marijuana offenses were, like Phelps, under 30. With most of their lives ahead of them, they face the greatest harm from prosecution under the drug laws.
So why shouldnt Phelps go to jail?
To ask the question is to answer it. While smoking pot may be a stupid thing to do for many reasonsrisking adverse health effects, endangering endorsements, undermining Phelpss status as a celebrity role modelhe hurt no one but himself. He could have been photographed while drunk and stumbling out of a party, and it would have been no different. Bad press and angry sponsors would have forced an abject apology, and everyone would have moved on. Just like with his marijuana hit.
Of course, advocates of prohibition argue that illicit drugs are different. And so they aremostly because their use is illegal, a situation that creates the most serious problems usually associated with drug use.
The arguments are old but clear. Whatever the law might say, the people have voted with their lungs: 95 million Americans over the age of 21 have smoked pot, 20 million have smoked in the last year, and 11 million use the drug regularly. Its hard to believe that all of them, almost one-third of the U.S. population, are criminals who deserve jail time.
Moreover, the violence associated with drugs is principally from prohibition rather than use. Drunks are far more likely to commit (and be victims of) violent crimes than are users of marijuana. Prohibition-era Chicago offered a dramatic lesson in the impact of banning a widely used drug. That citys violent era is being played out on a larger scale in Colombia and Mexico, where urban and rural communities have been overwhelmed with drug-gang violence.
The health arguments remain disputed, but the basic question is whether we live in a free society in which people can choose to engage in risky behavior. Cigarette smokers, hang gliders, and rock climbers all take risks that many others view as unacceptable. Thats no reason for arresting them.
And its pretty hard to argue that marijuana use will prevent Phelps from being productive. Most all of us probably remember pothead classmates who ended up wildly successful in their chosen careers. Will some people use to excess? Yes, just as some people drink too much, gamble too much, spend too much, and act irresponsibly in a multitude of other ways. Criminal law is not the answer.
Is Michael Phelps likely to go to jail? No, and for good reason. But for the same reason, the rest of us should not be arrested for smoking pot, either. Whether marijuana use is good or bad is not the issue. Short of engaging in behavior that directly threatens others, people should be left alone. Thats what a society grounded in individual liberty isor at least should beall about.
Doug Bandow is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute. A former special assistant to Pres. Ronald Reagan, he is the author of the forthcoming Leviathan Unchained: Washingtons Bipartisan Big Government Consensus.
Would you if it was legal?
I can't prove it wasn't a certain neighbor of mine, or a guy I used to work with, from that picture. They've both told me they're glad they have alibis. :-)
Nope, probably hippies in BC Canada
Really. What if it was grown in somebody's garage in Anytown, USA??? Just like prohibition helped spawn the likes of Al Capone, pot prohibition has spawned the likes of the Mexican drug cartels. It has also seriously eroded our personal freedoms guaranteed to us by our creator and laid down in our Constitution.
And for the record, I don't smoke pot. Never have, just have a burning belief in personal freedoms. I think the larger crime is thinking that it's OK to incarcerate someone and revoke all of their personal freedoms for burning a plant, and inhaling the smoke. Meanwhile, it's perfectly OK to take the fruit of a plant, ferment it, drink it, and cause all of the problems that alcohol abuse causes in society. Hypocrisy????
“So those who oppose the legalization, dissemination, and use of drugs are “pseudo-conservative”?”
No, but I dare say the Folks that through one side of their mouth preach the glories of smaller Government, yet out of the other side of the mouth preach the glories of the Drug War and it’s outlandish excesses might want to review whether they are or they are not “Conservative”
Does this mean that you will be turning yourself in with a written, notarized confession to all past misdeeds?
The "I'll Bet You're A Hypocrite" tangent isn't that simple in this case. Legalizing it would be a game-changer. Within one season (or perhaps immediately, depending on how much is currently hidden in Humboldt County CA for example), there would be nearly uncountable tons of U.S.-grown weed available at every level from your own garden (?) to the Saturday farmer's market to the size of the multi-national companies that sell salad in bags.
You know about supply and demand. The hippies in BC can’t meet the demand of all the wasted, loser, worthless, human debris in the US. Plus shipping all the way to Texas and Louisiana would be too expensive. For every dollar you spend for BC pot, you raise the price on the stuff the Mexican cartels are pushing.
Or some really nice Canadians.;-)
He (Phelps) admitted that it was.
“Would you if it was legal?” Probably. Then the cartels would just become multi-billion dollar corporations. They already have the logistical system set up to distribute their product. With their new found legal protection, they’ll do what all other good corporations do, put the mom and pop distributors out of business or coerce them to go through their channels.
I think the post points out the silliness of the drug war well, actually.
Legalize domestic-grown drugs, tax it more than cigs, and fire all the drug warriors -— or have then do something useful like hunt terrorists or illegals.
Instant balanced budget.
Perhaps some time in jail or performing community service will get him together. All this boozing and now drugs. He’s literally out of control and I wonder if at some point he’s going to end up in trouble in a foreign country.
Some good points here. It’s pretty clear that the marijuana laws, like an increasing portion of the legal system, primarily apply to the non-rich and unfamous.
"Preach the glories"?
That's what is called snide and overwrought hyperbole. That seems to be the way of Amsterdam Libertarians.
Yes, I do, and I also know that there is almost nowhere that the stuff won't grow, and it has a fast maturity.
Legalization would destroy the mystique, and destroy organized crime, so it will never be legalized.
I wonder what it feels like after people smoke pot .
I see that you too are a bold supporter of organized crime! (tax collection)
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.