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Opinion: Unholy smoke Print E-mail
By Benjamin Cole   
Monday, April 27, 2009

(ABP) -- Can anything good come out of Mexico?

That’s the central question in the minds of millions of Americans who have favored protectionism over of free trade, gun-toting Minutemen at the border instead of substantive immigration reform and a largely ineffective and draconian system of laws that criminalize cannabis (often produced in, or trafficked through, Mexico) instead of having a serious conversation about the terrible legacy of America’s so-called War on Drugs.

There are stale and reductionist arguments on both sides. Is marijuana a dangerous gateway drug that leads to addiction, lethargy and various social ills? Or is smoking marijuana a relatively harmless little pleasure that affects no person but the user himself?

I suggest that a way forward exists in the debate whereby society can generally discourage marijuana usage without the full force of criminal statute. But first, allow me to rehearse some facts.

More than 1,500 people were killed between January and March of this year in the drug wars that have raged in many Mexican cities. To put things in perspective, this is 30 times the number of Americans who have died in the Iraq war since President Obama took office.

A growing number of politicians from both the left and the right are considering a shift in our marijuana policies. As early as 1968, the patron saint of modern conservatism, William F. Buckley, was arguing in favor of marijuana legalization. Most libertarians have long advocated the move, and it’s not that far of a stretch for liberals who believe a woman has the right to abort a fetus from the womb to support the right to inhale cannabis into the lungs.

There are four basic approaches to the federal policy question of marijuana possession for either medical or recreational purposes.

First, the United States could legalize marijuana possession altogether, establish regulations for its production and distribution and then tax it to generate desperately needed federal revenues.

Second, we could decriminalize marijuana possession, a move that would impose civil fines similar to those resulting from traffic tickets instead of a criminal trial and a prison sentence. Under such a law, marijuana use would still be discouraged, but in a way that generates revenue for state and local governments.

Third, Congress or the president could move to declassify marijuana as a Schedule-1 substance under federal drug laws, thereby diminishing its investigative and prosecutorial priority with the Justice Department.

Or finally, as Attorney General Eric Holder has recently signaled, the laws criminalizing marijuana possession could remain on the books and the feds simply choose not to enforce them. In this regard, marijuana laws will soon suffer the fate of other ignored moral statutes: they will die the death of universal neglect. The existence of a law, however, implies its enforcement. What purpose non-enforced laws serve in the body politic is hard to understand.

There are solid reasons to consider the decriminalization of marijuana: the undoing of a violent culture that grows in the fertile soils of prohibition; the burgeoning and burdensome cost of arresting and prosecuting nearly 1 million people every year who possess only small amounts of marijuana; and the fact that some studies suggest nearly 80% of Americans under the age of 35 and one-third of all Americans attest to having at least tried marijuana.

But the repeal of marijuana laws should not occur without a serious national conversation, for the rationale of decriminalization must rest on a principle more enduring than personal preferences and utilitarian cost-benefit analyses.

The soul of America needs to be reintroduced to the basic distinctions between personal liberty and commercial vice. For instance, there was a time in America when fornication, sodomy and adultery were criminal acts. Over time, however, these laws rusted out like an old jalopy, resting unserviceable on the cinder blocks of justice.

To be sure, adultery -- and, to a lesser degree, pre-marital sex -- are still regarded as immoral acts, but the various states have decided that these do not rise to the level of criminal prosecution. A zone of privacy, if you will, has been safeguarded in American sexual mores.

Prostitution, on the other hand, remains almost universally illegal. This is because a particular vice like fornication or adultery on a personal level is exacerbated when a person trades and traffics their vice on the black market.

In the same way, Americans should be educated to make moral distinctions between the personal use of marijuana, punishable by an appropriately assessed civil fine and the mass production and distribution of marijuana for profit, punishbale by necessarily heightened criminal penalties.

A very few cases of medical necessity notwithstanding, America should generally discourage marijuana use. But we can do so in the same way we discourage speeding in construction zones or failure to wear seat belts rather than the way we criminalize more egregious and corrupting social vices.

-30-

-- Benjamin Cole is a former Southern Baptist pastor who now works on public-policy issues in the nation’s capital.

EDITORIAL DISCLAIMER: As part of our mission to provide credible and compelling information about matters of faith, Associated Baptist Press actively seeks a diversity of viewpoints in its columns, commentaries and other opinion-based content. Opinions expressed in these articles are not intended to represent ABP editorial policy and do not necessarily reflect the views of ABP’s staff, board of directors or supporters.





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Comments (5)Add Comment
Unnatural
written by OwnerCandW, April 28, 2009
It's a plant! A plant people! A flower, we picked a fight with a flower (and we're loosing). It's one of gods creations and, no person has the right to make it illegal.

Cannabis in 2000 caused 0 deaths. Compare that with NSAIDs "aspirin" which killed 7,600 people and tobacco wich contributed to 435,000 deaths.1 Yet we have no problem giving aspirin to our kids and selling billions of cigarettes that have a good chance of killing the addicts that buy them. Last year the war on drugs in mexico resulted in more than 6,000 deathes, thats more than the entire Iraq war.

We must stop this immoral unnatural war all over a flower.

1."Actual Causes of Death in the United States, 2000," Journal of the American Medical Association, March 10, 2004
...
written by wilx1, April 28, 2009
That people think Marijuana is a harmless drug is precisely why it is dangerous. Many European countries are currently reassessing there legalization laws because of the increased crime rate (people who live to get high usually don't want to work so they have to get their pot money somewhere) and a dramatic increase in the number of Marijuana users on public assistance (see my previous "don't want to work" comment).

While I agree that it is not addictive in the opiate sense, it is psychologically addictive. People develop a psychological dependence. Currently in Denmark, there is a growing number of people entering rehab for "Marijuana addiction." As Christians God is to be our desire. All of our sense are to be filled by the presence and love of God. Like any relationship, this requires work and effort. People who use Marijuana want an easy and cheap way to feel good.
...
written by robertangison, April 28, 2009
My my ABP...you've fallen awfully far from the tree of accepted Baptist belief.

How is this a baptist position? Shouldn't the better, more Christian position be to encourage all Christians to abstain from tobacco or drug products all together?

You have continually discreditted yourselves over the past several months. It saddens me too, for not long ago I supported your efforts. No longer do I put myself in that kind of a position.

You are the Church!
R.A.
Commenting after misreading the article
written by Arce, May 02, 2009
I saw nothing in the article that advocates use of marijuana. To the contrary, it is only advocating alternative means of controlling the use of marijuana, with civil rather than criminal penalties. It may well be that doing so would break the link between marijuana and other drugs. After all, every drug addict was fed milk as a child, so milk must be a gateway substance for drug addiction.
Response
written by Dr. J, May 06, 2009
Admittedly, I lean to de-criminalizing the use of marijuana. This is tough for a conservative to admit. I've never used marijuana. I suspect my three children have tried it. I would hate for them to undergo criminal charges for something I view as less of a problem than alchohol abuse.

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