-Caveat Lector-

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/30/opinion/30KELL.html

November 30, 2002

Reefer Madness

By BILL KELLER




e interrupt our coverage of the war on terrorism to check in with that other permanent
conflict against a stateless enemy, the war on drugs. To judge by the glee at the White
House Office of National Drug Control Policy, the drug warriors have just accomplished 
the
moral equivalent of routing the Taliban � helping to halt a relentless jihad against 
the
nation's drug laws.

Ballot initiatives in Ohio (treatment rather than prison for nonviolent drug 
offenders),
Arizona (the same, plus making marijuana possession the equivalent of a traffic 
ticket, and
providing free pot for medical use) and Nevada (full legalization of marijuana) lost
decisively this month. Liberalization measures in Florida and Michigan never even made 
it to
the ballot.

Some of this was due to the Republican election tide. Some was generational � boomer
parents like me, fearful of seeing our teenagers become drug-addled slackers. (John
Walters, the White House drug czar, shrewdly played on this anxiety by hyping the 
higher
potency of today's pot with the line, "This is not your father's marijuana.") Some may 
have
been a reluctance to loosen any social safety belts when the nation is under threat.
Certainly a major factor was that proponents of change, who had been winning carefully
poll-tested ballot measures, state by state, since California in 1996, found themselves
facing a serious and well-financed opposition, cheered on by Mr. Walters.

The truly amazing thing is that 30 years into the modern war on drugs, the discourse 
is still
focused disproportionately on marijuana rather than more important and excruciatingly
hard problems like heroin, cocaine and methamphetamines.

The drug liberalizers � an alliance of legal reformers, liberals, libertarians and 
potheads �
dwell on marijuana in part because a lot of the energy and money in their campaign 
comes
from people who like to smoke pot and want the government off their backs. Also,
marijuana has provided them with their most marketable wedge issue, the use of pot to
relieve the suffering of AIDS and cancer patients. Never mind that the medical 
benefits of
smoking marijuana are still mostly unproven (in part because the F.D.A. almost never
approves the research and the pharmaceuticals industry sees no money in it). The issue
may be peripheral, but it appeals to our compassion, especially when the administration
plays the heartless heavy by sending SWAT teams to arrest people in wheelchairs. Thus a
movement that started, at least in the minds of reform sponsors like the billionaire 
George
Soros, as an effort to reduce the ravages of both drugs and the war on drugs, has 
become
mostly about pot smoking.

The more interesting question is why the White House is so obsessed with marijuana. The
memorable achievements of Mr. Walters's brief tenure have been things like cutting off
student loans for kids with pot convictions, threatening doctors who recommend pot to
cancer patients and introducing TV commercials that have the tone and credibility of
wartime propaganda. One commercial tells pot smokers that they are subsidizing 
terrorists.
Another shows a stoned teenager discovering a handgun in Dad's desk drawer and
dreamily shooting a friend. (You'll find it at www.mediacampaign.org. Watch it with the
sound off and you'd swear it was an ad for gun control.)

Drug czars used to draw a distinction between casual-use drugs like marijuana and the
hard drugs whose craving breeds crime and community desolation. But this is not your
father's drug czar. Mr. Walters insists marijuana is inseparable from heroin or 
cocaine. He
offers two arguments, both of which sound as if they came from the same people who
manufacture the Bush administration's flimsy economic logic.


One is that marijuana is a "gateway" to hard-drug use. Actually Mr. Walters, who is a
political scientist but likes to sound like an epidemiologist, prefers to say that pot 
use is an
"increased risk factor" for other drugs. The point in our conversation when my 
nonsense-
alarm went off was when he likened the relationship between pot and hard drugs to that
between cholesterol and heart disease. In fact, the claim that marijuana leads to the 
use of
other drugs appears to be unfounded. On the contrary, an interesting new study by 
Andrew
Morral of RAND, out in the December issue of the British journal Addiction, shows that 
the
correlation between pot and hard drugs can be fully explained by the fact that some 
people,
by virtue of genetics or circumstances, have a predisposition to use drugs.

Mr. Walters's other justification for turning his office into the War on Pot is the 
dramatic
increase in the number of marijuana smokers seeking professional help. This, he claims,
reflects an alarming rise in the number of people hooked on cannabis. But common sense
and the government's own statistics suggest an alternative explanation: if you're 
caught
with pot, enrolling in a treatment program is the price of avoiding jail. And marijuana
arrests have doubled in less than a decade, to 700,000 a year, even as use of the drug 
has
remained static. In other words, the stampede of pot smokers into treatment is probably
not a sign of more dependency, but of more aggressive enforcement.

So what's really going on at the White House drug office? I can think of three 
answers. One
is that they are sincerely worried about pot. Marijuana is not harmless. Regular pot
smoking can mess with your memory and attention span, your immune system and fertility.
Mr. Walters may feel the dangers justify a lot of hyperbole.

A second explanation is the old political-bureaucratic imperative. To justify a $19 
billion
drug control program you need a threat that touches middle-class voters � not just the 
few
million mostly wretched, mostly inner-city, mostly nonvoting users of heroin and 
cocaine.
And you want to be able to claim success. When he appointed Mr. Walters, President Bush
announced he wanted "measurable results," and the measure would be a reduction in the
number of people who admit to being recent drug users � 10 percent by 2004. Well, since
three-fourths of illicit drug users are pot smokers, the easy way to get the numbers 
down is
to attack the least important aspect of the drug problem. That will give President Bush
some bogus victories to boast about when he runs for re-election.

The third reason is the culture war. Mr. Walters is a veteran of the conservative 
political
bunkers, where pot is viewed as a manifestation of moral degeneracy. "It's still about 
the
war in Vietnam and growing your hair long," says Mark Kleiman, a drug law expert at
U.C.L.A. and a thoughtful centrist in a debate monopolized by extremes. "It's the 60's 
being
replayed again and again and again � the S.D.S. versus the football team." For this 
White
House, to give ground on pot would be a moral surrender.

Mr. Kleiman's view, which I find persuasive, is that the way to deal with marijuana is 
to
remove criminal penalties for possession, use (recreational or medicinal) and 
cultivation of
small amounts, but not to legalize sale. It's silly and costly to treat people as 
outlaws for
enjoying a drug that is roughly as addictive as caffeine and far less destructive than 
tobacco
or alcohol. At the same time, the inexorable logic of a legal marketplace would mean a 
lot
more consumption and abuse. Consider this statistic: Fifty percent of the liquor 
industry's
revenues are derived from alcoholics � people who down at least four drinks every day.
The sin business, whether it's a private liquor company or a state-run lottery, may 
preach
responsible behavior, but it thrives on addiction.

Once you're past pot, you face the gloomy landscape of hard drugs, along with newer
chemical worries like Ecstasy. If your experience of the hard-core drug world is 
mostly from
movies like "Traffic" or two splendid HBO series, "The Corner" and "The Wire," you may 
be
inclined to despair of easy answers. You would not be wrong. The moralistic drug war 
has
overstuffed our prisons, left communities fatherless, fed corruption, consumed vast
quantities of law enforcement time and money, and led us into some cynical foreign
ventures, all without making drugs scarcer or more expensive. Legalization, on the 
other
hand, means less crime and inner- city misery, but more addicts.

The things worth doing are incremental and unglamorous and lacking in demagogic appeal.
They aim not at winning a spurious war but at minimizing harm � both the harm caused by
drugs, and the harm caused by draconian enforcement. Almost everyone (including Mr.
Walters, in principle) agrees that diverting drug users into treatment, preferably 
backed by
the threat of jail, is much better than consigning them to prison. But liberalizers 
are all
carrot, and drug warriors are all stick. The drug czar who so eagerly intervened in 
Arizona
and Nevada has kept his distance from efforts to humanize New York's merciless and 
failed
Rockefeller drug laws.

Drug reform requires not only money, creativity and patience, but also the political 
courage
to face down ideologues. And political courage, you may have noticed, is a lot harder 
to
come by than drugs.


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