Pubdate: Wed, 04 Apr 2001
Source: News-Times, The (CT)
Copyright: 2001 The News-Times
Contact:  http://www.newstimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/637
Author: Robert White

MARIJUANA USE SHOULD BE LEGALIZED

I am a conservative Republican, but I would like to make the case for 
legalization of marijuana - the conservative argument.

The so-called war on drugs has spawned police actions that threaten 
everyone's Fourth Amendment rights. These tactics are more suitable 
to a Soviet or Nazi regime than our freedom-loving society. For this 
reason, conservatives from Milton Friedman to William F. Buckley, and 
even George P. Schulz, advocate the legalization of drugs like 
marijuana.

Is it even in the state's interest to prevent a person from taking 
action that he believes is both relatively harmless and potentially 
helpful? The truly conservative stance is to allow people the freedom 
to make up their minds based on their own private experience with the 
drug.

I do not believe the state has an interest in prohibiting marijuana, 
but for the sake of argument let's suppose there is one. Leaving 
aside disagreements on the merits or harm of smoking pot, how should 
the state deal with people who, based on our rational apprehension of 
the relative safety of the drug, choose to violate the law by smoking 
marijuana? How harshly should the state punish offenders whose 
offense harms no one else?

Is it appropriate to punish the pot smoker with prison, which is 
itself more harmful than pot smoking by itself? Is that not akin to 
saying, "Your windshield has a crack in it, so I'm going to smash it 
with a sledgehammer." By so doing, the state takes a small, private, 
nearly harmless act and punishes it with a potentially life 
threatening act - incarceration in prisons where assault and rape are 
commonplace.

As any consumer of marijuana will attest, the effects of this drug 
are far from evil. As is often suggested, however, the way we 
currently punish pot smokers is evil.

Robert White
DANBURY
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