Pubdate: Fri, 27 Apr 2001 Source: Bay Area Reporter (CA) Copyright: 2001 The Bay Area Reporter / B.A.R. Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/41 Website: http://www.ebar.com/ Author: by Bob Roehr Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) FRANK ADDRESSES MARIJUANA, PRIVACY, AND MEDICINE Representative Barney Frank (D-Massachusetts) was critical of the country's drug laws when he addressed the annual conference of the National Organization to Reform Marijuana Laws on Saturday, April 21 in Washington, D.C. "Ninety-plus percent of the examples we have of police practices that violate privacy are driven by the drug laws," Frank said. "If any one of us goes outside and is robbed, mugged, or our cars are vandalized, we become the best friends of the police" and try to help them, he said. But with victimless crimes such as recreational drug use, "normal police techniques don't work, there are no complaining witnesses. The police are driven to violate people's privacy by the nature of the so-called crime." "I do not advocate people using various mind-altering substances, the less of that you do, the better," he said, including tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana on that list. "The disparity with which we treat marijuana compared to alcohol and tobacco can only be explained by the fact that marijuana has historically been seen by a lot of Americans as a badge of the counterculture," from jazz musicians and people of color in the 1930s to the hippies and protesters of the 1960s. Frank said conservatives have argued that federal programs such as those for the homeless, welfare, and public housing have spent billions of dollars without measurably changing the situation, therefore the programs are ineffective and should be cut. "Nowhere is that analogy more conclusive than with the drug wars," yet conservatives continue advocate spending even more on those failed policy. He credited conservatives with having "accurately educated America as to the power of the free market. It is the case that if a large number of people have money and the desire to buy something, then it is very hard for government to get in their way. They absolutely ignore that fact when it comes to the drug program." "I do not think that there is a dumber policy pursued by any government anywhere in the world than for the United States to try physically to keep drugs out of America." He thought that the military, Immigration and Naturalization Service, and other agencies could probably keep all horses from being brought into the country. "But as the commodity to be brought is more easily concealed, the percentage is going to go up. … If you can't keep drugs out of a maximum security prison, how the hell are you going to keep them out of Texas?" Frank believes that a states' rights approach makes legal sense in areas such as medical marijuana, where the direct effect of the policy does not extend across state borders. He chastised conservatives who embrace this argument when it comes to issues they favor, such as the death penalty, but then call for federal intervention when voters pass referenda on medical marijuana as has happened in California and a handful of other states. "You can't turn that on and off, it's not a water faucet," he said. Frank introduced the States' Rights to Medical Marijuana Act (HR1344), along with nine co-sponsors, on April 3. It would amend the Controlled Substances Act to move marijuana from Schedule I to a Schedule II. And it would allow physicians to prescribe or recommend marijuana as therapy as applicable under state law. He believes that several themes resonate well with the American public. One that he urged advocates to emphasize is the correlation of privacy violations by the government with the drug war. Another is the huge amount of money wasted on interdiction, prosecution, and imprisonment of people for drug use. Frank called for traditional lobbying techniques of writing and visiting their elected officials. He downplayed the role that money plays in politics, particularly on this issue. "Money will not beat public opinion." When audience members asked about the need for large demonstrations to show visibility, citing what the gay community had done in this area, Frank was withering in his criticism. He said that the largest of them, the 1993 March on Washington, "came and went and left no trace" in the halls of Congress. Furthermore, the media will focus on the "wackos." With the gay march, "it was the guys in dog collars and jock straps, I don't think that is helpful." While opposed to mass demonstrations, he thought that coming out as "smokers" to friends and relatives was helpful. The public is ahead of politicians on this issue, said Frank, "They know what works and what doesn't work." He pointed to election results in states were medical marijuana has been on the ballot. And he closed by saying, "We have the opportunity to make American drug policy less stupid." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk