Pubdate: Mon, 12 May 2003 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2003 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Bill+Bennett Author: William Raspberry Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Bill+Bennett Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?214 (Drug Policy Alliance) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?179 (Nadelmann, Ethan) HYPOCRISY IN 'SIN' CITY It is, of course, the size of his alleged gambling losses that has us clucking our tongues over William J. Bennett's recent public embarrassment. The fact that he writes and speaks on virtue -- that he has become a highly remunerated public scold on the subject -- is just added seasoning. I mean, $8 million in losses in a decade! Surely that's immoral -- and just as surely it must make Bennett a hypocrite (although he has never specifically listed gambling among the vices he has called on us to abandon). Would we be having this conversation if Newsweek and the Washington Monthly had revealed that the former drug czar to the first President Bush had lost several hundred dollars playing the slots? Well, no, but he lost 8 million bucks! Two things about that. First, the reporters never said that the $8 million represented a net loss. Bennett himself implied that he had come close to breaking even over the years. Second, there's no suggestion that Bennett, whose honorariums can run to $50,000 a speech, has stolen money, become indebted to the mob or impoverished his family. And we don't care. We'd be clucking just as furiously if Bill Gates were found to have gambled away $8 million. It's the number of zeroes that has us in a tizzy. Okay, some of us believe that gambling is wrong. But a lot of us don't. How else do you think those state-run lotteries generate so much action? I always buy a few tickets when the jackpot gets above a certain number of millions. Does that make me less moral than if I invested the same amount of money in a stock market that lately has treated me unkindly? Wouldn't it be immoral only if my bets compromised my ability to meet my obligations? So does our criticism of Bennett make us as hypocritical as we accuse him of being? I don't think so. I don't know what Bennett earned in the past 10 years, but surely $8 million is a substantial part of it. Gambling at those levels, to my mind at least, suggests a problem -- at best a loss of perspective, at worst an addiction. Or in Bennett's lexicon: a sin. A sin, I mean, as surely as drug abuse, overuse of alcohol and other personal failings on Bennett's public censure list are sins. Why would he exempt his sin and punish yours? For Ethan Nadelmann, who runs the Drug Policy Alliance, that is the heart of Bennett's hypocrisy: his assigning of some "sins" for public punishment while he exempts others as none of the public's business. "Gambling addiction is very much like drug addiction," says Nadelmann, whose organization advocates decriminalizing marijuana use. "The high you get, what happens physically to the brain of a gambler, is quite similar to what happens to the brain of a person on cocaine. There is a further similarity in the fact that the large majority of gamblers and drug users do no harm to anyone else. A minority of both do go to extremes and harm others." Nadelmann's point? Actually, he has several points. Behavior that does no harm to other people shouldn't be the business of the state. Behavior that harms others should be punished -- and its source in addiction is no exoneration. When people engage in risky behavior and stumble but cause no harm to others, our first response should be to offer help in getting their lives together again. But doesn't such mollycoddling encourage risky behavior? Maybe. But no one calls it mollycoddling when lifeguards try to save people who swim too far from shore or when teams of mountain climbers risk their lives to rescue someone who tried a too-dangerous climb. Bennett, without ever admitting that he has done wrong, says he will quit gambling. That's fine with Nadelmann. Suppose he tries, then relapses. Then, says Nadelmann, let him try again. Nearly half a million Americans are in prison for nonviolent drug offenses on the theory that the threat of prison is the only way to keep them away from drugs and in their rehab programs. Says Nadelmann: "Bill Bennett wouldn't choose the threat of jail to keep himself away from the casino. You can bet on that." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom