Pubdate: Sun, 23 May 2004 Source: New York Times Magazine (NY) Column: The Ethicist Copyright: 2004 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Randy Cohen Note: Send your queries to: or The Ethicist, The New York Times Magazine, 229 West 43rd Street, New York, N.Y. 10036, and include a daytime phone number. THE PROSECUTION RESTS I am a former federal prosecutor who has investigated and prosecuted narcotics traffickers. A few of my friends smoke marijuana and use other recreational drugs, and I have no problem tolerating that. But would it be unethical of me to use such drugs myself, having helped imprison drug offenders? I find it difficult to articulate what I find unethical here, apart from the illegality and feelings of hypocrisy. Anonymous, California - ----- A chain-smoking family doctor is a hypocrite: she advises patients to act one way while she acts another. An ethics columnist who preaches moderation but acts licentiously is a hypocrite, too. But the failure to practice what you preach doesn't necessarily reveal a lack of ethics, just a lack of character. Both the hypothetical doctor and the entirely imaginary columnist know that their advice is good; they simply lack the strength to follow it themselves. If you still support the drug laws but can't resist the siren song of drug use, hypocrisy (and illegality) might account for your discomfort. But what I infer from your tolerating drug use in friends and your contemplating it yourself now is that you have come to believe that those laws are, at best, unwise. If that is so, you are guilty of worse than hypocrisy. You did not merely give advice - you helped send people to prison. A major part of ethics is considering the effects of our actions on others. Yours did real harm to those you prosecuted. If you acted in service of policies you now consider unwarranted, you have an ethical obligation to undo that harm, perhaps by working to free those currently in jail as a consequence of your efforts, perhaps by helping to reform the laws that put them there. When you've done harm in the past - and your query suggests that you now believe you have - your duty isn't merely to lament, but to make amends. There is a third possibility. If the laws you enforced regulated different drugs from those you now regard as benign, no problem. You might reasonably oppose the use of heroin, for example, while smoking a little pot on the weekend. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake