Pubdate: Thu, 3 Nov 2005 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Copyright: 2005 The Sydney Morning Herald Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/441 Author: Julia Baird Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) PROOF POLITICS HAS LONG GONE TO POT WHAT a curious state of affairs in Britain, when models are sorely judged for using drugs, while politicians are excused for the same behaviour. As the New Statesman asked, "Politicians on drugs, what's new?" Does this finally explain the decision to go to war in Iraq? What's going on? First, the model. It's been a wonderful irony that the icon of heroin chic, the spindly legged, gaunt-cheeked Kate Moss, is now a cautionary tale for anti-drugs campaigners. Ever since she was secretly filmed snorting half of Colombia's cocaine in some grubby recording studio with her unappealing rocker boyfriend - - who someone once deliciously described as having a face like a sweating cheese - her image has taken a serious pummelling. The finger-thin Brit lost contracts with Burberry and Chanel among others, and has been chastised by other sponsors. She has been painted as the scourge of the modelling world as hypocritical fashion and advertising executives have wiped their noses and feigned horror. Moss's devoted fan, British columnist Julie Burchill, declared people were just jealous and indulging in a "sumptuous banquet of self-righteous envy because she is the one constant great hell-raiser it is impossible to feel sorry for: no lost looks, no lost love, no failed career, just an endless parade of drugs, boys and girls to take or leave as she wished." It may also have been the fact that she is a mother, and that the evidence was graphic. Whatever the reason for the outcry, she has been punished, has gone off to rehab, is being investigated by police and may lose custody of her child. Kate has been thoroughly spanked. But David Cameron, who admitted he "erred and strayed" at university, has got through to the final round of the Tory leadership contest relatively unscathed. "Cannabis Cameron", perhaps because he threatens to be a modernising influence on the stuffy Conservative Party, has been repeatedly grilled about his personal drug use. He refused to reveal whether he tried hard drugs in his life before politics, declaring it was private. He said he had a "normal university experience" and that politicians were only human. He also gained sympathy because he is not alone. Cameron pointed out that when the shadow home secretary called for a tougher approach to marijuana in 2000, eight Tory shadow cabinet members admitted having smoked it. In the New Statesman, Simon McDonald convincingly constructed a lineage of drug and alcohol abuse in the British Parliament: former PM William Pitt the Younger said he was told by his doctor to drink one bottle of port a day, and more than obliged. William Gladstone added opium to his coffee. A prime minister, Lord Rosebery, was fond of cocaine. Thirty current British MPs have admitted to dabbling in soft drugs. You might conclude it's all right for drug users to lead the country but not to advertise plaid scarves. And it's not just in Britain. Bill Clinton, famously, did not inhale. George Bush, caught on tape talking about having used marijuana, said he would not answer any questions because he did not want to encourage kids to do the same. JFK took steroids, amphetamines and smoked pot with his mistress. Here, Carmen Lawrence, Alexander Downer, the Northern Territory Chief Minister, Clare Martin, the Victorian Premier, Steve Bracks, and the West Australian Premier, Geoff Gallop, have admitted to smoking marijuana. Tony Abbott confessed to having a drink laced with hallucinogens in India, and having "one half-hearted puff of a marijuana cigarette on a rugby tour in America". When the NSW independent MP Richard Jones polled 37 of the 42 members of the NSW upper house in 2002, 40 per cent said they had smoked marijuana and a handful said they still did. Mark Latham has shared a joint with journalists. He implied plenty of politicians took drugs: "I think their dealers are up in the gallery, and the pollies are just in the conga line of choofers." Australia has demonstrated the same perverse tolerance as Britain, though - we are startled, apparently, to learn a Neighbours actor was sacked for drug use, but Latham's comments were largely unexplored. Community attitudes have changed, and liberalised. We now tolerate youthful experimentation but would view current addiction differently. If Cameron were thought to have a habit today, he would doubtless have not survived. Still, it's bizarre to see models and actors chastised for behaviour tolerated in politicians. As Nino Culotta famously wrote, we're a weird mob. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake