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Drug WarRant

Saturday, January 21, 2006

The Progress of Reform

Libby at Last One Speaks makes a fascinating observation...

When I started this blog it was pretty much Pete and me. Now there's a dozen really good blogs doing consistent policy reform news. We're getting louder folks. That can only be a good thing. [...]

When I started LOS, there weren't that many sources much less outlets for drug related news. Now there's more than a dozen blogs can even cover, but more importantly it's crossing over into the general political dialogue. Every day you see more and more mainstream political pundits, making the connections between the war on some drugs and the general assault on civil liberties.

Don't tell anybody, but I think we're turning a corner towards reform.

I think she's right.

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Top Ten Stoner Comics

Just for fun. According to the Boston Herald, the March edition of High Times will rank the Top Ten Stoner Comics. The winners?

  1. Bill Maher
  2. Doug Benson, co-writer of The Marijuana-Logues
  3. Amy Poehler, SNL
  4. Sacha Baron Cohen, Da Ali G Show
  5. Jack Black/Kyle Gass, Tenacious D
  6. Jon Stewart
  7. Jim Breuer, Half Baked
  8. Sarah Silverman, stand-up
  9. Jay Leno
  10. Jackie The Joke Man Martling

(Note: I'm pretty sure that the inclusion of comedians on this list is not so much that they are stoners, but that they enjoy pot humor.)

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Odds and Ends

bullet image Over at The Agitator read what John Tierney has to say. Go read the whole thing. Here's some snippets...
As the baby boomers age, more and more Americans will either be enduring chronic pain or taking care of someone in pain. The Republican Party has been reaching out to them with a two-step plan:
  • Do not give patients medicine to ease their pain.
  • If they are in great pain and near death, do not let them put an end to their misery.
The Republicans have been so determined to become the Pain Party that they've brushed aside their traditional belief in states' rights. The Bush administration wants lawyers in Washington and federal prosecutors with no medical training to tell doctors how to treat patients.

[...]

You know Republicans have lost their bearings when they need a lesson in states' rights from Janet Reno, who considered the Oregon law when she was attorney general. For the federal government to decide what constituted legitimate medicine, she wrote, would wrongly ''displace the states as the primary regulators of the medical profession.''

bullet image Via US Marijuana Party, check out this sophisticated marijuana grow operation. Impressive.

bullet image Also at Us Marijuana Party, Steve Kubby has lost his last appeal ane will be deported from Canada to the U.S.

In addition to being a tragedy for the Kubby family, it seems to me that this is the last thing that the U.S. Feds should want. If they put him in jail, how will they take care of his medical needs? If anything happens to him in jail in the U.S., you can bet that a lot of people will be watching.

bullet image Regulate Marijuana.org is gearing up for efforts to legalize marijuana in Nevada.

bullet image Medical Marijuana gets new hope in New Mexico

In an unforeseen move, Gov. Bill Richardson on Wednesday night said he will include a medical-marijuana bill on his agenda this legislative session. [...] Richardson said in a news release, "After speaking with many seriously ill New Mexicans, I have decided to include this bill on my call. This issue is too important, and there are too many New Mexicans suffering to delay this issue any further."

bullet image The first move is positive in Denver's uneasy relationship with its new marijuana legalization law.

The city on Wednesday dismissed a pot possession charge against the first person arrested after Denver voters backed a measure legalizing small amounts of marijuana. [...]

"Denver voters spoke loudly and clearly on this issue, and it looks like Denver officials are listening," [Footer's lawyer, Brian Vicente, who also is executive director for Sensible Colorado] said. "The city has recognized there is better use of resources and taxpayers' money than prosecuting these cases. We hope this will send a message to police that the city attorney views this as futile."

But prosecutor Greg Rawlings said the dismissal of charges against Footer means no such thing. [...]

"I am prosecuting a number of marijuana cases today and will continue to prosecute them," he said. "These cases are a large part of the docket every day."

bullet image In a strange, but potentially important lawsuit, San Diego county is suing in District Court to overturn California's medical marijuana law, claiming that since federal law trumps state law and because of federal international treaties, the state law cannot stand.

Pretty crass move on the part of the county supervisors, to ignore the will of the people in the state, simply because they don't like medical marijuana. It could bring up some tricky constitutional issues.

The ACLU is preparing to respond to the suit.

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Friday, January 20, 2006

Irresponsible Journalism

The Brits really seem to like this sensationalistic stuff.

The BBC magazine has a feature:

Out of joint: Here, one father tells the traumatic story of how cannabis turned his bright and promising teenage son into a wreck.

Gives you a sense of it right there doesn't it? Standard Reefer Madness stuff

My son James was always a popular teenager. He had masses of friends, was good at sport, and was also intelligent and handsome. Like many boys in their teens, he was constantly going out to meet friends, arrange football or cricket games or see his long-term girlfriend. ... I remember thinking one sunny day seven years ago that life was good, and couldn't get much better.

With that setup, you know something dark is going to happen...

But I hadn't reckoned on cannabis.

Aha! I knew there had to be a villain in this story.

It was as though someone had stolen my lovely James overnight. He was talking weirdly, his thoughts were all over the place, he was having hallucinations, and was totally paranoid. He thought people and vampires were after him. But it was going to get a lot worse, and I'm still waiting for my son to fully return to me.

That demon cannabis.

Then the story gets strange. They get him off cannabis after six months and onto a bunch of anti-psychotic drugs. A year later he loses weight, loses his friends, becomes violent, stops taking his medicine and starts drinking, becomes more violent, and finally has to be subdued by 10 police in riot gear.

All this due to cannabis?

But finally his son saw the light...

It took another trip to hospital a year later, before James finally realised he needed to take some sort of medication to stay stable. That was over four years ago, which I'm told is a hopeful sign. Since then he has not only given up all drugs, but also cigarettes and even alcohol.

So he has given up all drugs but is staying on his medication. And in addition to giving up all drugs, he also gave up cigarettes and even alcohol. Somebody needs to teach this guy what the word "drugs" means.

[Thanks, Ben]


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Thursday, January 19, 2006

It hits the fan in Baltimore

Questions raised for years about city 'flex squad' in the Baltimore Sun (via Hit and Run).

The Southwestern District flex squad has been disbanded and its officers suspended under a huge list of allegations, including rape charges against some officers, plus planting drugs, falsifying arrest reports and lots more.

Troubles in the flex squad became public this month with the disclosure of the rape allegation.

Jones, 28; Steven P. Hatley, 27; and Brian J. Shaffer, 28, have been charged with rape, conspiracy to rape, sexual offense, assault and violation of official duties. [...]

While investigating the rape allegation, police said in an affidavit, they seized 11 bags of suspected cocaine from Shaffer's duffel bag[...]

"When you're on a flex squad, you're going fishing," said a former top commander in the Baltimore Police Department, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he still works in law enforcement. "And you're going to the prime fishing spots. You're going where the drugs are; you're going where the guns are." [...]

"They put stuff on you," said Marlon Harris, a 21-year-old Southwest Baltimore resident whose criminal record includes several drug arrests. "Knockers want you to give up a gun or a house, and they'll let you go. They're dirty. It was just a matter of time before they got caught. I'm glad."

Again, I feel the need to point out that most police officers are good people who perform an excellent and important job (and if you want some excellent examples, meet some of the officers with LEAP). We see more of the bad officer in drug enforcement, since the scum inevitably finds its way there for the ultimate in corruption opportunities.

I daresay that the drug war also corrupts many who, in another world would be acceptable police officers, but here got sucked in to the dark side. Why? Because the laws and the drug war society told them that their employers -- the citizens -- were actually their enemy, and they developed a war mentality in justifying their own tactics.

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Crack perspective

Interesting article by Sharon Lerner in the Village Voice, Anatomy of a Drug Craze: Why Tough Laws Can't Claim Credit For Beating Back Crack

Decades after the hysteria of the crack "epidemic," and the legacy of bad law (including racist bad law) that emerged and damaged our society far more than any drug epidemic could, it is now possible to analyze and understand.

But while tough sentencing laws were effective in filling the prisons, drug experts say they had little to do with crack's decline.

[...]

So if the war on drugs didn't stamp out crack--and even made a bigger mess where the drug left off--why is crack receding to whatever extent it is? Experts say the answer lies in who has stopped using it--and who hasn't. The average age of those still smoking crack has increased over the past 10 years, with the largest group of users now in their thirties. Thus the "little brother theory": kids who have seen their older relatives and friends messed up by crack decide against using it themselves. "Crack is the lowest rung on the nasty-dirty ladder now," says John Galea, who runs the Street Studies Unit for the state's Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse. "Kids just don't think it's cool anymore. Even heroin addicts look down on crackheads now."

Some researchers say the little brother effect points to the beginning of the end for crack.

But they also say that crack would be on the decline with or without its bad reputation, simply because most drugs enjoy only a limited heyday.

Illegal drug fads typically go from incubation to plateau to decline over a period of years ( though some, like heroin, will go through the process many times, resurging in popularity as their bad reps fade from memory ).

It's a very interesting article (read the part about how law enforcement actually made things worse), and it's nice to see someone in the media taking a look backward to, maybe, learn something.

I suspect that there's a lot this could teach us about our current meth "epidemic" as well. (Speaking of which, check out Jan Frel's post Meth! Meth Disaster at Alternet (via TalkLeft).)

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Practice makes perfect

For my regular readers... You don't get opportunities like this very often, so here's your chance.

Be pleasant and polite. She's a nice liberal girl with a B.A. in political science who thinks she has the drug war figured out.

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Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Plan Colombia By The Numbers

Adam Isaacson's got the data:
  • Total U.S. aid to Colombia over the seven years between 2000 and 2006: $4.72 billion
  • Square miles of Colombia sprayed with “Round-Up Ultra” herbicide, 2000-2005: 2,550
  • Land area of Delaware, square miles: 1,954
  • Square miles planted in Colombia with coca, the plant used to make cocaine, in 2000, the year Plan Colombia began: 526
  • Approximate cost of fumigating one square mile, conservative estimate: $162,000
  • Reduction in Colombian coca-growing from 2003 to 2004, in acres: 0
  • Percentage of coca plots detected by the United Nations in 2004 that did not exist the year before: 62
  • Amount per month, according to the United Nations, that a Colombian farmer nets from a hectare (2.5 acres) of coca: $199
  • Percentage of Colombia’s rural population living below the poverty line: 82
  • “Arbitrary arrests” documented by Colombian human-rights groups between August 2002 and August 2004: 6,332
  • Percentage of murders in Colombia that end in a sentencing: 4%
  • Colombians forcibly displaced from their homes by violence, January 2000-September 2005: 1.8 million
Go read

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Plummeting Arrest Clearance Rates -- a victim of the drug war?

This could be huge. Former NY state criminal justice official Scott Christianson takes a different look at crime statistics in today's Christian Science Monitor.

Christianson first notes that violent crime has been falling, particularly in the past 10 years, and in some cases has reached its lowest point in 40 years.

And yet...

But discussions of police performance often fail to note another important but overlooked trend, apparently unrelated to the falling crime rate: Federal statistics reveal that the nation's "clearance rate" - the percentage of cases for which police arrest or identify a suspect - has fallen dramatically. And this shift is fraught with implications.

The arrest clearance rate for reported homicides recently dropped to about 60 percent compared with about 90 percent 50 years ago. This means that a murderer today has about a 40 percent chance of avoiding arrest compared with less than 10 percent in 1950. The record for other FBI Index Crimes is even more dismal: The clearance rates have sunk to 42 percent for forcible rape, 26 percent for robbery, and 13 percent for burglary and motor vehicle theft, all way down from earlier eras.

If the crimes aren't being cleared, is this due to a lack of police resources? Apparently not.

It's not that America's cops haven't been making arrests - in fact, their total annual arrests jumped from 3.3 million in the nation in 1960 to 14 million in 2004, a staggering number that helps to explain why the United States imprisons more of its citizens than any other country in the world.

So, if reported crime has been going down and arrests have gone up, what accounts for the plummeting arrest clearance rates for murder, robbery, rape, burglary, larceny, and motor vehicle theft?

Part of the answer must involve drug law enforcement - victimless offenses that aren't reported to the police or included as FBI Index Crimes. Instead of arresting suspects for burglaries and other serious reported crimes, cops today spend much of their energy going after illegal drugs. Their arrest rate for drug possession ( especially marijuana ) has shot up more than 500 times from what it was in 1965.

Interesting.

Now, the causality is far from certain -- there certainly are other factors involved, and more research is needed. But it makes a lot of sense, and there's plenty of evidence to support the notion that the drug war has interfered with, or distracted, police from doing their job in other areas. Partly due to the additional work load of dealing with the drug war, but also through focusing on the drug war to the expense of other crimes. Not every police officer or department is seduced by the glamor (or profit) of the drug bust, but many are.

And this goes right up the line. For example, after 911...

While Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaida minions were diligently preparing for their murderous mission, the FBI was looking the other way with equal determination. More than twice as many FBI agents were assigned to fighting drugs (2,500) than fighting terrorism (1,151). And a far greater amount of the FBI's financial resources was dedicated to the war on drugs....

In Phoenix, where the now infamous Ken Williams memo originated, counterterrorism agents complained bitterly about their efforts being given "the lowest investigative priority" by a supervisor who preferred glamorous drug-fighting investigations.

Christianson speculates that the drug war could affect police performance in other ways, such as emboldening violent criminals who assume a lower likelihood of being caught, or decreasing community cooperation with police.

So is the drug war making up less safe from murderers, thieves and rapists? At the very least, this whole issue demands further investigation.

Asked why the arrest clearance rate has dropped so much, one leading police scholar, Professor David Bayley of the State University of New York at Albany, said, "I haven't a clue. I've been involved in the field for 40 years and best as I can tell, nobody has even raised this stuff. Hearing about it now is like being hit by a bus."

Wow.

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4th Amendment Glimmer of Hope #2

SCOTUSblog previews today's Supreme Court arguments in United States v. Grubbs.

While this is a pornography case, it has a lot of potential connection to the drug war.

The case involves Anticipatory Search Warrants. These are warrants that are issued in advance to be triggered by a certain event, such as after the package pornography is delivered, or after the informant goes into your house to sell you drugs. Then they search your house and find what they sent there and arrest you for possessing it. These anticipatory warrants are used a lot in drug stings.

In Grubbs, there was a technicality issue in the warrant (the triggering event had been left off the actual warrant). The government says that doesn't matter because the 4th Amendment only requires the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

Interestingly, the defense will be taking that on and actually attempting to get the Supreme Court to rule that anticipatory warrants themselves are unconstitutional. Here's the idea:

In response, Mr. Grubbs seeks not only to refute the government's arguments, but also to challenge the constitutionality of anticipatory warrants generally. He relies on the text of the Fourth Amendment, which requires that "no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause." This language, Mr. Grubbs contends, means that the probable cause must exist at the time of issuance; under an anticipatory warrant, there is only probable cause once the future contingency is satisfied. Further, the conferral of discretion on executive officers to determine when probable cause exists at a future time is inconsistent with the constraining purpose of the Fourth Amendment. Mr. Grubbs denies that there is any compelling law enforcement need for anticipatory warrants given the other options available to police to seek warrants quickly.

The language seems clear to me... "No warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause." How could a warrant be issued prior to probable cause existing?

Should be interesting.

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4th Amendment Glimmer of Hope #1

Scott over at Flex Your Rights Blog writes about a New Jersey Supreme Court ruling that's a slap at the U.S. Supreme Court.

The New Jersey Supreme Court ruled last week that police may not automatically search vehicles following an arrest of the driver. This finding contradicts the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in New York v. Belton, which holds that police may search any vehicle following the lawful arrest of its driver. The Belton rule is supposed to prevent suspects from destroying evidence or reaching for weapons, but in practice it's just another excuse to search people [...]

Fortunately, I'm not the only one who lies awake at night cursing the Supreme Court's decision in New York v. Belton. In a unanimous ruling, the NJ Supreme Court concluded that Belton's logic "simply does not pass muster." The article also notes that MA, NV, OR, NM, WY, and PA have similarly rejected the Supreme Court's outrageous effort to strip arrestees of their 4th Amendment protections.

Fascinating issue. The article referenced points out how New Jersey (and the other states) can ignore U.S. Supreme Court precedent:

"The United States Supreme Court interpretations of the Federal Constitution establish not the ceiling but only the floor of minimal constitutional protection," the justices wrote.

The ruling, in essence, gives people in New Jersey greater protection against unreasonable searches and seizures under the state constitution than the U.S. Supreme Court has provided under its interpretation of the Fourth Amendment.

Scott hopes the New Jersey decision will embolden other states to follow suit.

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Tuesday, January 17, 2006

Supreme Court Turns Back Feds and Upholds Oregon's Assisted Suicide Law

Not much time to post right now, so I may comment more later.

Link

The Supreme Court upheld Oregon's one-of-a-kind physician-assisted suicide law Tuesday, rejecting a Bush administration attempt to punish doctors who help terminally ill patients die.

Justices, on a 6-3 vote, said that federal authority to regulate doctors does not override the 1997 Oregon law used to end the lives of more than 200 seriously ill people.[...]

The administration improperly tried to use a drug law to prosecute Oregon doctors who prescribe overdoses, the court majority said.

"Congress did not have this far-reaching intent to alter the federal-state balance," Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote for himself, retiring Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and Justices John Paul Stevens, David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Stephen Breyer.

And who was on the side of the Federal government against the states (in fact, in this case, it was simply the executive branch of the federal government against the states)?

Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for himself, Roberts and Justice Clarence Thomas, said that federal officials have the power to regulate the doling out of medicine.

[Thanks, Adam!]

Update: As discussed in comments, it seems likely that Thomas voted this way, at least in part, so he could write his own dissent.

This Supreme Court decision is causing a lot of talk around the blogosphere. Certainly, at first glance, many are shocked at the comparison of Raich and Oregon.

Professor Bainbridge's reaction is common:

According to our Supreme Legislature Court, federal drug law does not preempt state law when it comes to doctors prescribing drugs so their patients can kill themselves, despite the long-standing moral and legal traditions against suicide. But federal drug law does preempt a state law that would allow doctors to alleviate suffering by prescribing a simple joint.

What many are noting with this decision is the whole notion that in complex cases (and when are they not at the Supreme Court level), it isn't simply a matter of interpreting the text of the constitution as it was written, but it requires filling in gaps -- making judgements -- and those judgements inevitably involve Justices using their own views of the subject matter.

Armando at Daily Kos

Federal power vs. state power - whither federalism? So the lineup of the Justices in this decision makes it startlingly clear that EACH AND EVERY JUSTICE was a results-oriented legal realist in this case. As they are in EVERY case with such ambiguity and import.

John Cole at Balloon Juice:

Were Alito on the court, I have seen nothing that would persuade me that he would not join the other 'federalists' in trying to strike down the ban.

All together now, conservatives-- "States Rights!"

All Justices are activist judges. They have no choice.

Now this case is also, to some extent, even more complex. It involves the interpretation of the CSA by the Executive Branch. The CSA specifically forbids marijuana. It does not specifically forbid assisted suicide -- that idea was Ashcroft's. Some have opined that the same Court would uphold a ban against assisted suicide if Congress passed it.

Interestingly, in fact, one could interpret this decision to be, in part, a reaction to recent Executive Branch power grabs.

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The Battle for the Hearts and... Urine of Today's Youth

The Drug Czar is taking his Pee-in-a-Cup circus on the road to convince educators to spend taxpayer money on drug testing kids (and the first event is Thursday!) If he isn't countered, his message may seem logical to school districts that don't know the facts.

However, there's no reason why we can't attend these same public events and find ways to tell the truth.

The fabulous Students for Sensible Drug Policy have been on top of this issue for some time, and have done a great job in the past of countering the Drug Czar by showing up to events like these, passing out some real facts, and giving the press someone to interview on the other side (ONDCP doesn't like this, but the press eats it up).

Here's the info from DARE Generation Diary

Full Schedule:

Orlando, FL, January 19, 2006
(Rosen Centre Hotel, 9840 International Drive)

San Diego, CA, February 22, 2006
(Hilton San Diego Mission Valley, 901 Camino del Rio South)

Falls Church, VA, March 15, 2006
(Fairview Park Marriott, 3111 Fairview Park Drive)

Milwaukee, WI, April 25, 2006
(Hyatt Regency Milwaukee, 333 West Kilbourn Avenue)

If you live in or around any of these cities, please get in touch with SSDP as soon as possible by calling our world headquarters at (202) 293-4414 to find out how you can counteract the Drug Czar's propaganda machine when it comes to town. Students, parents, and activists had a great time raining on the Drug Czar's parade last year. Let's make sure he and his cronies know that we'll continue to be there providing the truth wherever and whenever they proliferate lies.

If you're planning on going, be sure to take a look at the student drug testing section of SSDP's website, where you'll find talking points and other materials.

Make sure to sign up with ONDCP if you're planning on attending one of the summits.

NORML is also working on countering the summit. The University of Central Florida chapter of NORML has already gotten some coverage in the college paper

Members of the UCF chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws are taking a stand at the Rosen Centre Hotel Thursday while the site hosts a regional student drug-testing summit.

The event, held by the Office of National Drug Control Policy, takes place at 8:30 a.m. and is intended to convince local educators that drug testing high school students will better serve the environment in public schools. NORML will argue, however, that national statistics have shown that this process does nothing to deter drug use and is nothing more than a waste of money.

[Updated to new edition] If you'd like a nice printable piece to counter drug testing advocates, the ACLU and Drug Policy Alliance has one that's excellent. Making Sense of Student Drug Testing: Why Educators Are Saying No (pdf) [2nd Edition].

At the very least, we shouldn't let the Drug Czar off easy. With any luck, we'll have educators coming to these events interested in drug testing, but leaving turned off by it.

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Monday, January 16, 2006

Maine officials explode from hyperbole

All the Maine news outlets are covering the fact that, while final facts are not yet available, 2005 will be the year to see drug deaths exceed motor vehicle deaths. Politicians were quick to explode with wrath:

Link

Gov. John Baldacci took aim at the Bush White House, saying it continued to turn its back on the suffering of Maine families. He noted that federal funding to the Maine Drug Enforcement Agency has been cut by 40 percent. [...]

Public Safety Commissioner Michael Cantara also blamed the federal government for "walking away" from its responsibility, citing that the drugs killing Mainers were federally regulated narcotics and were being trafficked across state lines, a federal offense. [...]

Maine Attorney General Steve Rowe called Washington's response to the drug problem "shameful."

So what do we actually know? There are projected to be 178 drug-related deaths. 140 of them were accidental overdoses. The majority of those were methadone, and the majority of those were from the pill form, prescribed by physicians for pain.

And if we look further...

Physicians have become cautious when prescribing OxyContin because of its potential for abuse, and have switched to drugs such as methadone and morphine for pain, Kim Johnson, director of the Office of Substance Abuse, said.

"The drug of choice is still OxyContin, but it's not available," Johnson said.

Hence, methadone and morphine deaths are on the rise.

Oops.

It looks like what they don't need is more federal government assistance.

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Mary-Louise Parker wins Golden Globe

... for Actress in a Leading Role - Musical or Comedy Series, for her role as a suburban housewive making ends meet by dealing pot, in Showtime's 'Weeds', which has been picked up for a second season.

Not a huge surprise to me. She really is outstanding (and so is the show).

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Morality and Lawmaking

I was strolling through the blogosphere looking at drug war-related posts and I stumbled across a blog by Ron Gainey (WRONGAINEY) and yesterday's post about Risk, Reward, and Paternalism. In it, he quotes an unlinked statement from his friend Daniel Charles regarding the drug war and the paternalistic justification for prohibition that I found interesting.

For any given thing that has no demonstrably irreplaceable good value and which does have demonstrable negative effects to a significant portion of a population of people, there can be no moral justification for permitting it.

Now Gailey describes himself as a quasi-libertarian and does a fairly good job in the rest of the post in refuting this statement through analysis of relative risks, etc., (which is a good trick, since the words "demonstrably," "irreplaceable," "good," "value," "demonstrable," "negative," "effects," and "significant" are undefined, and who gets to define them is unassigned) but I kept going back to Charles' statement with a growing sense of outgraged astonishment.

For any given thing that has no demonstrably irreplaceable good value and which does have demonstrable negative effects to a significant portion of a population of people, there can be no moral justification for permitting it.

And quite frankly, I find the notion of even looking at comparative risk analysis to be... odd. My gut reactions were as follows:

  1. Such a political philosophy is one of the few justifications I can imagine for actually invading and overthrowing a radical theocracy (assuming that philosophy was held by their government).
  2. As a patriotic American, I would fight to the death to prevent the overthrow of our constitution and our system of freedom to such a political philosophy.

Problem is, I can't just dismiss this, because it appears to me that this kind of thinking is influencing those who have hijacked much of the conservative "movement" in the U.S., including public figures like William Bennett, Mark Souder, John Walters, and others.

Focus on that last section: "there can be no moral justification for permitting it." This is, in context, saying that there is a moral imperative to use government power to outlaw the action, and even leads to the notion that punishing others is a moral value. Sound familiar?

This is an extremely perverse definition of morality that is nevertheless seductive to many. It's nice to think that if we pass a law, we're being moral, but in fact that is not a moral act.

Take the obvious: Murder. If you choose not to commit murder, that is a moral act. If you teach someone else that murder is wrong so that they choose not to commit murder, then both you and they have committed a moral act. If you murder someone, you have committed an immoral act. The act of making murder illegal, on the other hand, may well be an appropriate element of a legal system and may be based on moral principles, but is not itself moral or immoral.

Many people are confused about this and somehow think that making something illegal can, itself, be a moral act, under the assumption that the illegality will reduce the incidence of a supposed immoral action (far from certain), or are confused by the fact that law may sometimes get its inspiration from moral values.

Attempting to legislate morality is not only incorrect, it is potentially dangerous. Those who believe that drug prohibition laws are moral acts will strongly resist alternatives, despite clear facts showing the lack of efficacy of those laws, or the increased harm caused by those laws.

If someone wants to argue with me that drug use is immoral, fine. I may disagree with you, but I accept your right to your own moral views. But don't ever try to tell me that passing drug laws is a moral necessity.

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Odd definition for 'Beyond Resonable Doubt'

Link

A Wyoming man was arrested for selling "drug paraphernalia" in his store, but a jury acquitted him in just 30 minutes of deliberation, something that didn't set well with the Police Chief.

But Police Chief Rich Adriaens worries that jury members looked more at technicalities than the reasonableness of the charges. Adriaens said there's enough leeway in the law that Gillette residents serving on the jury could have made an important stand against drugs, but they chose to act differently.

"enough leeway in the law" to convict

What a bizarre legal concept.

1:25:42 PM |  | Related  | permalink | comment []



Economics 101

Look, I took Economics in college at 8 am from a professor who droned in a monotone for 55 minutes. Needless to say, I mostly slept through it. And yet, I still was able to come out of it with a basic knowledge of supply, demand, and elasticity -- something that nobody involved in drug policy seems to have gotten.

Via Marginal Revolution, I see that a new paper in the Journal of Political Economy by Gary Becker, Kevin Murphy, and Michael Grossman called "The Economic Theory of Illegal Goods: The Case of Drugs" will attempt to explain it to our political leaders.

In an important new study, world-renowned economists--including a Nobel Prize winner and a MacArthur "genius"--argue that when demand for a good is inelastic, the cost of making consumption illegal exceeds the gain. Their forthcoming paper in the Journal of Political Economy is a definitive explanation of the economics of illegal goods and a thoughtful explication of the costs of enforcement.

The authors demonstrate how the elasticity of demand is crucial to understanding the effects of punishment on suppliers. Enforcement raises costs for suppliers, who must respond to the risk of imprisonment and other punishments. This cost is passed on to the consumer, which induces lower consumption when demand is relatively elastic. However, in the case of illegal goods like drugs--where demand seems inelastic--higher prices lead not to less use, but to an increase in total spending.

In the case of drugs, then, the authors argue that excise taxes and persuasive techniques --such as advertising--are far more effective uses of enforcement expenditures.

"This analysis...helps us understand why the War on Drugs has been so difficult to win... why efforts to reduce the supply of drugs leads to violence and greater power to street gangs and drug cartels," conclude the authors. "The answer lies in the basic theory of enforcement developed in this paper."

It's a nod to the sad state of the education of our politicians that I even quote this press release so extensively, instead of saying, "Well, Duh!"

1:06:26 PM |  | Related  | permalink | comment []



ONDCP's First Full Podcast, Featuring...

... Al Roker.

That's right -- the Drug Czar's office has stepped up to the plate and shown off their command of new technology by interviewing a weatherman.

Maybe they decided that they wanted to start off with an authority, to show off their seriousness with facts and science and stuff, and someone in their office said: "Isn't weather a kind of science?" Or... Maybe they wanted to hit the kids with a popular celebrity, so they asked who's hot, and the 70-year-old cleaning woman said "I've always liked that Al Roker." Or...

Anyway, it was clearly an interview designed for an audience that never heard the word "podcast."

We did get some insight into Al Roker's past drug use...

I tried pot, twice basically in college - and I didn't like the way I got very subdued and tired - and polished off, I don't know, a 55-gallon drum of cheetos - and "this isn't good" - and that was it, it didn't do anything for me.
And then he addressed the issue of talking to your kids and hypocrisy. At this point in the interview, the discussion had been about marijuana. Notice how at the end of this segment, he realizes that his argument isn't that strong, so he changes the stakes.

If you characterize it as that - that it was not something that you continue to do - it's not something that you condone - that you knew it was wrong, but, you know, you tried it, and that was that. I don't see that as hypocritical.

Now if you're still doing it and you tell your kids not to - If they see you doing that - you have no moral leg to stand on. To say "Well don't do that" - it's like "Do as I say, not as I do." So that's a real issue.

And there are those who say "Well, you tell your kids not to drink and yet you maybe have a cocktail" Well, it's not illegal - and it's a different - I don't think you can equate a glass of white wine with meth.

How did comparing pot with hard liquor (cocktail), change to comparing a glass of white (why white?) wine with meth?

I love how drug warriors (and their apologists) treat all illegal drugs as interchangable when it helps their argument. I can't count the times I've heard statements that are essentially like... "Those who say marijuana is relatively harmless are dead wrong. Drugs have consequences. If you don't believe me, just talk to a mother who lost her son to a heroin overdose."

So, for switching drugs mid-argument, I call 'Shenanigans' on Al Roker.

For interviewing Al Roker on a podcast, I call "Clueless" on the Drug Czar's office.

10:25:25 AM |  | Related  | permalink | comment []










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