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A Friend Stopped By | 11/03/2009 4:00 am

Legalize It, by Allegra Huston

What could we do with an extra $2.88 billion of public revenue right now?
By Allegra Huston
Image via Flickr by wallyg

Editor’s Note: Allegra Huston’s new book, Love Child: A Memoir of Family Lost and Found, hit bookstores last spring. Allegra is the youngest daughter of film director John Huston and sister of Oscar-winning actress Anjelica Huston. She was born in London, raised in Ireland and Los Angeles, and now lives in Taos, NM. She was a publisher in London for nine years and has been a freelance writer and editor since 1994.

It’s dark. You’re walking to your car, the subway or just home. You spot a gang of youths out for a night of fun. Your heart races. Then you see what they’re doing: smoking dope. Oh, no! You might trip over one of them. Maybe they’ll philosophize you to death.

Good thing they’re not doing something legal, like drinking, which might get you a broken bottle in the face.

Reefer madness was a fantasy; if everyone took up pot, we’d have a nation of chilled-out people committing way less violent crime.

I’m not such a libertarian that I’m arguing for the legalization of all drugs — I’ve seen what hard drugs can do. But let’s be sensible. Why do we criminalize more than a quarter of the population for enjoying a substance whose primary effects are relaxation, the munchies and an overuse of the word "dude"? I don’t use cannabis, but I also don’t jump out of airplanes, go on ten-day fasts, eat peanut butter or engage in masochistic sex; and as people who enjoy those things aren’t hurting anybody but themselves, I don’t see the point of banning them. In fact, I think we should mandate cannabis use for politicians; then they might actually tell the truth, as Al Capone’s henchman did when the FBI gave him a joint to loosen him up for interrogation.

But it’s a Drug — that dreaded word. OK, what’s a drug? "A substance other than food intended to affect the structure or function of the body."  Too broad. "Something and often an illegal substance that causes addiction, habituation or a marked change in consciousness." That covers coffee, video games and iPhones, not to mention alcohol and tobacco. OK, I’m queen for a day, and I say they’re bad for people. Now they’re illegal. You’ll call them drugs.

Full disclosure: I have tried, twice, to smoke a joint. I couldn’t; my throat burned, it hurt. I tried hash brownies too, but uttering a sentence was like hauling on ropes to put my brain back together. I ate too many. I couldn’t resist: I’m addicted to chocolate.

That’s my point: A drug would be a medicine, or just a vice, or merely an indulgence, if it weren’t illegal. So why is cannabis illegal?

It’s virtually impossible to figure out why some drugs and not others were made illegal in the first place. The history of criminalization is piecemeal and murky. The first ban on cannabis was a specifically anti-Muslim act, propagated by those guardians of all that is right and good, the Spanish Inquisition — who, when they came to the New World, instantly concluded that the hallucinogenic drugs used in native religion must be tools of the devil. It’s hard not to see racism and power politics at work in all this, especially when you look at old propaganda images of black men high on cocaine raping white women, and sinister Chinese luring the flower of white youth into their opium dens. 

142 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

deber B
Laurel, that’s already been discussed.   I am fully aware that it was LSD, dear.   My point is that marijuana leads to other drugs.   Documented.
By deber B on 11/04/2009 5:32 pm
R.J.B. Reed

You are assuming that people don’t smoke pot and do the things you’ve mentioned now, and that they will if it is legalized.  Do you believe that people who break the law and smoke out aren’t also breaking the law and driving high?  In any case, we already have laws in place for people who operate machinery, automobiles or otherwise, while impaired.  Legalizing another drug won’t change that.  For instance, you can get a DUI if you are high on prescription drugs that you’ve legally obtained.

All that happens when pot is illegal is increased crime due to black-market sales and increased usage by children as it is easier to obtain than booze. 

By R.J.B. Reed on 11/03/2009 10:40 am
Wendy R
Chris I worked as a drug counselor for six years and have a degree in substance abuse, if pot was legalized and sold legally in stores like beer and wine it would have tracer put in it to show up on breathalyzers, atleast that is what I was told in school. If your caught driving high on pot now it is a DUI just like if you were drinking. I don’t smoke pot, but I think we should make it legal and reap the taxes it would provide. Sorry to all that think it should be illegal, you can get pot anywhere as it is, so why not legalize it and get some good tax dollars out of it. Deber those drug epidemics you speak of in those other countries, are mainly an opiate addiction problem not pot, I had to research those countries drug policies and seen many documentaries on how heroin is a strain on their social support systems. But hey to each their own, I have studied the effects of substances in the human body and alcohol is by far one of the most toxic and dangerous things to put in your body in mass amounts, notice I said mass amounts and it is legal. If you studied how the drug classification system in this country works you would laugh at where pot is rated in contrast to say cocaine, heroin, LSD,  and alcohol.
By Wendy R on 11/03/2009 11:17 am
deber B
Amen, Chris!!!
By deber B on 11/03/2009 3:40 pm
Messy ONE

I hate to have to be the one to tell you this, Chris, but there are plenty of people who drive buses and carpooling that are drunks, too. Soccer moms, industrial workers, bus drivers - ANY of them could (and are) be zooming around putting people at risk perfectly legally RIGHT NOW.

Prohibition didn’t work. Neither will maintaining a ban on marijuana. 

By Messy ONE on 11/04/2009 1:21 pm
Chris Glass`
I know that plenty of alcoholic drivers are on the road along with those on legal prescriptions that say "do not drive when you take this medicine." That is no excuse to add another layer of risky drivers to our highways.
By Chris Glass` on 11/05/2009 4:34 pm
Chrome Toe

we’ve had this discussion on this board a couple of times. I just can’t get over that we haven’t legalized pot and prostitution yet. it’s just ludicrous. especially at a time when our country needs the revenue. stupidity.

By Chrome Toe on 11/03/2009 8:45 am
deber B
chrome toe, and to continue with your statements….do we also need more crime, murders and homelessness?   Yes sir…legalize marijuana because our country needs the revenue…..breathtaking, Chrome Toe.   : (
By deber B on 11/03/2009 11:39 am
Chrome Toe
I spent 20 years working in criminal justice. I’ve taught at corrections academy’s, worked on crime legislation, and reviewed more research than most people would ever care to. I’ve read a lot of your posts on this board and don’t imagine you can actually have your mind changed so i won’t try. But frankly.. you don’t know what you’re talking about.
By Chrome Toe on 11/03/2009 12:41 pm
Laurel Sayler
Unless potheads are robbing a 7-11 of its doritos supply the chance they major crime will increase is laughable. Potheads mellow out and get lazy when stoned. BTW there is a difference between being stoned and buzzed. NO one has become homeless because of pot.
By Laurel Sayler on 11/04/2009 3:41 pm
deber B
Laurel, "buyer’s remorse" has a strange way of appearing in posts.   Keep smoking your pot.   I care about my grandchildren and do not want it legalized.  
By deber B on 11/04/2009 5:36 pm
Heidi W
Excellent article, excellent idea.  I have supported legalizing marijuana for years now.  I am so tired of seeing young kids get busted for small amounts of pot and going to jail sentenced by some gung ho righteous judge for two years then coming out well schooled in how to be a REAL criminal.  I ate it while going though chemo and it was a blessing.  I have seen Reefer Madness, the movie and I laughed so hard at the ridiculous thing,  I almost fell over laughing hyterically.  Pot has been around for thousands of years and is not going to go away,  may as well make some money off of it and improve our schools.  Kids who have hope for the future wont be interested in making the world go away through drugs. As for it being a gateway drug,  that is baloney, and addict will be an addict no matter what they start with, just as those who won’t… wont.  People who have never experienced the high pot gives you make it out to be much worse than it is.  From experience I would rather smoke pot (I don’t) than drink any day and I don’t drink either. 
By Heidi W on 11/03/2009 8:52 am
Belinda Joy

For the record Allegra, if the group of youths you referred to in your opening scenario were indeed drinking alcohol instead of smoking weed, that would not be legal as you implied.

I understand that there are people who consume alcohol for the sole purpose of getting drunk. I recognize I am in the minority when it comes to drinking wine or champagne, that I do it for the taste. However that is the very point as to why I am against legalizing marijuana, why legalize (yet again) something that people will be using for the sole purpose of "getting high"?

Why did you want to get high those two times you tried it? Why are so many people desiring escapism by way of getting high? That should be the question on everyone’s mind. What is going on in our country that so many people want to mentally check out? We are becoming a nation of "if it feels good, do it" and I find that disturbing.

Social morals are on the decline as more and more people make exceptions for bad behavior. Teen pregnancy, it’s not the girls fault, it’s just a sign of the times. Infidelity in a marriage, sometimes it happens, oh well. Alcohol and drug abuse, it’s not my fault, it’s a disease and beyond my control. Prostitution should be legal right? Putting a price on your sexuality, its a victimless exchange, right?

And for you and others to argue legalizing it because of the revenue it would generate….that sickens me beyond words. A nation filled with slack jawed, stoned people….but the upside is we’ll have lots of money. Hmmm a fair trade I guess.

By Belinda Joy on 11/03/2009 9:14 am
Heidi W
Belinda, if it is legalized that does not mean everyone will jump on the bandwagon and do it, just as not everyone drinks to get drunk (you and me)….but some people do. People are going to smoke/eat pot whether it is legal or not and whether we like it or not, that is just a fact, who would you rather see make the money on it?  Drug lords?  I would rather see it go to the people of the US to help in some way like education, teachers salaries etc.  Any way you look at it, it will continue,  it is up to us to choose how. 
By Heidi W on 11/03/2009 9:31 am
R.J.B. Reed

What’s wrong with getting high?  You claim that it’s a problem because it’s escapism, but I fail to see why a little escapism is bad.  People practice it in so many ways.  Some people drink, some use pot, some people read books, others watch movies, some play video games and others spend hours at a time hanging out on the internet.  Escapism only becomes a problem if a person isn’t facing reality at all.  So, if a person is playing Wow to the point where they can’t hold down a job and where their relationship with their family deteriorates, that’s not good.

You say that it’s disturbing that we’re a nation of, "if it feels good, do it", but I don’t understand why this is a problem. Should we do things that feel bad?  The only question we should ask is whether it is inherently harmful to other people for someone to exercise this right.  Otherwise, we’re saying it’s ok to feel good by going to church, or by having a PBR at the pub with some friends, but not to kick back and smoke a joint and what is the sense in that?

Social morals are not on the decline.  They are merely changing to reflect the changing society.  Change does not mean decline.  People have been claiming that morals are declining for hundreds, if not thousands of years.  And yet, things have only improved.  When I look at how much progress we’ve made with respect to sexism, homophobia and racism in my life, I can’t believe some people claim that we’re in a decline.  Certainly there’s still a lot of work, but I’m extremely hopeful.

By R.J.B. Reed on 11/03/2009 10:35 am