
When I am out protesting and speaking out against the war on drugs, People
often ask "what the hell is a matter with you, how can you condone legalized
drug use? My answer, wake up drugs are everywhere, in your bars, pharmacies, and
supermarkets. The fact is that I do not condone drug use of any sort, including those
toxic poisons that doctors prescribe, which are responsible for a 100,000 deaths
a year. I'm not suggesting we make heroin, cocaine or amphetamines available the
way we do alcohol and cigarettes.
What am I recommending?
Drop the "zero
tolerance" baloney and the unrealistic goal of a drug free society. Accept that
drug use is here to stay, and accept that marijuana is an herb, no different than
saffron or st John's wort.
More specifically, I'm recommending:
My Minimum Acceptable Marijuana Policy
The Minimum Acceptable Marijuana Policy would have to meet ALL of
the following criteria:
Makes it legal for any person any age to possess
and use Marijuana with permission and / or prescription of their personal physician.
Specifically prohibits the use of marijuana before or while driving, in public
areas, restaurants, clubs, offices and workplaces.
Makes it legal
for any person 18 years or older to smoke marijuana for medicinal or recreational
use in the confines of their own home.
Makes it legal to smoke outdoors
only with permission or by policy of the property owners, out of sight of those who
would / could object.
Makes it legal for persons 18 years of age
or older to possess up to one ounce of marijuana anywhere anytime period.
Allows for not more than a 10% tax and or users fee for State and not more than
10% for the federal Government.
Makes it legal to grow Marijuana for
any and all industrial uses from rope to biomass and for any person 18 years of age
or more to grow up to 24 plants per person on private property for personal and or
family / household use.
Also
* that doctors be allowed and encouraged
to prescribe whatever drugs or herbs that work best, notwithstanding the demonized
status of some drugs in the eyes of the law, because Doctors and their patients are
best qualified to decide what is medicine not lawyers in Washington D.C..
*
that people not be incarcerated for possessing small amounts of any drug for personal
use. But also that people who put their fellow citizens at risk by driving while
impaired be treated strictly and punished accordingly;
* that employers reject
drug testing because they reveal nothing about whether people are impaired in the
workplace, but what they have done on their own time over the weekend;
* We step
up our efforts to provide honest and effective drug education rather than propaganda
programs like DARE.
This is a call for a fundamentally different drug policy. It's not legalization,
it's a matter of spending more on treatment and prevention and less on interdiction
and enforcement.
Some call it "harm reduction" an approach that aims
to reduce the negative consequences of both drug use and drug prohibition.
The truth is most anti-drug war activists aren't really drug legalizers at all. A
legalizer, is someone who believes that heroin, cocaine and most or all other drugs
should be available over the counter, like alcohol or cigarettes.
This is not
to say there is no such thing as a "legalizer." Milton Friedman, and Thomas
Szasz, have both argued that total drug legalization is the only rational and ethical
way to deal with drugs in our society. Most libertarians and many others agree with
them.
U.S. drug prohibition, like alcohol Prohibition decades ago, is responsible
for creating vast underground markets, criminalizing millions of otherwise law abiding
citizens, corrupting government at every level, infringing on personal freedoms,
and legitimizing public policies that are contrary to the very foundations of our
country.
I will never be an advocate for over the counter sale of all drugs,
and not just because it's not a politically popular argument. I do not believe that
total legalization is the right answer.
The fact is, there is no drug legalization
movement in America. What there is is a political and social movement for drug policy
reform. It consists of the growing number of citizens who have been victimized, in
one way or another, by the drug war, and who now believe that our current drug policies
are doing more harm than good.
What I am talking about is an approach grounded
not in the fear, ignorance, and prejudice , but rather one grounded in common sense,
compromise and basic human rights. That's true drug policy reform.


