Editor's note: LZ
Granderson, who writes a weekly column for CNN.com, was named journalist
of the year by the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association and
is a 2011 Online Journalism Award finalist for commentary. He is a
senior writer and columnist for ESPN the Magazine and ESPN.com.
(CNN) --
I have smoked pot. Not today or this week, or even this month, but I have...
I'm telling you this because before I
begin talking about the pot-smoking habits of others, I thought it would
only be right that I first owned up to my own past use.I have smoked pot. Not today or this week, or even this month, but I have...
Maybe this will encourage
others to be a bit more honest because, like it or not, admitting to
smoking pot is bound to get a lot less scandalous.
Three states -- Colorado, Washington and Oregon
-- have marijuana legalization proposals on the ballot, and it won't be
surprising if at least one of them passes. Not medical marijuana, mind
you, but the regulation and selling of small quantities for recreational
use.
If you thought Nirvana and Pearl Jam put Seattle on the map, legal marijuana will make it out of this world.
And I promise that will
be my last pot joke, although being silly about pot illustrates why it's
taken this long for the country to begin adult conversations about
marijuana, and not just knee-jerk rhetoric based on fear instead of
facts. When President Nixon signed the Comprehensive Drug Abuse
Prevention and Control Act, officially starting the so-called war on
drugs, it was largely in response to pot-smoking hippies and Vietnam
vets coming home addicted to heroin.
Nixon budgeted $100 million to fight what he called public enemy No. 1 -- illegal drugs. In 2010, it was $15 billion. A trillion dollars has been spent on the war on drugs since it began. Two government reports released last year had difficulty proving the billions being spent are making a big difference.
In 1970, the federal
government listed pot to be more harmful than cocaine and meth. We now
know that isn't true. That's not to say legalizing pot is without risks;
it has been shown to impair concentration. But one study found alcohol was by far the most dangerous drug, followed by heroin and crack. Weed rated far down the list.
So why do we continue to allow the Nixon administration's hatred of hippies to influence what we think about drug usage today?
I don't know how much or
how little tax revenue is actually going to come from state-sanctioned
pot, but to me that's not the point.
The issue isn't how much
money the government can make from pot sales, but rather, are the
reasons why pot was originally classified as illegal still valid today?
Now that we have studies that debunk the myth of longtime impairment from using pot,
now that we see how ineffective the government has been in keeping pot
off the streets, now that we have seen the gangland violence of drug
cartels, should we still be looking at marijuana the way we did 40 years
ago?
In the 1928 presidential
election, Herbert Hoover crushed his opponent, Al Smith, winning 40
states, in part because Smith was demonized as "the cocktail president."
Smith was in favor of repealing the 18th Amendment -- Prohibition --
while Hoover believed he must enforce the law. It's hard to imagine
today, but alcohol was so vilified then there was an actual Prohibition
Party dedicated to keeping it illegal. Members even endorsed their own
candidate for president.
Yet, just five years
after that election, alcohol was legal. And even though Hoover lost his
bid for re-election, he did so supporting the repeal.
That's how quickly things can change.
And that bit of history
is what makes the results of these three states so fascinating. No one
expects President Obama or Mitt Romney to come out in support of
legalized marijuana within the next few days, but what will the
conversation be like four years from now?
If the nation can go
from upholding Prohibition to "drink up" in an election cycle, why
couldn't 2016 feature the first pro-pot president?
Especially if next
week's results are, shall we say, favorable? Voting for a candidate
solely because he or she lets you light up is stupid, but if all other
things are equal, are we ready to vote to legalize marijuana the way our
grandparents voted to legalize alcohol?
I think we are, but then one could say I'm a bit biased.
Original Article Link Below
http://edition.cnn.com/2012/10/30/opinion/granderson-legalize-pot/index.html
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