Why Has Marijuana Remained Illegal for Over 70 Years?

Opinion by NORML
(June 23, 2009) in Society / Drug Law

Last week Breckenridge Colorado joined the growing chorus of municipalities across America seeking to create a sensible cannabis policy (one, that in principle, is similar to that of alcohol in the recognition between acceptable, responsible adult use and abuse). Even though Colorado is already one of the 13 states that have decriminalized possession amounts of cannabis, following Denver’s lead, Breckenridge voters will soon be asked to make cannabis both a lowest law enforcement priority and the ‘penalty’ for possessing it– nothing. Nada. No fine, no criminal record.

A bright and enthusiastic lawyer with a young and growing family in Breckenridge is one of the chief advocates for this initiative, and in an ongoing ‘The Law and Marijuana‘ series of essays submitted by attorneys from the NORML Legal Committee to be exclusively published by the organization, Sean McAllister opines about why he thinks cannabis prohibition has lasted over 70 years.

-AStP

————————–
By Sean T. McAllister, Esq., Member, NORML Legal Committee (Breckenridge, CO)



Marijuana remains illegal even though public attitudes are clearly changing on this topic. It is illegal even though 100 million Americans have smoked it and suffered little if any negative side effects. It is illegal even though 40% or more of Americans currently support legalization. It is illegal even though it is not physically addictive; you cannot overdose on marijuana; and the dependency rate of marijuana is lower than alcohol.

Marijuana remains illegal even though prohibition is incredibly expensive. The federal government spends at least $10 billion per year specifically on marijuana prohibition. Approximately 60,000 people are in prisons in America on marijuana violations only. If all 15-25 million Americans who smoke marijuana monthly were imprisoned, the country would spend $365 billion per year to incarcerate these people. Considering the country could reap approximately $6.2 billion per year if marijuana were taxed and regulated like alcohol, the war on marijuana easily costs somewhere in the neighborhood of $20 billion per year.

Marijuana remains illegal even though prohibition has miserably failed. After 35 years of a war on drugs largely targeting marijuana, the same number of high school students now say marijuana is easy to get and they had used it as answered those question in the affirmative in 1975. It remains illegal even though the Obama administration has declared an end to the “war on drugs,” while at the same time laughing off marijuana legalization.

Marijuana prohibition continues even though it empowers Mexican drug cartels. Approximately 60-70% of the profit of Mexican drug cartels comes from marijuana sales. If marijuana were taxed and regulated, this black market would virtually disappear, Mexican drug cartels would be much weaker, and our border would be much more secure.

Despite these facts, most politicians continue support marijuana prohibition. Commission after commission and newspaper editorial board after board may endorse marijuana legalization, but it continues to be ignored in state capitals. Grassroots activism does a great job keeping this issue in the press, but politicians continue to ignore it. Few politicians see it in their narrow interests of reelection to come out in favor of legalization of marijuana.

What follows is a brief analysis of some of the factors that continue to propagate the inertia of marijuana prohibition:

Facts don’t matter

When it comes to marijuana, statistics don’t seem to matter. Costs don’t matter. As noted above, no matter how many billions per year it costs to enforce marijuana prohibition, there seems to be no cost too high to prohibit it. Prohibitionist seem to be saying that there is no cost to high to attempt to limit marijuana use.

Overall use and teen use is lower in countries that have legalized (Amsterdam) or fully decriminalized marijuana (Portugal, Spain, Britian) than in the United States. There is no real evidence that marijuana is a gateway drug (in fact research shows that marijuana is largely a terminus drug - meaning people use nothing more than marijuana throughout their lives).

In Colorado alone, 13,000 people are arrested every year on marijuana charges. Another few hundred are in prison on marijuana charges. In total, Colorado spends around $85 million dollars per year on marijuana prohibition. If Colorado taxed and regulated marijuana, the net gain for the state coffers would be $150 million per year.

None of this seems to matter to those in favor of prohibition. Instead, the debate turns on value judgments and justifications not tried to any empirical data. While those favoring legalization should continue to insist that we deal with empirical data, facts alone will not legalize marijuana.

Prohibition is a hangover of the 60s culture war

By far the greatest impediments to living in a world where marijuana is not criminalized are the left over stereotypes and culture wars from the 1960s and 70s. Those where the decades when the counterculture made widespread marijuana use synonymous with alternative lifestyles and an implicit rejection of mainstream traditional American values.

The classic narrative of drug use in America is that while it may have started out as an innocent and idealized behavior in the 60s, the 70s and early 80s saw the “drug culture” deteriorate into a narcissistic world of selfishness and excess. The irresponsibility of some early users saddled the next several generations with the general notion that marijuana users were not good citizens and their lifestyles did not produce healthy communities and families. Simply put, prohibitionist have succeeded in branding marijuana users as irresponsible and not serious. That perception must change, even if it means more people “coming out of the closet” and showing that marijuana use can occur in conjunction with healthy, intelligent lifestyles.

Marijuana Prohibition Criminalizes Youth and Leads to Skewed Electoral Results

The classic pattern of marijuana use is that people begin experiment with marijuana near the end of high school. Experimentation steadily tappers off through their late 20s and for most people by their mid-30s, marijuana use is a rare or nonexistent experience. As people acquire more responsibility (marriage, children, mortgage), they find less room in their lives for marijuana.

This trend also explains why political change is so hard. As marijuana withers from adults’ habits, they are less likely to pursue or advocate for reform. By a person’s mid-30s, he or she has already quit using marijuana so they have no incentive to seek its legalization. This leads to the general atmosphere of marijuana reform, which is that too few people remain directly affected throughout their lifetimes so as to care about changing marijuana laws. Those that continue to “care,” perhaps care too much and are seen as radicals by the establishment. The reform movement needs to engage past users to help change marijuana laws.

Free rider problem and Selective Enforcement

For those that will continue to use marijuana throughout their lifetime (perhaps 6%-10% of users), there also is little incentive to advocate for legalization. As few as 2 in 100 people ever suffer criminal justice sanctions as a consequence of their marijuana use. Because so few stakeholders feel the effects of prohibition, those with the most at stake in legalization are not in the streets demanding change. The difference between the gay rights movement and marijuana proponents is that by advocating for marijuana rights people immediately subject themselves to criminal prosecution – something no longer possible for gay activists.

Related to the free rider problem is the low stakes involved in most marijuana arrests. With the exception of a few states in the deep south and Utah, in most places marijuana arrests result in a small fine and perhaps community service and/or drug counseling. The popular stereotype that our prisons are filled with people who only smoked marijuana cigarettes is not accurate. Small time users generally do not go to jail, but cultivators and distributors do. Therefore, the lack of serious sanctions has also deflated the potential movement against injustice because the stakes are so small. Why would a doctor or lawyer risk his or her reputation seeking to legalize marijuana when the sanctions are already so slight? Again, these free riders need to be convinced that advocating for marijuana legalization is a “gateway issue” to reforming the larger failed drug war and that they may not avoid prosecution forever.

Inability to have an honest discussion about drugs – lack of acknowledgement of responsible use

Another barrier to societal acceptance of marijuana is the inability to have an honest dialogue about the potential positive benefits of marijuana use. Universally, when drugs and marijuana are discussed in public, the frame of debate is that marijuana use is a self-destructive and unhealthy activity. There is little public acknowledgement that for millions of people occasional and responsible marijuana use has greatly enhanced their lives, such as by making a walk in nature powerfully introspective, by resulting in riotous laughter, or by making their sex lives more fulfilling. Instead, those who are usually the most outspoken about marijuana’s positive aspects tend to preach in a manner that makes marijuana use out to be an unmitigated good, refusing to acknowledge any negative consequences of abuse. The message of legalization must be that while legalization may marginally increase some irresponsible behavior, the savings from ending the war on marijuana will far outstrip any harms.

Just say no is an easy message for parents

Parents have always had a hard time discussing drug use with their children. Many parents are conflicted on this issue because a large percentage of parents once experimented with marijuana. Keeping marijuana illegal gives parents an unassailable reason why their kids should not use it: because it is illegal. The simplicity and utility of prohibition is a major reason that many parents passively support it, even if they privately don’t believe marijuana is harmful. Parents need to be shown alternative methods for keeping their children away from marijuana, such as science based drug education.

A long term minority without a constitutional right protecting them

The main Constitutional defense to marijuana prosecution is that it violates rights to privacy under the 5th and 14th Amendment. Unfortunately, other than Alaska, most experts believe that state privacy rights are not strong enough to protect marijuana use in your own home. There are no other significant constitutional guarantees that can be expected to protect marijuana users. Unlike racial minorities or gays and lesbians, it is unlikely that marijuana users can seek refuge in Constitutional clauses for their activities. With only 15-25 million regular users, about 10%-15% of all adults in America, it is unlikely that a majority of American adults will ever use marijuana on a regular basis as long as it is illegal. Without a constitutional right to protect them, it is unlikely they will be able to muster electoral majorities in the next 10-15 years to end their persecution.

Discomfort with Freedom

Despite America being the “land of the free and home of the brave,” in practice there appears to be a significant resistance and discomfort with giving people the freedom to make potentially bad choices. Regardless of how many can use marijuana safely or responsibly, if some abuse it, many will oppose legalizing it. This inherent discomfort with the actual practice of freedom is a major cultural hurdle to legalization.

The many have always paid for the poor choices of the few. Marijuana prohibition is by definition a preemptive war which seeks to criminalize all who use marijuana because a few may abuse it. While America seems to recognizing the futility of preemptive wars, there is still a strong undercurrent of support for this type of reaction.

Discomfort with Marijuana Intoxication Compared with Alcohol

There is no principled distinction between alcohol and marijuana intoxication. The Attorney General of Colorado says that people can drink alcohol in “sub-intoxicating doses,” which seems only possible for those chronic users of alcohol who are not affected by small amounts. Of course, the mild psychedelic or psychological aspects of the marijuana are different than alcohol. The paranoia resulting from marijuana use in a small number of users is among its most common psychological negative effect. While most people experience great insight and pleasure from the use of marijuana, others experience this paranoia. The general discomfort with psychedelic or spiritual experiences related to marijuana use lead many to a conclusion that it should not be widely used. Again, this is the many paying for the negative consequences of the few.

Conclusion

Marijuana legalization is gaining steam. I believe firmly that in my lifetime it will be legal for both medical and recreational purposes. What seems necessary at this point is to build a movement of tolerance for responsible marijuana users’ rights to be left alone. This tolerance will also need to acknowledge that a small minority of people may abuse their freedom if marijuana is legalized and that society will need to deal with those negative effects. Surely all the money saved on incarceration and prohibition would cover the costs of any negative effects of legalization. Rather than spending another generation toiling under a failed system, I hope we can end this failed preemptive war on marijuana soon. However, it will not end until the reform movement addresses the above concerns and transforms the debate back into a human-centered fact-based dialogue which focuses on reasonable solutions rather than ideology.

Sean T. McAllister, Esq.
McAllister Law Office, P.C.
PO Box 3903
Breckenridge, CO 80424
970-453-6594
www.mcallisterlawoffice.com

Regarding Opinion
Why Has Marijuana Remained Illegal for Over 70 Years?

Thank You for your Comment

We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

  • tRANIS
    Now that is a nice breakdown

    Excellent!
    Really all I have to say on that.
    The uses outweigh the abuses by far.

    - tRANISUS June 23, 2009 3:31PM

    Reply to this Recommend (1) Icon flag

    Thank You for your Comment

    We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

  • AB390
    Legalize Pot in California

    Nicely written piece!

    If you live in California and favor legalizing marijuana , YOU can make it happen. Tell your representatives to support California Assembly Bill 390. It's easy. Visit yes390.org

    - AB390US June 23, 2009 4:23PM

    Reply to this Recommend (1) Icon flag

    Thank You for your Comment

    We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

  • JD420
    You too can be a functional pot-head!

    Thank you Mr. McAllister for your comprehensive and accurate composition regarding the use of marijuana . I just wanted to add my two cents.

    I used to live every day with severe chronic back pain; since 1994, I received treatment for a herniated disc, including failed disc surgery (Laminectomy, 1999), DOZENS of epidural injections and, ultimately, a pain-management doctor's prescription to manage my pain through the use of Vicodin, Norco and Morphine. Eventually, a wiser doctor told me that my liver and/or kidneys would ultimately fail should I continue to use narcotics to manage the pain. Last October I broke my ankle and experienced tremendous pain on top of my chronic back troubles; it was then that I decided to try medical marijuana ("MJ"). I am now pain free and prescription narcotics free!!!

    I had not used MJ in nearly 20 years, and was a bit skeptical at first about using it. There is no psychedelic paranoid high, rather, through adjustments in dosage, I can control the pain and function in all daily tasks without being a 'stoner.'

    Now for some background: I am in my mid-40s, I have a BA in Political Science and Economics (Minor), I have a Juris Doctor from an ABA accredited Law School (studying for the Bar), I work for a respected national law firm, I have a wife and two teenage boys, own a house, two cars , go to movies on the weekend, pay my bills, don't ask for government handouts, etc... Without the (CA) medical marijuana laws, I would likely be on the national liver transplant list within the next 5 years.

    Medical Marijuana allows me to function pain free, sleep throughout the night, wake up without a hangover, live, love and laugh every day! Today, I officially join the chorus: “Legalize it!”

    - JD420US June 23, 2009 4:45PM

    Reply to this Recommend (1) Icon flag

    Thank You for your Comment

    We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

    • AB390
      Anti-marijuana bigotry

      The reason you feel compelled to justify your use, including an explanation of your social status as an upstanding citizen, is this: There is a tremendous amount of bigotry against marijuana . Anti-marijuana prejudice has been fueled by decades of government propaganda and misinformation.

      There are around 100 million Americans who have tried marijuana and 10 to 15 million who admit to using it regularly. Many of those who use it are productive, upstanding citizens.

      Government propaganda says that marijuana causes "amotivational syndrome", i.e., that it makes users unmotivated. If this were true, how could you explain Michael Phelps winning 14 gold medals? How could you explain the Beatles' success? Some other examples of very successful cannabis users: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Barack Obama, Jennifer Aniston, Louis Armstrong, Bessie Smith, Carlos Santana, Caroline Kennedy, John Updike, Roger Moore, Pablo Picasso, Sir Richard Branson, Hillary Clinton, Kirsten Dunst, etc. More examples can be found here: http://www.veryimportantpotheads.com /

      If you want marijuana to be legalized, taxed, and regulated for adults, YOU can make it happen. Tell your legislators to support California Assembly Bill 390. It's easy. Visit yes390.org

      - AB390US June 23, 2009 5:09PM

      Reply to this Recommend (0) Icon flag

      Thank You for your Comment

      We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

  • Clay
    Pharmaceutical Companies

    The main lobby against legalization is the pharmaceutical lobby,one of the three largest lobbies in DC,and willing to spend big bucks to keep marijuana from being classified as a medicine .
    When it is,and testing and studies support the many diversified medical uses for cannibus,they will lose billions from just the sale of sleep aids. Who would take a chemical sleep aid with death as a possible side effect when you can use a herbal remedy that you can grow your self?

    - ClayUS June 23, 2009 8:49PM

    Reply to this Recommend (1) Icon flag

    Thank You for your Comment

    We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

    • jxzac
      the prime reason..

      .is that marijuana is an unregulated commerce. It grows very easily. virtually anywhere. i do know people who do smoke it as self medication . they're prescribed drugs for their condition. i'm sure they're pretty expensive drugs. marijuana is virtually free. it would literally be a roadside weed if we were to legalize it's existence. from southern california to northern maine.

      - jxzac June 24, 2009 4:29AM

      Reply to this Recommend (0) Icon flag

      Thank You for your Comment

      We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

      • John411
        It's the people, not the corporations

        I don't think it has that much to do with lobbying from pharmaceutical companies or any other powerful corporations trying to keep their profits up. There is no evidence really that much of that has been going on, and it hasn't been necessary anyway because the majority of the people are still opposed to legalization. If the vast majority of voters were for legalizing marijuana we'd end up legalizing it pretty quickly. Politicians would push for it because it would win them votes.

        The thing is though that most voters are against legalizing marijuana, especially older voters who tend to actually go to the polls and vote. They tend to be strongly opposed to legalization and politicians don't want this demographic mad at them. Support for legalization is on the rise though and has been since the early 1990s. The old folks who are most opposed to legalizing pot are steadily dying off.

        Within a few years we'll start seeing that the polls are coming back consistently showing more than half of voters support legalization, and it won't be too many years from then that we will see it legalized. We might see some lobbying in earnest by the private prison industry and so on then but it won't be enough to stop marijuana from being legalized when that's what most of the voters who elect them want. It probably won't happen overnight once popular support is there, but it will happen regardless of any lobbying efforts against it.

        - John411US June 24, 2009 12:56PM

        Reply to this Recommend (0) Icon flag

        Thank You for your Comment

        We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

  • John411
    Not Enough Support Yet

    "It is illegal even though 40% or more of Americans currently support legalization."

    That's why it is still illegal. Support for legalizing marijuana has been climbing steadily since the early Nineties and may be climbing at an even faster rate now, but the majority are still opposed to legalizing it. Also, you need to take into consideration that the highest levels of support are among young people, 18 through 29, who unfortunately do not have a good track record of actually showing up to the polls and voting , especially at mid term elections like the one coming up in 2010. The greatest opposition is among older voters born before the "Baby Boom" which began in 1946. Most all of them are opposed to legalizing marijuana and when polled on this question the vast majority will respond that they are "strongly opposed" to legalizing. So, even when we hit the point that 51% of the voting aged public supports legalization that doesn't mean that 51% of those who actually go to the polls and vote will be for legalization.

    The pre-boomers born before 1946 are still a powerful group of voters and people from their ranks are still the most powerful in our lawmaking bodies, Congress and the Senate. The old politicians have seniority. They head up most of the powerful committees. They decide which bills make it to the floor for a vote. They pretty much dictate the party line and younger legislators are expected to fall in line and vote with their parties, which they generally will do most of the time. The average age of committee leaders in either the Senate or Congress is way up there in the high sixties. It seems like most people are under the impression that the Baby Boomers have been in power for a long time, but that really isn't the case when it comes to our federal laws. Old geezers who in most cases are strongly opposed to legalizing marijuana still call the shots in our federal law making bodies.

    "Pre-boomers" were 55 and older in 2000. They accounted for 28.3% of the voting aged public in 2000, but were probably a much greater percentage of the people who actually voted because older voters just tend to actually exercise their right to vote more than younger voters. This group is shrinking fast though. By 2010 they'll only be a little over 17% of voters, and by 2015 less than 13%.

    Just the shrinking of the pre-boomer group alone will bring support for legalizing marijuana up over 50% within a few years. More and more politicians will come on board then. It is no longer political suicide for them to admit they've smoked pot or to talk about the need to debate legalization. As time goes on we'll see more and more politicians coming out in support of legalization because they see a political advantage in doing so.

    Since older voters out vote younger voters and most support is among younger voters and most opposition is among older voters born before the Baby Boom, it may be that we need to see overall support climb up on over 60% before we see marijuana legalized, but it is going to be legalized. It is only a matter of time now. It's not going to happen when the majority of Americans are opposed to it, and it's probably not going to happen right away when we see polls coming back consistently showing greater than 50% of voters are for legalization, but it is going happen not too many years from when support passes that 50% mark. Our most powerful lawmakers are slowly but surely being replaced by people much more likely to support legalization or at least not be strongly opposed to it, and the strongest opposition to legalization among voters is dying off with the people who came of age before marijuana became popular in this country. Barring some huge change in the trends on attitudes about marijuana legalization we've seen since the early Nineties, we ought to see greater than 50% for legalization in the first half of the next decade. Then things are really going to heat up.

    One last quick point. There was a national Zogby poll and a California field poll where apparently more than 50% of those surveyed said they were for legalization. I don't know about the California poll but we've had several national polls on legalization recently putting support in the low to mid forties, so I can't put much stock in this one Zogby poll with 52% of those surveyed being for legalization. When we start seeing lots of different national polls consistently coming back showing greater than 50% support for legalization, then we'll know most voters are for legalization. One national poll with results so different from all the rest is not enough.

    - John411US June 24, 2009 12:16PM

    Reply to this Recommend (0) Icon flag

    Thank You for your Comment

    We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

  • hotfootrun
    overdose or overindulgence

    if im not mistaken i believe marijuana was the cash crop of the twenties and the first part of the thirties. The economic impact of hemp used in textile production is nothing new or freshly discovered. this was around a time when liquor was banned but some how e chose to make liquor legal and marijuana illegal somthings not right here. Swhat my kids will learn is that it's ok to drink yourself as long as the taxes were paid on the booze before you start drinking but you cant smoke till you passout and wake refreshed the next day because people would begin to smoke their nap sacks or their sleeping bags and we as american citizens cant allow that. HMM HMM. overdose or over indulge never heard of anyone over dosing on pot but alcahol poisoning is ok cocaine overdose fine herion overdose is ok too not to metion all the pharmacueticals you can fit in your fist or the dangerous and toxic chemicals used to produce most of the good we use almost everyday, paints varnishes.ok i understand now marijuana has bee illegal for 70 years because in this wonderful world we live in there are far worst way to die than by a plant that grows from the mother earth you have to take a ride on the harsher side of drugs so no go strait to the hard stuff cause pot will only keep you from loosing you mind no wonder it has worked for Amsterdanm all these years

    - hotfootrunUS June 28, 2009 1:07AM

    Reply to this Recommend (0) Icon flag

    Thank You for your Comment

    We review all comments before they're posted. For more on our comment policy, please see our FAQ.

See Related...