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OPINION

Kathleen Parker: Conservative mom leads drive to legalize medical marijuana

Wednesday, October 21, 2009
(Updated 3:00 am)
WASHINGTON --

In an act of merciful sanity, the Obama administration has made good on its promise to stop interfering with states that allow the medical use of marijuana.

Clink-clink, hear-hear, salud, cheers, et cetera, et cetera.

The announcement from Attorney General Eric Holder surely comes as a relief to the many who rely on cannabis to ease suffering from various ailments. This new, relaxed approach doesn't let drug traffickers off the hook. It merely means that 14 states that now provide for some medical marijuana uses no longer need fear federal raids on dispensaries and users operating under state law.

It's a good move, long overdue. But is it enough? Not quite.

The debate over whether Americans ought to have the right to be stupid-- or to make other people seem more interesting -- continues apace after 40 years of the (failed) "war on drugs."

Arguments for and against decriminalization of some or all drugs are familiar by now. Distilled to the basics, the drug war has empowered criminals while criminalizing otherwise law-abiding citizens and wasted billions that could have been better spent on education and rehabilitation.

By ever-greater numbers, Americans support decriminalizing at least marijuana, which millions admit to having used, including a couple of presidents and a Supreme Court justice. A recent Gallup poll found that 44 percent of Americans favor legalization for any purpose, not just medical, up from 31 percent in 2000.

The highest level of support, not surprisingly, is in the Western states and among self-described liberals, with 78 percent of liberals favoring decriminalization. But the shift toward a more-sensible national policy is no longer confined to the left. Nor is the long-haired stoner the face of the pro-pot lobby. Today's activist, more likely, doesn't have facial hair, but she does have kids.

Lately to the smallish conservative crowd, notably once led by anti-prohibitionist William F. Buckley, is Jessica Corry of Colorado, a married, pro-life Republican mom, soon to be "freedom fighter of the month" in High Times magazine.

Recent partakers undoubtedly will have to rub their eyes for a double take when they spot Corry, who spoke last month at a NORML conference (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) in San Francisco, wearing an American flag lapel pin, a triple strand of pearls and a gold marijuana leaf pin.

Another day, another stereotype in the dust bin.

In addition to writing and speaking to end marijuana prohibition, Corry, who does not smoke pot, is trying to organize Republican women around the cause. So far, she has commitments from 20 fellow Coloradoans, most of them lawyers, like Corry. Her husband, also an attorney, represents medical marijuana users.

Corry's arguments focus not only on the inhumanity of further punishing sick people who seek relief through pot, but also on protecting her own children should they decide to try marijuana someday. There's nothing like imagining one's own children as "criminals" to put irrational laws in perspective.

Corry is hardly alone and, in fact, may be part of a "toking point." (Is there a drug yet for "Tipping Point Fatigue"?) In its October issue, Marie Claire magazine featured "Stiletto Stoners" about accomplished career women who prefer to relax with pot. A September Fortune cover story, "Is Pot Already Legal?" examined the issue. In April, former (2006) Miss New Jersey, Georgine DiMaria, outed herself as a stealth marijuana user to treat her asthma.

States' rights and conservatism are old friends -- except when they're not. While many Republicans nurse a libertarian streak, the party has been selective in its support of federalist principles. The George W. Bush administration refused to honor states authorizing medical uses of cannabis, for instance, but aimed to return abortion and marriage issues to state jurisdictions.

In a column for the Colorado Daily, Corry argued that conservative principles of smaller government are in direct conflict with laws that try to control what we put into our bodies.

The decision not to raid dispensaries or punish people who benefit from marijuana use, though commendable, falls short of what's needed. At the very least, when jobs and cash are in short supply, legalizing marijuana would seem both prudent and profitable.

In 1929, the Women's Organization for National Prohibition Reform led the movement to end alcohol prohibition. Might women lead the next revolution in personal autonomy?

Keep those flutes and snifters (and bongs?) handy.

Kathleen Parker's e-mail address is kathleenparker@washpost.com

Comments

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Fred

October 21, 2009 - 5:53 am EDT

We Americans never seem to learn
Alcohol prohibition in the 1920's and 30's was a farce and the so-called war on drugs is no different.

Voice of Reason

October 21, 2009 - 12:48 pm EDT

Really? A farce? Where do you think drug addicts get money to purchase drugs? Hint: crime. Addicts will do anything, ANYTHING, to get the next high. That includes robbing, stealing, breaking in to houses, trading their cars for drugs and later reporting them as stolen, prostitution, etc. The wave of thought in this country continues to ignore this fact. And we are at a point in society when drugs are really cheap! Crack is terribly cheap, at a time when things like alcohol and cigarettes being taxed like crazy. Legalize drugs, and let the government tax them, and the price will skyrocket. Addicts aren't gonna go cold turkey due to cost, they'll have to commit MORE crimes to pay for their next hit. A Black Market for cheaper drugs will develop (like there exists for cigarettes and booze), which will lead to a continued "war" or those industries. What everyone needs to realize is, no matter what you do, legalize, tax, raise prices, ect., there will still be a huge problem due to how drugs affect people. Already legal, prescribed drugs are being abused at a terrible rate by our nations kids, what do you think will happen if you make crack easily obtainable to your 15 yr old kids?

Andrew Brod

October 21, 2009 - 9:47 pm EDT

No serious analyst believes that decriminalization or legalization will cause marijuana prices to skyrocket. Your whole scare-tactic argument is based on something that won't happen. In fact, you have it precisely backwards. It's the illegality of hard drugs that drives up their price and forces users to commit crimes. And I say "hard drug" because none is this is particularly relevant to marijuana, whose "addicts" are more likely to be found in beanbag chairs, giggling uncontrollably and eating Oreos dipped in Ranch dressing, than out in the streets committing crimes.

Andrew Brod

October 21, 2009 - 9:54 pm EDT

Someone calling himself "Voice of Reason" should care about what the experts say. One of the foremost experts on this is Harvard economist Jeffrey Miron. Here's a short essay by him:

http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/03/24/miron.legalization.drugs/

And here's his book:

http://www.amazon.com/Drug-War-Crimes-Consequences-Prohibition/dp/094599...

If "Voice of Reason" were more, um, reasonable, he/she would oppose legalization precisely because it would lower prices, thereby encouraging usage. The purpose of taxation of newly legalized drugs is to keep the price from getting too low.

ivynthemnts758

October 27, 2009 - 1:55 pm EDT

OK FIRST OF ALL THERE is a BIG differance between herb and CRACK..... S econg you say 15 yr old kid? OK lets say this kid has incurable cander and ALL his parents want is to see him Smile Laught and EAT...they Know someone who can make him some hemp seed FOOD or some herb made brownies then after eating he eats a big meal or small one then wow he syarts to get a lil bit better BECAUSE the herb filters his liver and starts to detoxify it...HMM now does his parents want some UPTIGHT BRAINWASHED IDIOT telling them he will smoke crack next week ??? go BACK to the book called The Empoer Wheres No Clothes READ it come back next week and repost for this childs poor parents ~k~ps jack herer wrote the book YOU CaN ReAD IT ONLINE FOR herb Dummies....

edalk

October 21, 2009 - 2:03 pm EDT

The article was about marijuana, which, even while illegal, causes less damage to society than alcohol use. Marijuana is not addictive, like crack, so users don't need it bad enough to steal, prostitute themselves or trade their cars for pot. Intelligent people can make the distinction between marijuana and cocaine.

Voice of Reason

October 21, 2009 - 2:31 pm EDT

But the problem still will exist. Marijuana is cheap now, but let the government start taxing it now and it won't be. Since it grows as a weed, there will be illegal growing/selling on the Black Market. The Gov't will want its share of the taxes, and law enforcement will still be forced to combat the problem.

Also, legalizing marijuana will create another problem- DUI's will go up significantly. Already, any amount of marijuana at all in your system while behind the wheel is a DUI, driving under the influence, that means more stoned drivers on the road. That's not something I want to see, not when already we have idiots driving while drinking at 2:30 in the afternoon while or children are on buses coming home from school.

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