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US: The New Politics of Pot

Joel Stein

Time Magazine (US)

Monday 04 Nov 2002

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Can It Go Legit? How the People Who Brought You Medical Marijuana Have Set
Their Sights on Lifting the Ban for Everyone

The drug czar is ready for pro wrestling. He already has the name, and now
he's got the prefight talk down cold. In every speech he makes in Nevada,
where Bush appointee John Walters has traveled to fight an initiative that
would legalize marijuana, he calls out his three sworn enemies as if he
were Tupac Shakur. The czar has a problem with billionaire philanthropists
George Soros, Peter Lewis and John Sperling, who have bankrolled the
pro-pot movement, and he wants everyone to know he's ready for battle. At
an Elks lodge meeting in Las Vegas, he ticks off their names and says,
"These people use ignorance and their overwhelming amount of money to
influence the electorate. You don't hide behind money and refuse to talk
and hire underlings and not stand up and speak for yourself," he says. By
the end of a similar speech at a drug-treatment center in Reno, he says,
"Let's stop hiding. I'm here. Where are you?" The czar is bringing it on.

Before the new czar was appointed in December, it was the government's
preference not to address the legalizers. But the pro-pot movement has
gained so much ground they can't be ignored as a fringe
element. Americans, it turns out, aren't conflicted in their attitude
toward marijuana. They want it illegal but not really enforced. A
Time/cnn poll last week found that only 34% want pot to be totally
legalized ( the percentage has almost doubled since 1986 ). But a vast
majority have become mellow about official loopholes: 80% think it's
O.K. to dispense pot for medical purposes, and 72% think people caught
with it for recreational use should get off with only a fine. That seeming
paradox has left a huge opening for pro-pot people to exploit. Eight
states allow medical marijuana, and a handful of states have reduced the
sentences for pot smokers to almost nothing.

The midterm election Nov. 5 has lighted up the issue even more. While
control of the House hangs in the balance and the race for the Senate is a
dead heat, the political trend for marijuana is clear: support is
gaining. The most interesting battles on the November ballot are over pot
initiatives: to allow the city of San Francisco to grow and distribute
medical marijuana, to replace jail with rehab in Ohio and decriminalize
marijuana use in Arizona. Many of these proposals are relatively modest,
but the pro-pot forces are also raising the stakes. In spite of the
electorate's contentment with the paradox of loose enforcement, some
particularly powerful people on both sides have taken extreme viewpoints in
an effort to end the political stalemate and force Americans to
choose. Either pot is not so bad and should be legal, or people should be
arrested for smoking it. The battlefield for the showdown is Nevada, where
Question 9 would allow adults to possess up to 3 oz. of pot for personal
use. In fact, the state government would set up a legal market for buying
and selling pot. To almost everyone's surprise, the race is too close to
call.

While the pro-pot forces have pushed their agenda at the polls, opponents
have tried to use legal muscle to fight back. After a Supreme Court
decision last year reiterating that federal drug laws trumped state ones,
the Drug Enforcement Administration sent federal agents to California to
bust medical-marijuana growers, a move that tended to outrage California
voters who had approved this use. In fact, as the Administration pushes
harder against the pro-pot forces, pot supporters seem to gain ground.

Among the biggest pro-pot players, medical marijuana was actually kind of a
ruse. Sure, there are sick people who really feel they need marijuana to
numb pain, relieve the eye pressure of glaucoma, calm muscle spasms or get
the munchies to help with aids wasting. But they are not the people who
put the debate into high gear. A few years ago, the Drug Policy
Alliance--an organization founded by billionaire philanthropist Soros, who
wants to legalize marijuana and reform drug laws by replacing jail time
with rehab--decided it would fund only those initiatives that could be
won. So the group ran a bunch of polls to find out how America feels about
the drug wars, and the reformers came up way short on everything but three
policies: people preferred treatment over incarceration in some cases,
people hated property forfeiture, and an overwhelming majority felt medical
marijuana should be legal.

So Soros & Co. set out to get medical-marijuana legislation. The fight
has done quite well, especially when, to their surprise, the Federal
Government took the bait and started arresting little old ladies and
storming peaceful pot-growing cooperatives. In fact, the pro-pot people
have done well enough that some of them feel it is time to drop the ruse
and fight for full legalization. Plus, with Britain experimenting with a
"seize and warn" policy instead of arresting pot smokers and Canada
flirting with doing the same, the blunt-friendly were ready to take off the
camouflage and fight. And where else to try this but in Nevada?

That's why the czar is in Vegas, sitting in a room at the Venetian Hotel
guarded by U.S. marshals. The czar, a smart, likable, earnest man who
believes he can help Americans by fighting the drug war, is derided by the
opposition as "Bill Bennett's Mini-Me." Indeed, he worked for Bennett under
Reagan in the Department of Education and then as Bennett's deputy drug
czar in the first Bush Administration. When George W. appointed him, the
President told the czar to watch the movie Traffic as a way to understand
the problem. The czar, who told Time he has never smoked pot, believes
marijuana to be not only a gateway drug but also incredibly detrimental in
its own right--causing driving accidents, domestic violence, health risks
and crippling addiction. He thinks the legalization argument is absurd,
especially when proposed by libertarian Republicans who are so doctrinaire
he finds them to be outside his party. "This is great talk at 2 a.m. in a
dorm room, that all laws should be consistent. But the real world isn't
consistent. It's ludicrous to say we have a great deal of problems from
the use of alcohol so we should multiply that with marijuana," he says. It
doesn't take long for him to get back to the three billionaires: "It's
unprecedented, the amount of money put in by such a small amount of people
over one issue."

The marijuana legalizers, including the billionaires Walters vilifies,
don't have much kinder things to say about him. In fact, for old rich men,
they can sound a lot like Tupac. One of them, Sperling, 81, is founder of
the highly profitable nationwide chain the University of Phoenix. He has
spent $13 million on drug-reform campaigns and lots of other money on other
pet projects, including cloning his cat. "Mr. Walters is a pathetic
drug-war soul who is defending a whole catalog of horrors he's indifferent
to," Sperling says from his office in Phoenix, Ariz. "The government's
drug-reform policy is driven by a Fundamentalist Christian sense of
morality that sees any of these illegal substances used as evil." Sperling
says he smoked pot to combat pain associated with the cancer he fought in
the 1960s.

Lewis, 68, former ceo of Progressive, an insurance company, doesn't despise
the czar quite as much, but he has been battling him even harder. The
reasons for Lewis are more straightforward. He has been referred to by
colleagues as a "functional pothead." He spends half the year on a $16.5
million, 255-ft. yacht, where he smokes pot regularly; he even got
arrested in New Zealand on drug charges a few years ago, he told the Plain
Dealer. He is one of the main backers of the radical Nevada proposal,
having given heaps of money to the Marijuana Policy Project, which is
running Question 9 there. "The absurdity of its illegality has been clear
to me for some time. I learned about pot from my kids and realized it was
a lot better than Scotch, and I loved the Scotch. Then I went to my
doctor, and he said, 'I'm thrilled. You're drinking too much. You're much
better off doing pot than drinking.'"

Soros ( who has smoked pot but no longer does ) declined to be interviewed,
and like the rest of the troika, he won't debate Walters. They are
probably refusing for two reasons: 1 ) they would likely lose, since none
of them are politicians; and 2 ) if you were going around the world on a
255-ft. yacht, would you list "Drug Czar" as one of your ports of call?

So instead they fight federal policy with initiative after initiative,
while also defending local pro-pot laws. Their side got a major media
boost in California in September, when federal agents busted Santa Cruz's
Wo/Men's Alliance for Medical Marijuana in an early-morning raid. The feds
dragged the farm's owners, who were legally growing pot under California
law, to a federal building in San Jose for breaking federal law and held a
paraplegic resident at the farm for hours. "I opened my eyes to see five
federal agents pointing assault rifles at my head. 'Get your hands over
your head. Get up. Get up.' I took the respirator off my face, and I
explained to them that I'm paralyzed," said Suzanne Pheil, 44, who is
disabled by the effects of postpolio syndrome. Her story was broadcast
everywhere, since the pro-pot people had basically been waiting for her to
be harassed, punching every phone number on their media list minutes after
the raid. Pot people, surprisingly, can move pretty fast when they want to.

The bust couldn't have gone better for the pot folks. California attorney
general Bill Lockyer fired off an angry letter to dea chief Asa Hutchinson,
who wrote back saying that federal law allows the feds to seize
pot. "During the Clinton years they didn't do this," says Lockyer. "It
disappointed me that they would be using precious resources to act like a
bunch of bullies." San Jose police chief William Lansdowne was so annoyed
by the raid that he withdrew his officers from the local dea task force,
ending 15 years of close work. Even Governor Gray Davis, who has been
quiet on the marijuana issue, expressed concern over the feds' bust. A
week after the raid, Santa Cruz officials gathered at city hall to
supervise public distribution of marijuana to members of the Wo/Men's
Alliance for Medical Marijuana in front of TV crews, a way of giving
Washington the finger.

To many Republicans, this looks like bad politics for Bush. "It seems to
me about as far from Compassionate Conservatism as you can get," says
former Nixon and Reagan aide Lyn Nofziger. "There are an awful lot of
people in their 50s and younger who smoked pot when they were younger and
don't look on it as something that destroyed their lives. I think there is
a lot more open-mindedness toward pot than there used to be."

In Nevada, popular Republican Governor Kenny Guinn refuses to take a stand
on Question 9, the pot-legalization amendment to the state constitution,
saying he'll go with whatever the people vote for. And he won't really
have to worry about it for a while, since the constitutional amendment will
go into effect only if Nevadans vote yes on Nov. 5 and again in 2004. So
Guinn may be smart to stay out of the debate, because the rhetoric from
both sides has gone out of control. The drug czar's latest commercial,
which was actually focus-grouped with teens and their parents, shows two
teens getting stoned in their father's study, talking apathetically about a
bunch of stuff. One pulls out a gun from his dad's drawer, the other asks
lazily if it's loaded, and the gun-toting teen shrugs and shoots the other
kid. "The suggestion is not to say too many children are being shot in
their dens who are marijuana users," Walters said. "It's meant to show
that marijuana alters your ability to use judgment." In the other camp,
many of the workers lied to voters in the course of gathering signatures to
get Question 9 on the ballot, saying it was a medical-marijuana
proposition, according to several pro-pot Nevadans. The two camps even
fight regularly about how many joints can be made from 3 oz. of pot, the
proposed legal maximum. The pro-pot people claim 80, while the anti-pot
people carry around bags of 250 joints to illustrate their case. Yes, moms
across the state are spending large parts of their nights rolling parsley
and oregano.

The Marijuana Policy Project in Nevada has a chance partly because it is
far better organized than its scattered opposition. The project made a
smart move in hiring Billy Rogers, a Democratic political consultant from
Texas, to run the Nevada campaign. Rogers sends people door to door daily
to target supporters he can call on Election Day and bus to voting
booths. This could make the difference in what the polls show is an almost
evenly split electorate. Rogers' office is situated in a Vegas strip mall,
just above an Asian massage parlor, which is right next to a children's
tutoring center, which is all you need to know to understand why the
project is staging this fight in Nevada. The office looks more like a
sorority fund drive than a '60s dorm room. Posters drawn by children
depict images like a teddy bear with a heart labeled vote yes on
9. Rogers, wearing a collarless white shirt, is still at work at 1 a.m.,
editing a commercial. "In college we'd sit around and talk about
this--that when we grew up we were going to change these laws. And now
we're doing it," he says. Rogers, who says he hasn't smoked pot in 15
years, doesn't have a personal connection to the fight, but it's pretty
easy to get him into a James Carville mood. When he talks about Walters'
oft repeated claim ( an assertion shared by the National Institute on Drug
Abuse ) that marijuana has much higher levels of tetrahydrocannabinol ( thc
) than it used to, that, in Walters' words, "it's not your father's
marijuana," Rogers goes ballistic. "It's a plant. What--it's not your
father's broccoli? Its genetic structure hasn't changed in 30 years," he
says, eating steak for a late-night meal. "These guys will say
anything. If I had a billion-dollar budget, I'd say anything to stay in
business."

That's one of the major conspiracy theories of the pro-legalization
movement--a rant right out of the Eisenhower era, that the government is
keeping pot illegal so it can maintain its giant drug-war bureaucracy. Its
advocates also believe--as put forth directly in the pro-medical marijuana
commercials of billionaire independent New York gubernatorial candidate Tom
Golisano--that politicians are in the pocket of the pharmaceutical
companies, who fear marijuana is such good medicine that their own products
will suffer.

The pro-legalization forces also believe, more convincingly, that the right
wing of the Republican Party connects drug use with sin and radicalism and
the failure of the family. "I've known John Walters for about 10 years,
and I don't think this is about drugs for him," says Ethan Nadelmann, head
of the Drug Policy Alliance. "John is a reactionary ideologue. It's the
broader battle about what we tell kids about life. It's a vehicle for
promoting a tougher, meaner approach to life and government." Democratic
Congressman Barney Frank of Massachusetts claims the war on drugs is really
a war against the Other. "Alcohol does more damage in many areas of
society than drugs, particularly marijuana, but we treat marijuana as much
worse, and that's because it's associated with the counterculture."

Some Republicans, however, are ready to legalize medical marijuana. Texas
Congressman Ron Paul, a doctor and onetime Libertarian Party presidential
candidate, has been fighting for medical marijuana. "From a humanitarian
standpoint, people should never be denied this kind of help," says
Paul. But fellow Republican Hutchinson stands behind the decision to
prosecute. "Why would they want to authorize behavior under state law that
is still a violation of federal law?" he says. "It endangers a population,
to me. It gives the green light on the one hand and a go-to-jail ticket on
the other."

Among cops and other law enforcers, there are sharp divisions too. Some,
like Joseph D. McNamara, a former San Jose police chief and now a Hoover
Institution fellow, call for an end to the criminalization of
marijuana. "Most of the police officers I hired during the 15 years I was
police chief had tried it," says McNamara. Like many pot legalizers, he
believes the system, which he says arrests more people for marijuana than
for any other drug, is racist. "Ninety million Americans have tried
marijuana. When you look at who's going to jail, it is overwhelmingly
disproportionate--it's Latinos and blacks." Not surprisingly, the topic is
radioactive in the police profession. Andy Anderson, who was head of his
state's largest cop organization, the Nevada Conference of Police and
Sheriffs, announced that his board members unanimously supported the
pro-pot initiative so they could focus on more serious crimes. A few days
later, Anderson was forced to resign. The voice for Nevada cops then
became Gary Booker, deputy district attorney in charge of the
vehicular-crimes unit, until he told members of the press he believed the
wild claims of political extremist Lyndon LaRouche that Soros is
pro-legalization because he bankrolls drug cartels. When talking to Time
at the Elks lodge where he introduced the drug czar, Booker awkwardly tried
to explain away his statement: "The word cartel was used, not drug. A
cartel is a group of businessmen who control price, and that's what we've
got here. Three or four guys are controlling the thing." He too stepped
out of the role of Nevada police spokesman.

The pro-pot people feel that victory--even if it comes not this year and
not in Nevada--is inevitable. Each year there are fewer members of the
pre-boomer generation, who tend not to distinguish between heroin and
pot. In 1983, only 31% of Americans surveyed had tried pot; the new
Time/cnn poll puts the figure at 47%. And though pot use among teens is
down from its '70s highs, parents sneaking joints when their kids are
asleep is a fresh phenomenon. But the polls show that Americans still
cling to pot's forbidden status, which is why the pro-pot people are
working so hard. "You would think you would get a change, but you're not
going to," says Charles Whitebread, a law professor at the University of
Southern California who has written extensively on marijuana law. "Even
though it did nothing to them, the fear that it will somehow pollute their
children has made some of the people who used marijuana extremely freely
now say, 'Oh, gee, I wouldn't be in favor of the change in the legal status
of marijuana.'" It may be that the major dividing line between the pro- and
anti-legalizers is not party affiliation but parental status. And even
among parents, moms see more against pot than dads.

So, barring another wave of '60s-like radicalism or a lot more poorly
thought-out co-op busts by the feds, Americans' complicated feelings about
pot aren't going to be reconciled overnight. And recent studies showing
that marijuana can have addictive properties, though in a small percentage
of cases, is going to make some parents more nervous about their kids
turning into potheads. While alcohol and cigarettes may be more dangerous,
a lot of parents would rather smell beer on their kid's breath than have a
29-year-old living at home, eating Cheetos and watching SpongeBob.

 

 

 

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