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- "As for drug proscription, I don't think it's possible except by
- inaugurating a society in which we wouldn't want to live. Legalize
- drugs for those over 21, and execute anyone convicted of selling
- drugs to a minor. That will leave us with about $25 billion per
- year to spend on therapy and education and will reduce the crime
- rate overnight by more than 50 per cent".
- - William F. Buckley, "National Review" magazine, Dec. 28, 1992, p 55
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: bwalker@polaris.unm.edu (Ben M. Walker)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs,talk.politics.drugs
- Subject: William Buckley for mj legalization
- Date: 9 Jun 1993 00:43:29 GMT
- Message-ID: <1v3bnhINNejv@lynx.unm.edu>
-
- This column by William F. Buckley was in The Albuquereque Journal
- this morning. It makes a good argument for marijuana legalization.
- William Buckley's columns are copyright by the Universal Press
- Syndicate.
-
- Legalization of Marijuana Long Overdue
-
- In a recent encounter, Edward Koch reminded his interlocuter that many
- years ago, Rep. Edward Koch had sought backing for a congressional
- investigation into the marijuana laws. I had been reminded by the former
- mayor of New York that along about 1967-68, the typical congressman
- had to reflect that any law requiring one or five or 10 years in jail as
- a penalty for being caught using marijuana endangered his own sons
- and daughters in college. Koch got the support he sought.
-
- But no meaningful reforms, if that is the word we are permitted to
- use, were enacted. In 1967, all drug arrests came to 121,000. Of these,
- marijuana arrests were one-half, 61,000. In 1991, all drug arrests
- were 1 million, marijuana 285,000.
-
- Background data give us perspective. Sixty-six million Americans
- have smoked marijuana, and at least 10 million - perhaps many more -
- continue to do so regularly. Comparable figures? Twenty-two million
- have used cocaine, 1.5 million still do; 150 million have used tobacco,
- 50 million still do. In 1976, 12 percent of children age 12-17 had used
- marijuana during the preceding month. By 1990, this figure was down to
- 5 percent. Over age 26, the percentage had not changed: 3.5 percent in
- 1976, 3.6 percent in 1990.
-
- The social vectors within the drug-law-reform movement have during the
- period since Koch asked for an investigation of federal marijuana laws
- moved as follows:
-
- -The informed public is gradually willing to acknowledge a difference
- between marijuana and more lethal drugs.
-
- -It is, however reluctantly, acknowledged that marijuana can have
- therapeutic uses, in particular to bring relief to those suffering
- from radiation or chemotherapy treatments for cancer.
-
- -There is a gradual awakening of the moral sensibilities of the
- alert members of the public. My own belated arrival on the scene stings
- in the memory. It came with a letter from a father in his early 30s
- who neither smoked nor drank, who had three children, was gainfully
- employed, and engaged in civic-minded activity - but liked on Saturday
- nights, to retreat to his woodshed and smoke a joint. He was caught at
- it, arrested, his house seized, and is now in jail, and sentenced to
- 10 years. It is hard to understand the moral disposition of the prosecuter
- who asked for that sentence, and the judge who imposed it.
-
- The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws has a
- program, which is to bring on the legalization of marijuana by the year
- 1997. The president of NORML, as it is everywhere referred to, is a man
- of considerable literary and polemical skills. Richard Cowan is a
- graduate of Yale and a co-founder of Young Americans for Freedom. He is
- here and there given to hyperbole, as when he cites the support given to
- the Partnership for a Drug Free America (PDFA) by corporate America as
- "reminiscent of the support given the Nazis by German industrialists."
-
- But Cowen is on to something, the root credentials of which are:
-
- -However one feels about legalizing cocaine, the case for legalizing
- marijuana is an entire world removed from that question.
-
- -The amount of money and of legal energy being given to prosecute
- hundreds of thousands of Americans who are caught with a few ounces of
- marijuana in their jeans simply makes no sense - the kindest way to put it.
- A sterner way to put it is that it is an outrage, an inposition on
- basic civil liberties and on the reasonable expenditure of social energy.
-
- -The point must surely come when the American people acknowledge that
- the drive against marijuana is not proving anything at all, given the
- contnuing availability of the drug and its (relatively modest) patronage.
-
- Richard Cowan makes a telling point, namely that the media are
- notoriously insensitive to the abuses of the narcocracy. "Most people
- are unaware of the nature of the marijuana prohibition in America
- today, the extent of its cruelty and injustice, and the threat that it
- poses to everyone's freedom. Ironically, many of those who are aware
- of the extent of the problem view it as being so great that they despair
- of being able to end it. Consequently, as an act of triage, they
- abandon it as a lost cause, to work on something which they view as
- at least possible." Like what? The rehabilitation of President Clinton?
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: eaw@hip.atr.co.jp (Eric Woudenberg)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
- Subject: William F. Buckley on the DEA's view of Marijuana
- Message-ID: <EAW.93Aug17210326@hsun08.hip.atr.co.jp>
- Date: 17 Aug 93 12:03:26 GMT
-
- [This news clipping was sent to me by my father, it's from a NJ
- newspaper, The Bergen Record, of August 4th. Apparently this is a
- syndicated column in which Buckley writes, called "From the Right"]
-
- The DEA Retort on Marijuana Misses Point
-
- A few weeks ago in this space, I argued that mounting evidence
- on the prosecution, indeed the persecution, of marijuana users
- increasingly substantiates a) that medical evidence doesn't justify
- treating marijuana as one would treat crack cocaine; b) that the time
- spent by law enforcement tracking down marijuana users is a waste of
- efforts; and c) the bloodlust by the Drug Enforcement Administration
- against marijuana users is being used to justify an abuse of civil
- rights and penology that in centuries ahead will bring to mind
- inquisitorial practices.
- The column in question stirred the extensive objections of
- Wayne J. Roques of DEA of the U.S. Department of Justice. He is listed
- as "demand reduction coordinator" in Miami, and he took the pains to
- address his letter of complaint to all of the sainted editors who use
- this coumn.
- Roques deserves a public reply to his public remonstrance,
- here undertaken on the understanding that is is not possible to cope
- with all the questions raised about marijuana use in a single column.
- But begin by acknowledging that the National Organization for
- the Reform of Marijuana Laws, or NORML, has never claimed that
- marijuana use is harmless, rather that it is no more harmful than the
- use of alcohol or tobacco or other over-the-counter drugs available to
- any adult.
- Roques stresses the addictive quality of marijuana and cites
- the work of "many scientists," but gives only one name.
- Roques gave the names of five medical authorities whom he
- considers expert on the toxicity of marijuana. But four of the five
- cited are not associated with marijuana research.
- But the current edition of the Merk Manual of Diagnosis and
- Therapy tells us that "there is still little evicence of biologic
- damage, even amoung relatively heavy users."
- On the civil liberties front, Roques challenges my assertion
- that sentences for marijuana users are simply disproportionate. But he
- confines himself to federal penalties, which are severe enough.
- Here is a report published by NORML in its journal, The
- Leaflet (March 1993): "Jimmy Montgomery was sentenced by an Oklahoma
- jury to life plus 16 years imprisonment for having two ounces of
- marijuana in his bedroom and two Colt revolvers under his pillow. The
- judge and D.A. thought better of it, and the sentence was reduced to
- 10 years. But the Beckham County prosecutor also filed papers to seize
- Jimmy's mother's house."
- And apropos the question whether marijuana can be medically
- useful, the balance of the story: "The result of an accident 20 years
- ago, Jim Montgomery is paralyzed from the center of his chest to his
- feet and confined to a wheelchair. Thelma Montgomery, Jim's mother,
- testified that doctors at a spinal cord injury hospital recommended
- marijuana to her son for relief of muscle spasms. The spasms got so
- bad at times Jimmy couldn't sit in the wheelchair. 'When Jim smoked
- marijuana, he didn't have to stay belted to his chair," his mother
- reported.
- The stories are endless. My own judgement is that it is as
- stupid for the person who does not use marijuana to experiment with it
- as it is for the non-smoker to take up tobacco. But those who don't
- take my advice should not be sent to Sing Sing.
-
- -- William F. Buckley Jr.
-