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- From: gabe@happy.cc.utexas.edu (Gabriel Demombynes)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs,alt.hemp,alt.drugs
- Subject: Article on Legalization
- Date: 11 Mar 1994 14:42:57 -0600
- Message-ID: <2lql4h$qqv@happy.cc.utexas.edu>
-
- I want to thank everyone who responded to my "Notable People for
- Legalization" request. You all were very helpful. Here's my column that
- was published Thursday in the Daily Texan, the student paper here at UT.
- Most of the research info came from Internet sources.
-
- *********
- Support swells for legal drugs
-
- Gabriel Demombynes
- TEXAN COLUMNIST
-
- In recent months, discussion of drug legalization has vaulted from the
- pages of High Times and obscure academic journals onto the front page of
- The New York Times. Prominent people are talking seriously about changing
- the direction of America's drug policy.
- The shift in sentiment can be traced to an effort begun a year ago in
- California. Several notable names gathered at Stanford University's Hoover
- institution to draft and sign a letter demanding a fresh look at drug
- policy.
- The original signatories included Nobel-laureate economist Milton
- Friedman, former Secretary of State George Shultz, Baltimore Mayor Kurt
- Schmoke and about 20 others.
- Since the initial meeting, hundreds of doctors, businessmen, attorneys,
- educators, judges and members of the clergy have signed the resolution.
- Among them are the mayors and police chiefs of San Francisco, Oakland and
- San Jose; 20/20 correspondent Hugh Downs; and members of the California
- Medical Association.
- On Feb. 27, The New York Times printed a similar proclamation by another
- Nobel laureate, Gabriel Garcia Marquez. He's convinced more than 2,000 of
- his Latin American intellectual buddies to sign the statement declaring
- that we must "focus on the various ways in which legalization can be
- administered. This means putting an end to the self-seeking, pernicious,
- useless war that the consuming countries have inflicted on us."
- To protest the inanity of our drug policy, roughly 50 of the nation's
- 680 federal judges now refuse to accept drug cases. One researcher surveyed
- 450 judges, prosecutors, and defense attorneys and found that 95 percent
- believe "the drug war has failed and more innovative measures are needed."
- The Feb. 28 Time included a pro-legalization column by respected writer
- Barbara Ehrenreich. Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders says that we would
- "markedly reduce our crime rate" by legalizing drug use. The Economist last
- year editorialized in favor of legalization. Conservative pundit William
- Buckley has said, "If you had all the facts, you would agree like me that
- marijuana should be legal."
- This political change has begun to gather momentum because the Hoover
- signatories explicitly shied away from advocating a specific new policy.
- Some favor merely making marijuana available for medical uses. Others want
- comprehensive drug legalization.
- All are part of the movement -- which has made for some strange
- bedfellows. Just imagine Friedman phoning up Garcia Marquez:
- Friedman: "Gabriel, it's Milt. What's say you and me and Joy Elders get
- together to discuss this drug legalization stuff?"
- Garcia Marquez: "Last night I awoke from the desperate slumber of a man
- who has tasted his lover's tears. In my bliss I felt a prescient
- understanding. Next Tuesday two men and a woman will meet on the zocalo in
- San Cristobal. While passionate men die on the streets in the name of
- revolution, the three friends will sip cafe con leche and whisper their
- desires."
- Friedman: "OK, so I'll see you Tuesday. But you're buying. I don't carry
- any of that Mexican funny money."
- The curious coalition shows no sign of breaking up. A proposal now being
- considered in Congress would charge a national commission with recommending
- a new national drug policy. The resolution has 17 co-sponsors in the House
- and five backers in the Senate.
- Mark Smith, UT assistant professor of American studies and history,
- teaches a class in the "Cultural History of Alcohol and Drugs." He says the
- hardliners "have been discredited because they've been in power and their
- results have been absurd."
- It's already possible to talk about legalization without having a "Dope
- Fiend" label pasted across one's chest. Perhaps within the next decade the
- nation will adopt a drug policy rooted in reason rather than hysteria.
- Demombynes is a Plan II/civil engineering senior.
-
- ******
- Thanks again,
- Gabe
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