aljazeera op-ed piece: 'up in smoke'

shap3less

Active Member
i came across this opinion piece today from aljazeera. http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/04/201242362552429495.html

Washington, DC - Towards the beginning of the cult classic Dazed & Confused, a high school senior named Slater, inquires of baby-faced freshman Mitch: "Are you cool?" What Slater is really asking - in this ode to 1970s youth and the counterculture - is: "Do you smoke pot?"

Ahhh, the 1970s. Back before Grover Norquist's Bedtime for Bonzo hero (some guy named Ronald Reagan) kicked the kooky, corrupt and thoroughly counterproductive War On Drugs into high gear. That's when - poof! - this country suddenly lost its collective mind, suffering a lapse in judgment that vaunted well past ill-advised and just beyond "they have weapons of mass destruction" to what might best be labelled "the mind of Ted Nugent".

As we pass the mythic, cultural marker of 4/20, it might be worth examining what we've wrought.
By any measure; economically, morally, democratically, we are far worse for allowing special interests - from the private prison lobby ("send us ten prisoners and we'll house one for free!") to the national security industry - take us down this road to perdition. It has spiritually hollowed us out, while erecting a prominent prison culture that makes The People's Republic of China seem like Woodstock.

This was made all the more evident recently when a Harvard economist, Jeffrey Miron, released a study [PDF] showing this exercise in dunderheadedness is costing us $13.7 billion a year. Writer Ernest A Canning points to to some statistics reported by Democracy Now! which make clear that "over the last 40 years, more than 45 million drug-related arrests have cost an estimated $1 trillion".

Hmm, I can't think of any better ways we could have spent this money, can you?

In fact, I know some neo-conservative types who seemingly kneel down in prayer a few times a day to make supple offerings to the graven idol of The Balanced Budget. You'd think they might notice numbers such as these and perhaps do something to save money being wasted on US citizens who take their mind-altering substances via the beer bong, as opposed to a funnel, filter or by simply reaching into a medically approved prescription pill bottle. Although, as Congressman Paul Ryan has discovered when weighing raising taxes on ascots vs slashing social programs, it's just so much easier and more fun to cut preventative care for kids than to honestly tackle real problems.
Legalise it?

Sadly, things have gotten no better under President Obama than they were under his predecessors. Back when he was running for president in 2008, Obama claimed to support the “basic concept of using medical marijuana for the same purposes and with the same controls as other drugs”. He even went further, claiming he would "not be using Justice Department resources to try to circumvent state laws”.

Yet, that is exactly what he has done, using the very same Justice Department to raid more than 100 marijuana dispensaries during his term. It is shameful, really.

The wasted potential of those who will go to our jails instead of our colleges (although at least Rick Santorum won't shake his head in not-so-subtle disapproval at their obvious snobbery) will not only cost these individuals and their families dearly, but our society as a whole. Much like with our health care system, when we ignore or compound problems in the short term, they always come back to haunt us later as the Ghost of Christmas past - and not the cool one played by Buster Poindexter in
Scrooged
either.

Listen, if you don't want to believe the facts, just take a gander at what Pat Robertson recently had to say on this issue (yes, I too am stunned I just wrote that). He took a moment off from blaming hurricanes on abortion rights or The Way We Were to come out for marijuana legalisation. Hey, I'm not saying I think his every neuron is firing in what one might call a fecund direction, but on this one, politicians should listen. And more importantly, they should pay attention to the people of this country, 47 per cent of whom favour marijuana legalisation, while only 42 per cent oppose it.

Because if we continue with the half-baked idea of expanding this war, we will also continue to watch our financial future, moral fibre and civil liberties go up in smoke.

Cliff Schecter is an author, pundit and public relations strategist whose firm Libertas, LLC handles media relations for political, corporate and non-profit clients.
Follow him on Twitter: @CliffSchecterThe views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.



the most shocking thing to me in this is the pat robertson statement :o:weed:

 

Jogro

Well-Known Member
The most shocking thing to me is that you're getting your news from Al Jazeera!

Right or wrong, they have a pretty strong anti-American slant in their coverage.

Its not exactly like Qatar (where Al Jazeera is a State owned enterprise) is exactly a "Mecca" (see what I did there?) of drug tolerance, and its not exactly like the rest of the Middle East is particularly drug-tolerant, either. (Hint, BEER is illegal in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia).

On the content of the article, its not like criticism of the "War on Drugs" is anything new. The author Schecter, is a pretty partisan leftist. The "political corporate and non-profit" clients he works with are invariably hardcore left-wing groups. This doesn't by itself invalidate what he says, but it does, in part, explain why the guy is working with/for Al Jazeera!
 

shap3less

Active Member
eh, just another news source for me. interesting to get the stories on things from a different perspective. no matter what news source you read, there's going to be some sort of slant (conservative, liberal, whatever) so if you use as many as you can, you can get a better idea of what is actually going on and how different people are looking at it. and they do a lot better job of covering world news than the american networks who just yammer about the stupid election and bullsh!t in washington and not much else..or maybe what the latest celebrities are doing..

and as to the middle east and its drug-tolerance, it's obviously mostly because of religion. most of the worlds opium is from afghanistan. with the way things have been going since the 'arab spring,' i think the potential for a more 'liberal' view on life in the middle east won't be too far behind..assuming the standing leaders fall and/or the new regimes are different..

alcohol is also illegal in bahrain. the podium finishers in the recent f1 race there opened bottles of (what i assume to be) sparkling cider, or some other fizzy non alcoholic fruited beverage. the fact they do publish something like that, seems to contradict the implications of their feelings towards drugs. and after all, afghanistan produces most of the worlds' opium.

i know it's nothing new, but it was nice to see something about weed other than '4/20 maaaannn!' stories/articles of the past week or so
 

FranJan

Well-Known Member
Since the U.S. government is helping run the "new slave trade", i.e. only having to pay prison laborers something like a $1.50 an hour to make products like soldier's helmets, do you think this war on personal choice will ever end? They need fresh bodies in their prisons so they can outbid other businesses/entrepreneurs. Isn't that Communism, (hey remember the original "Evil Empire"), boys and girls? They should at least have to, by law, pay these fuckheads and patsies minimum wage, give 'em a $1.50 an hour and use the rest to run their prisons or for victims groups. But no, the extra money goes to some fat POS, who the last thing he/she needs is more money or our borderline useful governments. We, as a country and as a people, are turning into dogshit. We're completely regressing by ignoring the past and not dealing with the truth of our situation. It's sad really. And now I'll pass the mike to.........
 
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