The common and continual mischiefs of the spirit of party are sufficient to make it the interest and duty of a wise people to discourage and restrain it.
-George Washington-
Friday, April 17, 2009
Now is the Time and the Time is Now.
Marijuana has been prohibited for
almost a century, with effects on the nation such as high prison populations
and an expensive “War on Drugs” that many call detrimental. For the past 40
years, the National Organization to Reform Marijuana Laws (NORML) and similar
organizations have sought to change that. While it sometimes seems as if these
efforts are gaining ground, victory remains aloof. Despite the ever-growing
number of users and increasingly relaxed attitude toward marijuana, prohibition
maintains a momentum that has proven difficult to counter. Recent developments
in America, most notably the recession and the skyrocketing deficit, have
provided fresh hope and a newborn kairos, or timeliness, for the argument that
marijuana should be legalized for both medical and recreational use.
Medical data contradicting the
established attitude toward marijuana as a dangerous narcotic has been stacking
up for decades, yet has gained no ground. Indeed, while official studies are
occasionally trotted out which purportedly prove that it is more dangerous than
ever, these appeals to logos (logic) are secondary at best and are never
trumpeted. Most of the arguments, some of which have almost become
commonplaces, are based on ethos (the speaker’s authority), pathos (appeals to
emotion), or a combination of the two. The major challenges are as follows:
Claims
by authorities, such as the DEA, that marijuana is both harmful to health
and a “gateway” drug that leads to harder drugs
The
argument that marijuana causes gang violence
The argument that marijuana ruins lives
(and, if legalized, maybe the economy) by sapping motivation and creating
“slackers”
The
argument that marijuana use is immoral
The
argument that marijuana arrests prevent more serious crimes by taking the
users off the street
The
argument that marijuana is addictive
The
argument that legalization would send the wrong message to young people,
in effect “giving permission” to smoke it
All of these arguments are highly
debatable. For instance, it can be countered (and has been many times) that
gang violence is caused by prohibition instead of by marijuana itself, that
slackers exist independent of pot, and that the government has no place
enforcing morals or acting as our children’s parent. However, prohibition has
lasted so long that few people bother questioning it, even some who use
marijuana. The government no longer needs to back up prohibition with logical,
medically based arguments, as such sound proof’s existence is largely accepted
sight unseen by the general populace. Only ethical and pathetic arguments are
needed to keep the status quo. Those who want legalization carry the burden of
proof.
It must also be noted that those
who oppose legalization do not come from one identifiable group. They are not
all rich Republicans or poor Democrats or white people or college graduates.
Legalization’s opponents come from all races, all political parties, and all
social strata. The same can be said, however, for legalization’s proponents.
This is an important point because
NORML tends to preach to the choir. Their booths are present at events such as
rock concerts, hemp rallies, and Libertarian Party functions, where the message
has a friendly audience. Their advertisements appear in cause-friendly
magazines like High Times. This is good from a fundraising point of
view, but is ineffective for spreading the message. While those who attend
these functions and believe in legalization may indeed try to convince others,
they are frequently dismissed by those others as “hippies” and “stoners” who
don’t really care about the issue beyond their desire to get high. Their ethos
cannot go up against the DEA’s. President Obama’s chuckling dismissal of the
notion in a recent webcast illustrates this perfectly.
NORML cannot forget these people,
of course. They form the movement’s core. They should be encouraged to donate
and vote. In order to gain the momentum needed to change drug policies,
however, NORML must expand their scope and bring their arguments to those that
don’t support legalization. Ads should appear in magazines besides High
Times. By appearing in publications such as Rolling Stone, People,
U.S.News and World Report, and scores of other mainstream magazines,
NORML will reach not only marijuana users but also legalization opponents.
NORML should also use newspapers, radio, television (if it can be budgeted),
and grass roots efforts such as flyers and handbills to reach as broad an
audience as possible. Also, a presence at Republican and Democratic functions
will increase visibility. If this is done aggressively enough, it will attract
media and political attention. Thus, the media can be used not only to spread
the message, but also to refute the inevitable political opposition that will
come with greater visibility. Minds can be changed, but only when they are
challenged frequently over a significant period of time, as in the case of
global warming. No one cared about global warming 30 years ago, but it is
considered a priority by much of the world after constant and varied
presentation of data, arguments, and appeals to pathos.
Most importantly, legalization
efforts thus far have been based on countering emotion and disinformation with
facts, and have largely failed. As noted, this is because prohibition arguments
are mostly based on emotion and the assumption that the facts were established
long ago. Again, the burden of proof is on the pro-legalization side, so logos
cannot be ignored – the arguments for legalization must be based on fact. In
order to be more effective, however, these facts must be consistently tied to
emotional arguments as well. Rhetorically speaking, arguments of pathos that
persuade by creating a particular emotion can best be countered by arguments
that create a different and stronger emotion.
For instance, it is often
advertised that legal prescription drugs are more dangerous than marijuana.
Recent reports claim that prescription drugs actually cause more deaths than
all illicit drugs combined, with marijuana’s historic death toll equaling
exactly zero. Alone, this argument fails to get much attention, but it can
easily be connected to arguments more emotional in nature, such as the economy.
The U.S. economy – with its record
setting deficit- has become the most emotional issue of the year. Doomsday
scenarios are easy to find, and even those who support President Obama’s
stimulus plan are nervous. People are very sensitive to any waste – or even
appearance of waste – in government spending. What better time, then, to remind
Americans that a recent estimate for federal, state, and local drug enforcement
is $44 billion dollars – $10 billion for marijuana alone? That the same
estimate puts possible tax revenues at $33 billion? That this is already
America’s biggest cash crop, with uses ranging from medicine to fuels, from
food to plastics, from paper to insulation? These facts can all be bundled in
one argument – that while our economy dwindles and manufacturing dies in
America, we are spending money to prohibit a non-lethal substance that could
instead put Americans to work and help pay off the deficit by great bounds –
that blends these facts with a vital emotional component. The question is, in
the final analysis, “Can America afford to continue prohibiting
marijuana?”
Furthermore, another appeal to
pathos comes from the fact that manufacturing fuels and plastics with hemp
instead of petroleum and making paper from hemp instead of wood pulp are both
more environmentally friendly. The quick rate at which the plant creates
biomass is another environmental appeal, as biomass converts carbon dioxide to
oxygen and thus combats global warming. These facts have been aired before, but
only as part of a larger, clinical whole. Highlighting hemp oil use to replace
petroleum, however, can strike an emotional chord more than ever for economic
and cultural reasons as well as ecological ones. Many people who don’t like the
idea of legalizing pot may like the idea of being dependent on OPEC even less,
and may be swayed by the idea of replacing petroleum with something available
domestically.
Marijuana’s medical uses provide a
strong opportunity to combine logos and pathos. So much has been made of
medical marijuana over the past few years that resistance to the idea is down
when regarding terminal patients. The Obama administration has already adopted
a policy of leaving medical marijuana alone in states that have legal programs.
Prohibitionists point out that a legal prescription marijuana derivative,
Marinol, is available to treat those conditions that marijuana is used for:
glaucoma, pain, and appetite stimulation for cancer and AIDS patients.
Patients, however, overwhelmingly testify that the derivative is ineffective
compared to the actual plant. This opens the door for the claim that the
government is less concerned with those suffering from disease than they are
with protecting the profits of America’s biggest lobbyists – the pharmaceutical
industry. Lobbying is another political topic that Americans have become
emotional about – anything connected with lobbying is eyed suspiciously these
days. Furthermore, the death statistics for prescription drugs, alcohol, and
tobacco can be brought into play. Actual patient photographs can give the
abstract idea of human suffering a face. A picture of an emaciated cancer
patient bearing the message that a medicine that could help her eat and regain
her strength – a medicine proven safer than prescription drugs - is prohibited
by law so that drug companies can make a profit from a less effective version
of the same natural substance carries a factual message with a strong emotional
component. Who doesn’t know someone who suffered such a painful death? Who
wouldn’t have helped that loved one escape the pain and nausea if they could
have?
Criminality is an aspect of marijuana
policy that is already mired in pathos – usually as a scare tactic to drum up
support. That could easily be reversed, however. The cost of enforcement
mentioned before has a human component: 872,000 arrests per year, more than for
murder, rape, robbery, and aggravated assault combined. Connect this to the
medical evidence and it is clear that the greatest risk a marijuana smoker
faces is the risk of arrest. 30 percent of those arrested are under 19 years of
age. Prohibition forces have been successful at giving these people a hardened
criminal’s face, but another face could be used- that of America’s children.
The argument that their lives were disrupted more by the arrest and conviction
than by the marijuana itself can easily be made, especially when linked to the
ethos argument to be outlined later. Using the commonplace that petty criminals
become highly trained criminals while serving time, these people can be shown
as normal young adults that weren’t criminals, but became criminals in jail as
a result of policies that protect pharmaceutical profits, show skewed justice
priorities, and waste taxpayer money.
There are two more forms a
pathetic argument involving criminality might take. First, legalization
opponents are generally seen as serious, straight people who are not at all
counter-cultural; think of the Brady Bunch. Prohibition, however, creates
black-market profits, profits that drug dealers violently protect. With
legalization, these profits – and motives – disappear. Thus, an argument can be
made that legalization’s staunchest opponents aren’t Mr. And Mrs. Main Street,
but the murderous drug cartels themselves. The second is related: a direct
comparison of Roaring Twenties era gang violence to the gang violence of today,
and a reminder that the violence of alcohol prohibition was ended by repeal.
The recent murder sprees in Juarez give this argument excellent kairos. As
Secretary of State Clinton admits that American demand for illegal drugs fuels
the mayhem along the Mexican border, Americans can also be reminded that
eliminating demand for drugs has never been effective, meaning that the only
realistic hope for eliminating the motivation for violence is eliminating the
black market by legalizing.
Finally, the prohibition forces can
no longer be allowed to control this debate’s ethos. It has been established
that those who keep marijuana illegal speak from a position of highly informed
authority, and that marijuana users are stoners and slackers who are
fabricating evidence for legalization only so that they can legally get high.
There are many people, however, who are not “slackers” yet have expressed
support for legalization, or at least a more open debate. Jocelyn Elders is
among the latter, but it may be more effective to trumpet a noted conservative
like William F. Buckley, Jr., who along with former NM governor Gary Johnson
and Republican Secretary of State George Shultz, is among the former. To combat
the “slacker” ethos that users have been saddled with, a campaign can be
started that highlights people who have admitted or been caught smoking
marijuana but have been highly successful, such as Olympic athlete Michael
Phelps (who would have needed no apology had he been caught guzzling tequila
straight from the bottle), actors Jack Nicholson, Johnny Depp, John Wayne, and
Woody Harrelson, as well as Republican governor Arnold Schwartzenegger. Others
include William Shakespeare, Mozart, Steve Jobs, Barbara Streisand, Pablo
Picasso, and even Bing Crosby, who openly advocated legalization in the 1960s.
Care must be taken not to put some of these people, such as Schwartzenegger, in
the position of advocating for legalization if they have not publicly done so.
The point to be made is only that smoking pot did not prevent them from
becoming productive and successful people, mainly because they were never
arrested for it.
The constant increase in marijuana
use over the past few decades, the advances in medical marijuana rights, and
the federal deficit have all combined to create a far more receptive atmosphere
for legalization than ever before. California is currently considering
legalization, in fact. Still, the pendulum can swing back quickly, or the
moment be simply forgotten, if this kairos is not acted upon. The arguments for
prohibition have become commonplaces while facts supporting legalization are
ignored. The time is ripe to change that, but efforts must go beyond merely
repeating facts to friendly audiences. These facts must be bundled with
powerful pathetic and ethos-based arguments and presented to a much wider
demographic, particularly those who support the status quo or are neutral. Only
by increasing support drastically can drug policy be changed. Only by combining
facts with emotional and ethos-based arguments for legalization and presenting
them widely over an extended time period can NORML and other pro-hemp
organizations reach the support levels needed to bring about this much-needed
change.
Tim April 22, 2009 07:08 AM PDT When Carter was prez, we thought legalization was around the corner. I really doubt that it will become legal. It's one more way that they can beat you over the head if they catch you doing it. It really is stupid making criminals out of otherwise productive indiduals. If legalised, it should be only at age 21. DUI laws would also have to be changed in many states, like MI, where having any detectable amount in your system makes you guilty of DUI or "drugged driving". This means that if you smoked any and drove, in days later and not under the influence, you would be guilty of DUI.
Joe the Troll April 22, 2009 12:41 PM PDT There was actually a TV commercial for legalization for the first time ever on 4/20. I've seen about five years worth of news articles on legalization in the last month. It won't be fast or easy but if this momentum is maintained it can happen before 2020.
O' Tim April 29, 2009 10:14 PM PDT Nate Silver (the FiveThirtyEight.com dude who bullseyed the election results) predicts it will be sometime after 2022, when a "supermajority" (60 percent) of U.S. citizens will favor legalization.
Still, Joe seems to be describing a perfect storm of kairos much closer than that, and while I have my hopes I also have my doubts.
I didn't know about that Michigan law, Tim (Isn't it just a minor citation for public usage in Ann Arbor?), which addresses a point I have always considered paramount to the debate. Law enforcement would not likely compromise on the issue without some sort of "stop gap" for excessive/dangerous public consumption. So it's back to the lab to work on my "pot breathalyzer."
Joe the Troll April 30, 2009 06:58 AM PDT I was discussing this paper with the professor I wrote it for last week - we both agreed that the due date was just barely at the point where this could be considered at all precognitive. I was amazed by the existence of the TV commercial, and I've seen the issue cropping up a lot more in other venues. Hopefully, it will gain momentum.
Maybe we could tie lack of American production to the spread of swine flu....... :-)
Tim May 5, 2009 11:01 PM PDT O'tim- ANY drug conviction in MI (whether you were anywhere near a car or not) is an automatic 90 driver's lic. suspension. Get caught at a concert: bye bye lic. Get caught in your own home : bye bye lic. Check out the Norml website or the MI sec. of state website.
Ann Arbor is just a minor fine, but if the court sends an abstract to the state (which they will), you be takin the bus for 90 days.
More draconian now than ever. Yeah, they just passed Med Pot here, but that just gives the cops a list of peeps to go after if they have a driver lic.