The Pay-Any-Price Principle

BY David Sirota

Considering both the public opinion shift and the facts about marijuana, this should be the moment that drug policy reformers drop their budget attacks and flip the security argument on their opponents.

When choosing between frugality and security, history shows that America almost always selects the latter. To paraphrase President Kennedy, we’ll pay any price and bear any burden to protect ourselves.

No doubt this was why the economic case against the Iraq invasion failed. To many, the war debate seemed to pose a binary question: debt or mushroom clouds? And when it’s a scuffle between money arguments and security arguments (even dishonest security arguments), security wins every time.

Call this the Pay-Any-Price Principle – an axiom that has impacted all of America’s wars, and now, most poignantly, its War on Drugs. When faced with criticism of budget-busting prosecution and incarceration costs, law enforcement agencies and private prison interests have successfully depicted their cause as a willingness to pay any price to jail dealers of hard narcotics.

Of course, data undermine that story line. In 2008, the FBI reported that 82 percent of drug arrests were for possession – not sales or manufacturing – and almost half of those arrests were for marijuana, not hard drugs.

Fortunately, these numbers are seeping into the public consciousness. Gallup’s latest survey shows record support for marijuana legalization, as more Americans see the Drug War for what it really is: an ideological and profit-making crusade by the Arrest-and-Incarceration Complex against a substance that is, according to most physicians, less toxic than alcohol.

Considering both the public opinion shift and the facts about marijuana, this should be the moment that drug policy reformers drop their budget attacks and flip the security argument on their opponents – specifically, by pointing out how safety is actually compromised by the status quo.

The good news is that some activists are making this very case.

Last week, students at 80 colleges asked their schools to reduce penalties for marijuana possession so that they are no greater than penalties for alcohol possession. It’s a request with safety in mind: According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, alcohol use by college kids contributes to roughly 1,700 deaths, 600,000 injuries and 97,000 sexual assaults every year. By contrast, “The use of marijuana itself has not been found to contribute to any deaths, there has never been a single fatal marijuana overdose in history (and) all objective research on marijuana has also concluded that it does not contribute to injuries, assaults, sexual abuse, or violent or aggressive behavior,” as the group Safer Alternative For Enjoyable Recreation notes.

“It’s time we stop driving students to drink and let them make the rational, safer choice to use marijuana,” said one student.

Now the bad news: Not every reformer is on message.

In California, where polls show most citizens support cannabis legalization, The New York Times reports that backers of a legalization ballot measure “will not dwell on assertions of marijuana’s harmlessness” but “rather on (the) cold cash” pot can generate for depleted state coffers.

The problem is not these advocates’ facts – California officials confirm that legal marijuana could generate more than $1 billion in tax revenue. The problem goes back to the Pay-Any-Price Principle.

By downplaying the argument about giving society a safer alternative to alcohol, California’s legalization advocates are letting drug warriors reclaim the language of security, to the point where even liberal Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer’s campaign now trumpets her opposition to the initiative on the grounds that “she shares the (safety) concerns of police chiefs, sheriffs and other law enforcement officials.”

A career politician, Boxer understands that if this battle reverts to the old tax-revenue-versus-safety fight, voters will choose safety. In other words, she gets the Pay-Any-Price Principle.

To maximize this opportune moment for drug policy changes, every reformer must appreciate that principle, too – and finally confront it head on.

David Sirota, an In These Times senior editor and syndicated columnist, is a bestselling author whose book Back to Our Future: How the 1980s Explain the World We Live In Now—Our Culture, Our Politics, Our Everything was released in March of 2011. Sirota, whose previous books include The Uprising and Hostile Takeover, hosts the morning show on AM760 in Denver. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com or follow him on Twitter @davidsirota.

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  • Reader Comments

    The drug was is insane.  You would think we would have learned out lesson with prohibition, that lesson being you can’t protect people from themselves.  We never seem to learn our lesson the first time so we keep paying to learn the lesson over and over. 

    We have a meth lab on every corner and the DEA can’t find them so they go out and attack a bunch of doctors just trying to take care of sick people.  What it comes down to is you can’t cure stupid and someone is always going to do something stupid.  Just because some idiots took Oycontin for fun and then drank with it and OD’d the DEA has launched an all-out war on Oycontin to the point that people with painful illnesses can’t get it.  Of course, people have been being stupid and doing crazy stuff drunk for decades but we don’t try to make it illegal because we’ve already proved that won’t work.  Aren’t we doing the same thing with drugs?

    I find it odd that back when people could go to the local drug store and buy laudanum for their pain we didn’t have a drug problem.  But the more we try to fight it the more unique and dangerous designer drugs we have.  Frankly, I totally agree that it doesn’t make sense for marijuana to be illegal as long as alcohol is legal.

    We’ve proven is it a valid medicinal substance but even more important is why isn’t it legal for recreational use as well since alcohol is.  I’ve had more than one policeman tell me they’d much rather raid a pot party than a booze party because nobody wants to fight or kill them.

    I grew up in the 60s and in all these decades I’ve never known of anyone going home and beating up his wife or kids because he smoked to much pot.  In fact, I had a friend that had a husband who liked to get drunk and beat her and we would get him high so he wouldn’t get nuts and beat her.  He was a completely different man high vs. drunk. 

    Frankly, I think legal marijuana would reduce the rate of violent crime and that is another really good reason for legalizing it.  People are going to self-medicate and I, for one, would much rather see them do it with marijuana than alcohol.

    Posted by CherisPlace on Apr 11, 2010 at 10:51 PM
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