For almost 40 years, the United States has waged a war on
its own citizens who have used marijuana as a part of a drug culture originally
encouraged by the government.
The war was commenced despite the government�s own findings
that marijuana posed less of a risk to American society than alcohol, and that
the greatest harm that would result from criminalization would be the injury
caused to those arrested for possession and use. The harm caused by the war
extends beyond its 15 million prisoners; its cost has exceeded a trillion
dollars, and it has benefitted only those who profit from the illegal
cultivation and sale of marijuana.
Government
responsibility for the drug culture
Drug use became endemic among U.S. troops serving in Vietnam
with more than 80%
getting stoned on marijuana and lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD). Many of
the secrets are still hidden; however, we now have some information about the
extent of the government�s responsibility for the development of the drug
culture in the military and in communities across America. These are the
highlights:
- Although the U.S. was a
signatory to the Geneva Convention protocols banning the use of chemical
weapons, the U.S. Army
engaged in extensive testing of marijuana and its active ingredient,
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) as an incapacitating agent in warfare. A secret
research program tested these substances, including highly-concentrated
derivatives, on thousands of American GIs without their informed consent.
- The CIA engaged in a ten-year secret program
to identify and test drugs for use as truth serums during interrogations
and as incapacitating agents. Operation Midnight Climax secretly tested
LSD on the unwitting patrons of a CIA-financed whorehouse.
- The U.S. Army envisioned
�driving people crazy for a few hours� by spiking a city�s water supply
and developed a
super hallucinogen known as quinuclidinyl benzilate (BZ), which was
tested on thousands of soldiers. Known as �agent buzz,� the Army produced more than
100,000 pounds of the chemical in a facility specifically designed for
its incorporation into conventional bombs. Allegations in foreign publications
that BZ was deployed against North Vietnam troops have never been
confirmed, and all files on the subject remain top secret. However, it is
known that the government considered using it for the control of domestic
riots.
- To facilitate its alliance
with the intelligence agencies of Thailand and Nationalist China, the CIA
supported the transportation and refining of opium into heroin in
Southeast Asia, including the opening of a cluster of heroin laboratories
in the Golden Triangle in 1968-1969. The CIA remained silent as its
allies, including officers of the Hmong irregular army, routinely
supplied heroin to American troops in Vietnam, resulting in the
addiction rates as high as 34%. In a secret report in 1972, the CIA
Inspector General said: �The past involvement of many of these officers in
drugs is well-known.�
- During classified
testimony before a House committee in 1999, CIA Inspector General Britt
Snider admitted that the CIA allowed its
Nicaraguan Contra allies to smuggle huge quantities of cocaine into the
United States during the 1980�s, which was refined into �crack� for
sale by street gangs. The House report found that �CIA employees did
nothing to verify or disprove drug trafficking information, even when they
had the opportunity to do so. In some of these, receipt of a drug
allegation appeared to provoke no specific response, and business went on
as usual.�
The national
commission on marijuana and drug abuse
In 1971, President Nixon appointed Governor Raymond P.
Shafer of Pennsylvania to chair a national commission to �report on the effects
of marijuana and other drugs and recommend appropriate drug policies. Governor
Shafer was a former prosecutor, who was known as a �law and order� governor.
The
�Shafer� Commission conducted the most extensive and comprehensive examination
of marijuana ever performed by the US government. More than 50 projects
were funded, �ranging from a study of the effects of marihuana on man to a
field survey of enforcement of the marihuana laws in six metropolitan
jurisdictions . . .�
�Through formal and informal hearings,
recorded in thousands of pages of transcripts, we solicited all points of view,
including those of public officials, community leaders, professional experts
and students. We commissioned a nationwide survey of public beliefs,
information and experience . . . In addition, we conducted separate surveys of
opinion among district attorneys, judges, probation officers, clinicians,
university health officials and free clinic personnel.�
Among the commission�s findings were:
- �No significant physical,
biochemical, or mental abnormalities could be attributed solely to their
marihuana smoking.�
- �No verification is found
of a causal relationship between marihuana use and subsequent heroin use.�
- �In sum, the weight of the
evidence is that marihuana does not cause violent or aggressive behavior;
if anything marihuana serves to inhibit the expression of such behavior.�
- �Neither the marihuana
user nor the drug itself can be said to constitute a danger to public
safety.�
- �Marihuana�s relative
potential for harm to the vast majority of individual users and its actual
impact on society does not justify a social policy designed to seek out
and firmly punish those who use it.�
The Commission concluded that �society should seek to discourage
use, while concentrating its attention on the prevention and treatment of heavy
and very heavy use. The Commission feels that the criminalization of possession
of marihuana for personal [use] is socially self-defeating as a means of
achieving this objective . . . Considering the range of social concerns in
contemporary America, marihuana does not, in our considered judgment, rank very
high. We would deemphasize marihuana as a problem.�
President Nixon
called Governor Shafer on the carpet and pressured him to change the
Commission�s conclusion saying, �You see, the thing that is so terribly
important here is that it not appear that the Commission�s frankly just a bunch
of do-gooders.� Governor Shafer declined to change his conclusions, and Nixon
declined to appoint him to a pending federal judgeship.
The war on drugs
White
House tapes reveal that Nixon�s opinions about marijuana were based on his
personal prejudices rather than the evidence. He can be heard to make
statements such as: �That�s a funny thing, every one of the bastards that are
out for legalizing marijuana is Jewish. What the Christ is the matter with the
Jews, Bob, what is the matter with them? I suppose it�s because most of them
are psychiatrists . . . By God, we are going to hit the marijuana thing, and I
want to hit it right square in the puss . . .�
When Nixon was talking with Art Linkletter about �radical
demonstrators,� he said �They�re all on drugs.�� On another occasion, Nixon
compared marijuana to alcohol use saying that marijuana users smoke it to �get
high,� while �a person drinks to have fun.�
Wanting to be strong, �like the Russians,� and to �scare�
marijuana users, Nixon ordered his administration to come down hard on users
and to target them as enemies in his �war on drugs.�
The war on marijuana and the false myths associated with its
usage have been continued by every president since Nixon. Since 1973, 15
million people, mostly young people who were committing no other crime, have
been arrested for marijuana. In just the last ten years, 6.5 million Americans have been
arrested on marijuana charges. Of the 829,625 people who were arrested in
2006, 738,915 of them were in simple possession.
Attorney
General Eric H. Holder, Jr. announced in March 2009 that the administration
would discontinue raids on the distributors of medical marijuana, including
California � which was the first state to legalize marijuana sales upon a
doctor�s recommendation.
Although President Obama backed off on arresting medical
marijuana users, his 2010
National Drug Control Strategy continues the hard line: �Keeping drugs
illegal reduces their availability and lessens willingness to use them. That is
why this Administration firmly opposes the legalization of marijuana or any
other illicit drug.� Contrary to the findings of the Shafer Commission, the
only existing comprehensive government study on the subject, Obama goes on to
say, �Diagnostic, laboratory, clinical and epidemiological studies clearly
indicate that marijuana use is associated with dependence, respiratory and
mental illness, poor motor performance, and cognitive impairment, among other
negative effects, and legalization would only exacerbate these problems.�
Fourteen
states and the District of Columbia have now followed California in passing
laws permitting the use of marijuana for medical purposes; however, no state,
thus far, has decriminalized personal possession for recreational use or personal
enjoyment.
After spending a trillion dollars in the battle, the war on
marijuana has been a complete failure. Although a marijuana user is arrested
every 38 seconds, one hundred million
people, or about one third of all Americans acknowledge they have used
marijuana, and 15 million �criminals� used it in the last month.
The only victors in the war on drugs have been the criminals
who have profited from illegal sales. There is an estimated $15 billion in
illegal cannabis transactions each year just in California. These transactions
are not taxed or regulated.
The cultivation
of marijuana in Mexico soared 35% last year to production levels greater
than any time in the last 20 years. According to the White House Office of
National Drug Control Policy, in 2006 more
than 60% of the revenue generated by Mexican drug cartels came from cannabis
sales in the U.S.
Nixon�s war has been expensive; it has been a failure; and
it has caused great damage to the fabric of America society. The harm has been
particularly felt by its young people who suffer up to 80% of the marijuana
arrests and who are disproportionately African American and Latino.
California�s
initiative to decriminalize marijuana possession
The penalty upon conviction for possession and use of less
than an ounce of marijuana in California is now restricted to a maximum of a
$100 fine. If California voters approve Proposition 19 on their November
ballot, such possession by a person over the age of 21 will no longer be a
crime under California law.
Just as California and New York ended criminal sanctions
against the possession and sale of alcohol before prohibition was repealed,
California voters again have the chance to remedy the evils caused by almost 40
years of a war without foundation or cause.
The initiative: �Changes California Law to Legalize
Marijuana and Allow It to Be Regulated and Taxed.� It includes the following
provisions:
- Allows people 21 years or
older to possess, cultivate, or transport marijuana for personal use.
- Permits local governments
to regulate and tax commercial production and sale of marijuana to people
21 years or older.
- Prohibits people from
possession of marijuana on school grounds, using it in public, smoking it
while minors are present, or providing it to anyone under 21 years old,
and
- Maintains current
prohibitions against driving while impaired.
The California Legislative Analyst and the Director of
Finance estimate there will be savings of up to several tens of millions of
dollars annually to state and local governments on the costs of incarcerating
and supervising certain marijuana offenders. In addition, there are unknown,
but potentially major tax, fee, and benefit assessment revenues to state and
local government related to the production and sale of marijuana products.
Conclusion
In 1972, during the same year of the Shafer Commission, I
was a sergeant of police in Los Angeles and had just completed a two-year
assignment to write and obtain approval of the Department�s Policy Manual,
which defined the principles and philosophy of policing in the city. I was also
attending law school and I was �loaned� to the staff of the Police Task Force
of President Nixon�s National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards
and Goals, where I was privileged to draft the introductory chapters defining
the role of the police in America.
Following graduation the next year and passing the state bar
examination, I moved to Washington, D.C., to work for the Justice Department�s
Law Enforcement Assistance Administration to implement national criminal
justice standards and goals. As a result of these initiatives, the quality of
policing in America has been vastly improved over the years, and today, law
enforcement is a profession which I am proud to have been a part of.
Several times, I had to fight for my life while enforcing
the law, and three of my law enforcement friends were murdered in the line of
duty. I am not naive. I have walked through too much blood and have seen too
much pain and suffering during my career. Everything I have learned during
almost 50 years in the justice system compels a conclusion that the
criminalization of marijuana was a fraud on the American people from the very
inception of the war on drugs.
I am not alone in this conclusion, which has been joined by
a large number of active and retired law enforcement officials and judges in
the United States and other countries.
Every voter has a duty to honestly consider the issues
presented by Proposition 19 and vote as though one of his or her children, a
niece or nephew, or a friend�s child will be caught experimenting with
marijuana in the future. How will you want the matter handled? By creating a
criminal, or by using the occasion as an educational opportunity?
We hopefully remember the danger to society caused by the
prohibition of alcohol and we have seen how education and reasonable regulation
has substantially reduced the use of tobacco in our society.
Let us rely on the true facts, our experience, our best
judgement, and our consciences, instead of our prejudices or the misleading
myths that continue to be perpetuated by our government. Let us bring an end to
the fraudulent war on marijuana.
William John Cox is a retired prosecutor and
public interest lawyer, author and political activist. His efforts to promote a
peaceful political evolution can be found at VotersEvolt.com, his writings are collected at WilliamJohnCox.com and he can be contacted at u2cox@msn.com.