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He’s Not High: Inside Barney Frank’s Plan to Legalize Marijuana

Desta Bishu | July 26th, 2009 at 1:07 pm | | Print This Post

While Congress debates health care, handles the economic downturn, and the quagmire in Afghanistan, Congressman Barney Frank is eyeing America’s draconian pot policies. Read our exclusive interview.

To my shame, I started my interview with Congressman Barney Frank about the legalization of marijuana by apologizing to my subject. “I know you guys have a lot on your plate these days, so I’m sorry to be calling you about something kind of trivial…”

Then I did a rapid midcourse correction. “But it’s not trivial, because people go to jail over it.”

“That’s exactly right,” Frank said.

We were talking about the Personal Use of Marijuana by Responsible Adults Act of 2009, Frank’s latest attempt to bring sanity to the federal marijuana laws. Currently, pot is classified as a Schedule I Controlled Dangerous Substance under federal law, which makes it worse than morphine, cocaine, amphetamine, and PCP. Possession of a single joint carries a penalty of $1,000 and a year in prison – a charge faced by about 800,000 American citizens every year. This is the government whose judgment on war and economics we are supposed to respect.

So I started the interview over.

ESQUIRE: Could you tell me why you’re doing it at this time? Everybody says you guys have got so much to handle right now.

BARNEY FRANK: Announcing that the government should mind its own business on marijuana is really not that hard. There’s not a lot of complexity here. We should stop treating people as criminals because they smoke marijuana. The problem is the political will.

ESQ: That’s my second question. There’s already been a lot of change in the country. Thirteen states have decriminalized pot. What’s holding up Congress?

BF: This is a case where there’s cultural lag on the part of my colleagues. If you ask them privately, they don’t think it’s a terrible thing. But they’re afraid of being portrayed as soft on drugs. And by the way, the argument is, nobody ever gets arrested for it. But we have this outrageous case in New York where a cop jammed a baton up a guy’s ass when he caught him smoking marijuana.

ESQ: You’re kidding.

BF: Actually, I’ve just been corrected by my partner – it was a radio he jammed up the guy’s ass, not his baton.

ESQ: Small radio, I hope.

BF: By the way, the bill is bi-partisan: I’ve got two Democrats and two Republicans.

ESQ: Who are the Republicans?

BF: Ron Paul. And Dana Rohrabacher from California.

ESQ: Isn’t Rohrabacher pretty hard-right?

BF: He’s a very conservative guy, but with a libertarian streak.

ESQ: That libertarian streak will help you out once in a while. And who’s against it?

BF: Well, Mark Souder from Indiana, who’s very much a proponent of the drug war.

ESQ: When you talk to Souder about it, what does he say?

BF: You don’t waste your time on people with whom you completely disagree.

ESQ: Okay.

BF: Here’s one thing I would say – there’s a great intellectual flaw at work here. People say, “Oh, you want the government to approve of smoking marijuana.” And the answer is, no, there should be a small number of things that the government makes illegal, but the great bulk of human activity ought to be none of the government’s business. People can make their own choices.

ESQ: What about the “public-square” argument that we need to keep prostitutes off the streets and pot-smokers on the run in order to promote a higher level of morality and civic order?

BF: One, I don’t think it’s immoral to smoke cigarettes or drink alcohol, even though they may make you sick. Morality to me is the way you treat other people, not the way you treat yourself. John Stuart Mill’s On Liberty makes a great deal of sense in that regard. I wish more people read him.

ESQ: My father forced me to read On Liberty when I was fourteen years old. I still haven’t recovered.

BF: He deals very thoughtfully with some of the objections.

ESQ: Then let me ask you from the other side: Why is the bill so modest? You explicitly say you’re not going to overturn state laws.

BF: Because I think it’s important, when you’re confronting political opinions this way, to make it easier for people. This isn’t for drug dealers. Although I do think there’s a logic that once you’ve allowed people to smoke, you’re going to go beyond that.

ESQ: So how far do you really want to go? Decriminalize completely? Tax it, like they’re talking about out in California?

BF: I don’t think that’s a debate I should get into right now.

ESQ: So you want to be a cautious centrist, waiting for the country to come around?

BF: [pause] You think this is centrist?

ESQ: [laughs] Okay, sorry.

BF: I must say, I don’t have a lot of sympathy with people on the left who say, “Oh, I’m not going to settle for some small step, I’m going to take the big step.” I’m doing something I think could be passable. I believe the results of modest beginnings will encourage people to go further. And if the people who disagree with me are right, it won’t go further.

ESQ: Realistically, do you think it’s going to pass?

BF: Not this year, no.

ESQ: How long do you think it will take?

BF: There’s no point in my guessing. Why would I want to guess? We’ll have a rational discussion, and we’ll see where it goes from there.

While We’re Here, One Final Hit on the Topic

Meanwhile, in the wacky world of Republicans who love liberty almost as much as they love prisons, an Illinois congressman named Mark Kirk has proposed a competing law to make selling “this new potent marijuana” punishable by $1 million in fines and 25 years in prison. Apparently Kirk is talking about something called “kush,” which I cannot personally evaluate since I am A) not currently a pot-smoker, and B) too crippled by college bills to afford anything that costs $600 an ounce. But for those old-fashioned reality-based types who care about scientific evidence, here’s what the guys in white lab coats say.

Speaking of reform, last week MSNBC reported the shocking statistic that health-care reformers have spent $15 million on ads, while the enemies of reform have spent a mere $4 million. “It’s a David and Goliath situation,” whined a right-wing shill named Jillian Bandes.

Well, there are statistics and there are statistics. Behind the scenes, where it really matters, hospitals, doctors, and Big Pharma are spending $1.4 million a day to kill reform. They’ve hired three-hundred-and-fifty former members of congress and congressional staffers as temporary lobbyists. “Even in a city where lobbying is a part of life, the scale of the effort has drawn attention,” the Washington Post reports.

David and Goliath, indeed.

You Like Dislike Me, You Really Like Dislike Me!

Loving a vigorous debate and personal abuse as I do, I have come to rely on my many right-wing critics for my weekly dose of bile. So it was very exciting to open my Web browser yesterday and find myself attacked from the left! My crime was comparing the 19th-century abolitionist John Brown to the “right to life” assassin Scott Roeder. Also, lamenting the 620,000 people who died in the Civil War. According to historian Louis DiCario, that makes me a racist. “What Richardson actually seems to be asking is: “Was ending the enslavement of black people worth a half-million white people’s lives?” And I was wrong to call Brown a terrorist too. Although he dragged a farmer and his sons from their beds and watched as his raiding party hacked them to death with swords, he was actually a “counter-terrorist.” Check it out!

In DiCario’s honor (and Barney Frank’s and John Stuart Mill’s and all the victims of righteous causes), here’s the quote of the day: “There is in most of us an unreconstructed Southerner who will not accept domination as well as a benevolent despot who wants to mold others for their own good, to assemble them in such as way as to produce a comprehensive unit which will satisfy our own ambition by realizing some vision of our own; and the conflict between these two tendencies – which on a larger scale gave rise to the Civil War – may also break the harmony of families and cause a fissure in the individual.” – Edmund Wilson, Patriotic Gore

By John H. Richardson | esquire

1 comment

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  1. Kevin

    26 Jul 09 at 4:55 pm

    Legalising Cannabis would have impacts across the board, some positive and some negative. As responsible adults we must look at the facts of this situation and make decisions based on facts, not propaganda. When I look at who is profiting from keeping cannabis illegal, I see cartels running drugs over our border (more recently growing inside our border in publics parks) to gangs who then distribute the products to our kids. We see gangs fighting over turf, customers, to maintain their cash flow. Why do we continue to feed this chaotic cycle that just creates violence and criminals? Cannabis is currently the most used substance in the US, and yet we don’t see very many cannabis related deaths compared to alcohol. Why do we not legalise and tax cannabis users, diverting the money from cartels to public works and community programs?

    Cannabis has been proven to be less harmful then alcohol and cigarettes, less harmful not harmless. Why is it irresponsible to use a safer substance? I saw a comment earlier saying we should drill for oil, did you know that cannabis creates diesel fuel? Wouldn’t that be a great way to help become energy independent, at the same time removing tons of CO2 from the atmosphere? Cannabis consumes vast amounts of CO2 while growing, as it is one of the only plants that can reach over 20′ in 5 months. The uses of the cannabis plant are many, more then I would care to go into, as an industry for materials as well as for recreational consumers.

    It makes sense to regulate a market that will not go away and is proven to be very stable. Why should we be paying taxes for people to be in jail for consuming a substance? If they are not committing any crime other then growing cannabis or consuming cannabis, why should we spend millions to keep them in jail with murders and rapist? I agree if they are commiting crimes, they need to be charged with that, with “committed while under the influence” tagged onto it, while raising the penalty, and mandate treatment classes, like we do with alcohol.

    With the money we spend on fighting cannabis, we could spend on catching real criminals, the ones that rape, murder and kidnap. Yet we spend more fighting cannabis then those three. With the profits we reap from the taxes we can put into funding our schools and education for responsible use. I think that with 30 minutes of research, one can learn quite a bit about cannabis and its risks. Educating ourselves is the only answer, being closed minded will not make this problem go away, it will only make it worse. Look to our border with Mexico, a situation that has been created by prohibition as it did when alcohol was prohibited.

    Taxes will be raised, why not tax a substance? Only those who choose to consume it will have to pay it. If we don’t tax and regulate cannabis, what will they tax or raise taxes on next? Time to legalise and make cannabis consumers pay their share.

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