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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Thu Mar 13, 2014, 05:55 AM Mar 2014

The Unbelievable Shift Towards Rational Drug Policy

http://www.alternet.org/drugs/unbelievable-shift-towards-rational-drug-policy



For anyone interested in addiction and drug policy, the last year or so has been the most fascinating period in recent memory. Having kicked heroin and cocaine in 1988 and written about the subject ever since, I can’t remember a time when public opinion and actual policy have changed so quickly—and in such a rational direction.

I’m not just talking about marijuana—although the fact that the Obama administration has allowed two states (Colorado and Washington, as of January 1) to legalize the recreational use of marijuana is a seismic shift. Six other states are considering either recreational or medical marijuana legalization. Internationally, Uruguay has also legalized, and Mexico has a decriminalization bill in the works.

A US congressman recently ridiculed the nation’s deputy drug czar for his failure to admit the obvious—that marijuana is less harmful than methamphetamine—when, previously, few politicians would publicly do anything except thunder about the evils of marijuana as a “gateway drug” while pushing for longer sentences, harsher penalties and increased “antidrug” spending. Being seen as “soft on drugs” was viewed as a political death sentence in the Clinton and Bush years.

But today, even the staunchly prohibitionist Smart on Marijuana (SAM) claims to support cannabis decriminalization: a stance that was seen as tantamount to promoting drug use just a few years ago. Although what SAM actually seems to favor is coerced treatment or “education” for marijuana possession rather than full decriminalization, the fact that almost no one seems to think locking up marijuana users and saddling them with criminal records is a good idea anymore is an incredible reversal.
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The Unbelievable Shift Towards Rational Drug Policy (Original Post) xchrom Mar 2014 OP
That mostly makes me wonder who the new scapegoats are gonna be if it's not the druggies any more Fumesucker Mar 2014 #1
follow the private prison lobby money. xchrom Mar 2014 #2

Fumesucker

(45,851 posts)
1. That mostly makes me wonder who the new scapegoats are gonna be if it's not the druggies any more
Thu Mar 13, 2014, 06:03 AM
Mar 2014

Is it possible for American society to even function without scapegoats?

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
2. follow the private prison lobby money.
Thu Mar 13, 2014, 06:15 AM
Mar 2014

i don't know if there is any data on their spending as things shift.

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