An Internet hub with domestic and international news, analysis, original reporting, and popular features from the left, center, indies, centrists, moderates, and right

The One Thing That Baby Boomers Got Right


Objectively speaking, baby boomers have screwed up virtually everything they have touched as government leaders and politicians. Or continued to perpetrate existing screw-ups. But down at the state level they have gotten something right in a growing number of states: Authorizing medical marijuana use and decriminalizing personal marijuana use.

The reason for this is obvious: Many boomers grew up smoking marijuana or at least were exposed to it, and fairly large numbers continue to smoke it. Consequently, they never bought the big lie — still being foisted on us by the Drug Enforcement Administration and shamefully agreed to in the breech by the Obama administration — that marijuana is a gateway drug that also has serious medical and psychological consequences.

In fact, Obama has broken a campaign promise to keep the feds’ mitts off of doctors who prescribe marijuana to help treat nausea and vomiting from chemotherapy, for AIDS victims, and sufferers of glaucoma and gastrointestinal illnesses.

So it has been left to state legislatures to undercut the big lie, and Delaware last month became the 15th state to authorize the use of medical marijuana. (It also is legal in the District of Columbia.) Only a small handful of states have decriminalized non-medical personal use, but that number also continues to grow.

* * * * *

My father, addicted to nicotine for his entire adult life and a Delaware resident, was wracked by lung cancer in the months before he died in 1981, but the chemo-induced nausea was even worse. I made arrangements to have a little package of marijuana cigarettes sent to my mother. She stored them in the Frigidaire and doled them out to my father when his nausea was especially awful.

Joe Mullen died before he had hardly made a dent in the package, but the cigarettes were a great source of relief for this gentle man who wouldn’t hurt a soul but was then — and still would be considered now — a criminal by the government of his beloved country.

My friend, a Delaware resident, has suffered from a variety of ailments over the years and has smoked marijuana or eaten marijuana brownies baked by his wife to mitigate his discomfort. So imagine his pleasant surprise when his old doctor retired and he was referred to a sixtysomething general practitioner late last year.

“What do you do to relieve your discomfort,” the doctor asked.

After hesitating, my friend replied, “Marijuana.”

To which the doctor responded, “Well, good for you. I don’t know how my wife and I would make it without the stuff.”

And so my friend will soon be able to smoke marijuana legally.

* * * * *

Data compiled by groups such as the Pew Research Center show a consistent upward trend towards supporting legalization of marijuana for recreational use, although no poll so far has shown a majority in favor. Interestingly, support for legalizing marijuana breaks down along racial lines. According to a new CNN poll, non-whites are less likely to support legalizing marijuana than whites, even though blacks are more likely be arrested for drug possession than whites.

While the pollsters do not explain why this may be so, my supposition is that people in poor minority neighborhoods wracked by drugs don’t see legalization as necessarily a positive move.

* * * * *

While the slow drift toward decriminalizing personal marijuana has accelerated and that is gratifying, it has less to do with the reality that marijuana is not the boogie man its opponents have long portrayed it as being than economic and social realities. Developments in California and Philadelphia prove the point.

In nearly-bankrupt California, a referendum question on whether to legalize personal marijuana use was shot down in the November election, but seems likely to eventually pass.

Although numbers are being thrown around with abandon by the “Tax Cannabis” pro-legalization forces, it is estimated that sales of marijuana total $14 billion a year in the Golden State, which could result in a $1.4 billion windfall from a tax on sales. (If pot is taxed the same as cigarettes or liquor the state’s toke . . . er, take could be up to $14 billion.)
Meanwhile, with Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams taking the lead, there is a movement to all but decriminalize the possession of small amounts of marijuana for personal use. Again, not because it’s the right thing to do but because Philadelphia’s court dockets are crowded with people whose only crime is getting caught with a small amount of pot, even a single joint.

Prosecutors now charge such cases as summary offenses rather than as misdemeanors. People arrested with up to 30 grams of the drug — slightly more than an ounce — may have to pay a fine but face no risk of a criminal record.

Small steps toward sanity, and progress indeed.



5 Responses to “The One Thing That Baby Boomers Got Right”

  1. JSpencer says:

    Small steps yes, but as you suggest, they are encouraging ones. The govt. has been terribly slow to come around on this issue though – meaning resources have been wasted and lives ruined in the persecution of cannabis users.

    Michigan voters saw the light with regard to medical use long before the law makers did – to the tune of 62%. If that isn’t a mandate I don’t know what is. In terms of non-medical use, it’s clearly and historically less damaging than either alchohol or nicotine. Carl Sagan has some interesting observations here:

    http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Carl_Sagan

  2. mizlandry says:

    As someone who always believed pot should be legalized, I was definitely in support of prop 19 (the CA. measure that failed). While that was going on, the house I own (and rent out) was turned into a grow house. Authorities from another jurisdiction (not the Oakland PD) got to the house, but my tenant was tipped off and fled, taking her plants and leaving me with $15K or more in damages. As I tried to convince fellow genXers to support 19, siting my story as one of the problems (I would like controlled grow areas, rather than these house farms, for example), they were against it because “prop 19 would hurt the little guy because he’d have to pay taxes.” This made me so angry! I am a freelancer who has to pay taxes, pot farmers should pay too. My own pot-loving friends could care less that I was stuck paying damages from my incident while the perps were NEVER CHARGE, NEVER WILL GO TO TRIAL, NEVER DO TIME. NOT EVEN FOR VANDALIZING MY HOME!

    My point being is, baby boomers seem to be ok with legalizing it, but the neo-libertarian ideas that were shoved into Xers and Yers over the years is creating this bizarre twilight where pot is looselyinvestigated and enforced but leaving people like me stuck with paying for it out of pocket.

  3. mizlandry:

    What happened to you is an outrage and you are correct that society is in a kind of twilight zone. The only comparable that I can think of are the waning days of Prohibition when enforcement was non-existent in places like New York City but brutal elsewhere.

    Incidentally, marijuana became the bugaboo that it remains today when Prohibition ended. The feds needed a new villain and marijuana conveniently fit the bill.

  4. merkin says:

    The question about legalizing drugs for recreational use doesn’t interest me very much one way or another. I don’t have any real experience with drugs used for fun, except for alcohol, which I can’t say was positive.

    And I voted against legalizing the lottery in two states, Georgia and California because I thought it was a terrible way to raise government revenue, so you can believe I wouldn’t support legalized recreational drug use for the same propose. (I know, I’m a real stick in the mud) (on the subject of hypocrisy, I must tell you that both of my children got excellent four year college educations under the Hope scholarship paid for by the lottery in Georgia that I voted against.)

    But I certainly believe that if my doctor says there is a benefit using a drug they should be able to provide it to me. And that is how marijuana is handled here in Georgia. It is not a matter of design, the legislature just never made medical use illegal. It is prescribed for a much more limited range of problems than it is in the states that have explicitly legalized it. And there are limits on how long the prescriptions are valid. I know that chemotherapy patients can only get two days worth of marijuana after each treatment. I don’t know if such limitations are legal or just medical practice.

    I go to an infusion center monthly. Most of the patients there are receiving chemotherapy. Once, on a Friday, the nurse came out and announced that due to a shipping mix up the patients receiving a two part drug infusion would have to come back in on Monday to receive the second infusion. Much to my surprise they all cheered the announcement. They explained that it meant they could get four days worth of marijuana, not just two. It was a slightly jarring experience seeing these gray haired sixty and seventy year olds cheer for marijuana.

  5. slamfu says:

    Anyone know a place I can get good stats on how much marijuana prosecutions and incarcerations are costing the justice system?

© 2003-2011 The Moderate Voice | Site design by Elegant Themes | Site customization, hosting, and security by Mode Equity