| WAR
ON PONY TAILS Source: Boulder Weekly
Author: Paul
Dougan
Paul Dougan teaches writing at the
University of Colorado in Colorado Springs
and is writing a book titled "Ethnic
Hippies: Common Sense about Today's
Counterculture."
The Drug War Is A War Against Counter Culture
Apparently, it's OK to have more arsenic in water
than it is to have hemp in cereal," comments
U.S. Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., about a new
Drug Enforcement Agency ban. The ban, which
prohibits hemp food products containing even
trace elements of THC, took effect on Feb. 6.
The crackdown on hemp foods is, according to the
Washington Post, the result of lobbying by the
religious right's Family Research Council, which
believes "hemp has become a stalking horse
for the drug legalization movement." The
ban, then, is part of a political agenda.
What is that agenda, and why such a fuss over
hemp in food? For that matter, why such a to-do
over industrial hemp and medicinal marijuana?
More "stalking horses" for the
legalization of pot? Maybe, but why is pot
illegal?
Pot is not physically addictive. "Marijuana
addiction" refers only to psychological
addiction, and research shows even this is
suspect. It assumes pot smokers have a problem,
and then when study participants display
difficulty removing pot from their lives, it
argues this is proof of addiction, much like
assuming sex is bad, then when people have
trouble abstaining, arguing this is proof of
sexual addiction. Circular logic.
Nor does pot necessarily lead to truly dangerous
drugs; the argument that marijuana is a gateway
drug is pathetic. First, it's a cause- effect
fallacy, confusing chronology with causality.
Probably most whiskey abusers at one time drank
beer; does that mean beer is responsible for
whiskey abuse?
Second, the gateway argument defies common sense.
If pot leads to harder drugs, particularly
heroin, then because America has seen a dramatic
increase in pot smoking since the '60s, there
should be a corresponding jump in heroin
addiction. But as reporter Daniel Baum notes in
Smoke and Mirrors: The War on Drugs and the
Politics of Failure, heroin addiction today is no
greater than it was in 1970. Third, pot
prohibitionists contradict themselves. The
gateway argument says pot users become
"bored" with a marijuana high; how can
something be both boring and
"psychologically addictive"?
Fourth, to the extent the gateway argument is
true, it's a self- fulfilling prophecy. Baum
quotes a University of Kentucky researcher:
"By throwing subjects into a subculture that
elicits heroin use, even moderate marijuana use
can weld the first link of a casual chain leading
to heroin." So, illegality is the problem,
not marijuana.
A quarter of all federal prisoners, some serving
life without parole, are in for marijuana.
Neither the health claims nor gateway argument
come even close to explaining why. What's really
going on?
Pot prohibition is about repression. According to
John Helmer in Drugs and Minority Oppression,
America's first anti-drug laws were anti- opium
laws, passed at the height of an anti-Chinese
campaign and used to persecute
"coolies." The original target of
anti-pot laws were Hispanics; thus, an Alamosa
newspaper editor's comments were read as
testimony to Congress in 1937: "I wish I
could show you what a small marijuana cigarette
can do to one of our degenerate Spanish-speaking
residents." American drug laws have
historical roots in the cesspool of racism and
ethnic intolerance.
A primary target of today's repression is
hippies. Oh, we say, "But hippies were a
thing of the '60s and no longer exist"-a
cliche we recite sheeplike.
But anyone with eyes can see hippie-types
everyday, and what we really mean is,
"Hippies are no longer supposed to
exist." Pot remains illegal because hippies
use it, and the powers that be see the
non-conformist, authority-defying values of
America's counterculture as subversive. Thus,
ever since the '60s, national policy has been to
harass, persecute, and hopefully eliminate the
counterculture. Did you know that in many
jurisdictions, having Grateful Dead stickers on
your vehicle is "due cause" for the
police to pull you over? A lot like "driving
while black." Did you know that at one time
Norway had hippie soldiers-men in combat gear
with ponytails and beard nets? Washington soon
insisted the Norwegian units de-hippify if they
wanted to participate in NATO drills. And so it
goes.
This unstated but very real policy of
"cleansing" America and the world of
hippie culture is the ugly truth we tap dance
around. We can't legalize marijuana or hemp in
any form because to do so would be to legitimize
hippie culture. No, anti-pot policies aren't just
bad health-care policy; they're repression-a form
of ethnic cleansing, I believe-disguised as bad
health-care policy. That's exactly what the war
on marijuana, hemp food and hippies is about:
prejudice, bigotry, and intolerance.
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