Rocky’s Drug War
by
Bill Kauffman
The
American Conservative
Recently
by Bill Kauffman: Meet
the Marlboro Man
I had drinks one night with an old friend who had spent the previous
year in jail. Despite my entreaties, and my guarantee that it would
provide rare cachet, he refused to loudly begin a sentence, When
I was in the joint
In fact, he denied that prisoners
ever called their domicile the joint, the rock, or the big house,
and he confessed to not having met a single grizzled veteran of
the pen who dispensed such gnomes as Do time; dont let
time do you.
You mean the movies lie about all this?
My levity shamed me. Theres really nothing funny about having
to live in a cage. My friends fellow penmen ranged from the
violent to the pathetic, from apparently unredeemable scumbags to
the luckless and the dumb. Innocent was seldom an apt description
of these men, but look hard enough and you can see the face of Christ
in each one.
The prison-industrial complex depends upon the drug war for its
seemingly limitless supply of bodies. (I write, by the way, as one
so drug-averse that I dont even like taking Tylenol for a
hangover I much preferred Minor Threat to Johnny Thunders.)
Although we have reached a stage where the jock potheads of my
boyhood have their avaricious little hands on the levers of power,
the bong throng including three consecutive deracinated ex-coke-sniffers
in the White House lack the guts even to take the gateway step
of saying that to imprison men and women for buying and selling
marijuana is an affront to personal liberty. (Not to worry: the
empty cells can be filled with Thought Criminals.)
Who are the national political figures willing to say that marijuana
ought to be legalized? The noble ascetic Ralph Nader, the heroic
physician Ron Paul, and former New Mexico governor Gary Johnson,
the triathlete running for president on the Libertarian ticket.
Governor Andrew Cuomo, no ones idea of a libertarian Democrat,
has proposed decriminalizing the open possession of less than 25
grams of marijuana. This is the latest meliorative attempt by New
York Democrats to soften the states drug laws, which took
an infamous turn toward the draconian four decades ago under Governor
Nelson Rockefeller.
Read
the rest of the article
July
9, 2012
Bill Kauffman's
[send him mail] most recent
book is Ain't
My America: The Long, Noble History of Antiwar Conservatism and
Middle-American Anti-Imperialism.
Copyright
© 2012 The American Conservative
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