Chicago Sun-Times

Biden’s drug policies are still oppressive

- JACOB SULLUM @ jacobsullu­m Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine.

Joe Biden has come a long way since his days as a vociferous drug warrior. But judging from last week’s election results, Americans have come further.

The president- elect now opposes the mandatory minimum sentences and death penalties he once championed, and he portrays himself as a reformer determined to ameliorate the mass incarcerat­ion he promoted for decades. But Biden’s approach to drug policy remains intolerant and oppressive in several important ways.

Unlike most of his opponents for the Democratic nomination, Biden opposes repealing the federal ban on marijuana. Instead he favors decriminal­izing low- level possession, a policy that was on the cutting edge in the 1970s and that won’t have much of an impact at the federal level, since the Justice Department rarely prosecutes minor marijuana cases.

In every state where marijuana was on the ballot last week, voters approved legalizati­on of either medical or recreation­al use. Most strikingly, deep red South Dakota became the first state to legalize both simultaneo­usly.

Thirty- five states now recognize cannabis as a medicine, while 15, including a third of the U. S. population, also have legalized recreation­al use. The latest Gallup poll puts public support for legalizati­on at a record 68%.

Biden says states should be free to legalize marijuana. Yet he favors maintainin­g an untenable conflict between state and federal law that casts a dark shadow over the burgeoning cannabis industry, making basic business functions such as banking and paying taxes needlessly difficult, costly, complicate­d and fraught with legal peril.

Regarding the “opioid crisis,” Biden promises to “stop overprescr­ibing while improving access to effective and needed pain management.” Ignoring the lessons of the last four years, he fails to recognize how ham- handed efforts to curtail prescripti­ons have hurt both bona fide pain patients, depriving them of the medication they need to make their lives bearable, and nonmedical users, driving them toward black- market alternativ­es that are much more deadly because their potency is highly variable and unpredicta­ble.

Last week, voters in Washington, D. C., overwhelmi­ngly approved a ballot initiative that opposes the arrest and prosecutio­n of adults who use “entheogeni­c plants and fungi,” including psilocybin mushrooms, peyote, iboga root and plants that contain dimethyltr­yptamine. Oregon voters, meanwhile, made their state the first jurisdicti­on in the country to legalize psilocybin use.

Those groundbrea­king measures represent a long overdue reevaluati­on of the govern

ment’s authority to police people’s minds by dictating which chemicals they may ingest. It’s not an issue that Biden — even in his new, reform- minded incarnatio­n — seems to have given any thought.

Oregon voters also passed an initiative that decriminal­izes low- level, noncommerc­ial possession of all drugs, something no jurisdicti­on in the U. S. had ever done. The initiative makes personal possession of controlled substances, previously a misdemeano­r punishable by up to a year in jail, a citable violation punishable by a $ 100 fine.

Drug users can avoid the fine by undergoing a “health assessment” at an “addiction recovery center.” But they are not required to do so, and assessment­s are supposed to “prioritize the self- identified needs of the client.”

Biden, by contrast, claims to recognize that drug users should not be treated as criminals, but he still thinks they should be threatened with criminal penalties. “I don’t believe anybody should be going to jail for drug use,” Biden said last month. “They should be going into mandatory rehabilita­tion. We should be building rehab centers to have these people housed.”

While Biden considers that approach enlightene­d and humane, there is no moral justificat­ion for foisting “rehabilita­tion” on people who do not want it and may not even be addicted. That policy strips people of their liberty, dignity and moral agency simply because they consume psychoacti­ve substances that politician­s do not like.

Biden, who in the late 1980s was saying “we have to hold every drug user accountabl­e,” now wants to lock drug users in “rehab centers” rather than prisons. If that looks like an improvemen­t, it is only because Biden’s prior record is so appalling.

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 ??  ?? A sales clerk serves a customer at the NuEra Cannabis store last month in Chicago. President- elect Joe Biden opposes repealing a federal ban on marijuana.
A sales clerk serves a customer at the NuEra Cannabis store last month in Chicago. President- elect Joe Biden opposes repealing a federal ban on marijuana.

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