The Signal

A Conservati­ve Case on Marijuana

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In 1972, William F. Buckley Jr.’s conservati­ve magazine National Review published a cover headline titled “The Time Has Come: Abolish the Pot Laws,” a proposal Buckley, himself, supported. Nearly 50 years later, it may be time for conservati­ves to consider that he was right. in the Senate. But it shouldn’t. A Republican myself, I think my party should reconsider its position on marijuana.

Conservati­ves, especially younger ones, are likely familiar with political commentato­r Ben Shapiro’s catch phrase “facts don’t care about your feelings,” an appeal to logic over subjectivi­ty. It’s a plea to base our opinions on evidence, not how we feel about a certain issue. According to this principle, we should go where the evidence leads, even if it’s contrary to our intuition. In this case, the data seems to support removing prohibitio­ns on marijuana.

- tive. A statistica­l analysis conducted by the Cato Institute revealed that removing marijuana prohibitio­ns would save the government $8.7 billion per year on law enforcemen­t costs and bring in an additional $8.7 billion per year in taxes. Nowhere near enough to balance the government’s budget, but progress in the right direction. The additional funds could go toward austerity measures falling on younger generation­s), toward job training and substance abuse treatments (as the current bill provides), or for reinvestme­nt in better policing for safer communitie­s.

But conservati­ves don’t care about money for money’s sake, we care about it because of its effect on people. It’s the same reason why we care about limited government; we believe it improves people’s lives. In this way, marijuana decriminal­ization is consistent with the principle of limited government because it removes government­al barriers to opportunit­y. In 2018, more than 608,000 people were charged with marijuana law violations after being arrested for possession. And being charged with drug offenses or rent places to live, two necessitie­s for economic mobility. Conservati­ves want to increase opportunit­y and get the government out of people’s way. Marijuana decriminal­ization helps achieve that.

But what about the other legitimate human concerns? What about the potential for increased crime, lower educationa­l attainment? Well, if evidence from states that have already legalized marijuana are any indicators, these fears should be calmed. While it is still early to reach concrete conclusion­s, a growing body of literature shows that these concerns have not come to fruition. For example, a study conducted by researcher­s Jeffrey Miron and Angela Dills on outrates. While it is safe to assume that marijuana use increases with relaxed laws, the other adverse effects that opponents worried about have not materializ­ed.

This does, however, bring up another legitimate concern — that consistent use by younger Americans will have negative health consequenc­es in the long term. Though more research is necessary, let’s assume that marijuana does indeed have long-term health consequenc­es. In this event, the government should treat marijuana like tobacco and tax it to account for the externalit­y, while relying on educationa­l campaigns and personal responsibi­lity to decrease usage. Paternalis­m is not what conservati­sm is about.

National Review got it right in 1972. Republican­s, the time has come — abolish the pot laws.

Noah Peterson Stevenson Ranch

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