Source: Creative Loafing Contact: 404-420-1402 Website: http://www.creativeloafing.com Pubdate: Saturday, 3 Jan 1998 Newshawk (and author) writes: Creative Loafing is a free weekly paper for the Atlanta area. Readership is 180,000, and it therefore claims to be the largest "alternative" city weekly in America. My op-ed appeared in their "Think Tank" editorial section. LEGALIZE POT The only thing Ralph David Abernathy III might be guilty of is hypocrisy I am no fan of state Senator Ralph David Abernathy III. But the holier-than-thou war being mounted against him for attempting to smuggle a tiny amount of marijuana through the Atlanta airport is making me sick. Gov. Miller has denounced Abernathy's act as "outrageous." Lt. Governor Pierre Howard is working with other oh-so-shocked legislators to craft new laws to punish lawmakers who commit similar sins. What's the big deal? Abernathy is an adult. What he chooses to put into his own body should be his own business. Some argue that Abernathy should be punished simply because he broke the law. But bad laws deserve neither our respect nor our obedience. The laws prohibiting the use, possession and sale of marijuana are similarly idiotic and despotic. Indeed, marijuana is far safer than the most popular legal recreational drugs in America, alcohol and tobacco. Alcohol and tobacco kill hundreds of thousands of Americans each year. Those who today enjoy beer or wine, yet condemn Abernathy for possessing marijuana, should pause and reflect that, a mere few decades ago, booze -- not marijuana -- was illegal. Alcohol was outlawed between 1920 and 1933. Eventually the country came to its senses, and booze was re-legalized. Marijuana was perfectly legal in America well into this century. The federal government didn't outlaw pot until 1937, and then only after Congress was bamboozled by a sordid propaganda campaign of outright lies. Just as our grandparents rebelled against alcohol Prohibition, today millions of Americans are rebelling against pot prohibition. According to the federal Department of Health and Human Services, 10 million Americans smoke marijuana monthly, and about 20 million use it yearly. And many more Americans like me, who have never touched the stuff, view the war against it as a terrible injustice. Rather than attacking Abernathy, we should be aiming our deepest contempt at politicians like President Clinton, Vice President Al Gore, and House Speaker Newt Gingrich -- all of whom smoked pot in college, suffered no ill effects whatsoever from it, and yet today wage a savage (and politically-motivated) war against others who merely choose, as they themselves once did, to smoke the same substance. Which brings me to the one good reason there might be for attacking Abernathy. Does he favor keeping marijuana illegal? If so, then he should indeed be booted out of office. Not for smuggling dope, but for outrageous and disgusting hypocrisy -- a hypocrisy unfortunately shared by many other politicians. James Harris freelance writer; editor, The Liberator and The Liberator Online (both published by the Advocates for Self-Government)