Barack Obama

If the US Is Serious About Pot Prohibition, We Will Bar Justin Trudeau From Entry

Canadian prime minister has openly admitted to using the drug (just like President Obama). So he should be barred from entering US.

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ycanada news, Wikimedia

As Jacob Sullum notes, anybody trying to enter the United States from a foreign country who has used a controlled substance is inadmissible without a special waiver. This law often trips up Canadians driving into the country from the Great White North and Sullum writes about concertgoers being kept out, a medical doctors denied entry simply because he'd written a journal article detailing decades-ago use of psychedelics, and a former Canadian football player who had been convicted of possessing a joint 30 years prior to his attempted visit.

But if America is serious about keeping out potheads from Canada and really wants to send a message, we should insist on an all-points-bulletin for the current prime minister, Justin Trudeau. Young, hip, and hunky, Trudeau has never made a secret of his past pot use. And yet, there was earlier this year, toasting his spiritual "sibling" (and another admitted pot user) Barack Obama at the White House! In 2013, he told Huffington Post Canada:

Trudeau said he's smoked pot five or six times in his life. "It has never really done anything for me," he later told HuffPost in an email.

"When the joint went around the room, I usually passed it around to the next person," he said.

"(But) sometimes throughout my life, I've had a pull on it."

"Sometimes, I guess, I have gotten a buzz, but other times no. I'm not really crazy about it."

Drugs, Trudeau said, were never his thing. He also described himself as not much of a drinker. He has never smoked cigarettes and doesn't drink coffee.

Even worse, there's this statement of personal responsibility that would be ruinous to our own war on drugs:

Trudeau said that his decision to smoke pot was personal and that adults should be allowed to make their own decisions.

Read the whole article here.

Trudeau is also outspoken in his desire to legalize marijuana and treat it akin to alcohol. He also notes that all sorts of international treaties make that tougher than it should be.

Somebody get Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Texas) on the horn and make sure he knows about this. It may help the prohibitionist legislator in his pernicious quest to sink criminal-justice reform on the grounds that currently illegal drugs are inherently violent commodities. Certainly, President Barack Obama, no stranger to the bong himself, seems at least half-heartedly committed to keep marijuana illegal. Despite the apparent spectacle of one of his daughters lighting up, about 600,000 people will be arrested for pot-related crimes this year.

Aren't our elected leaders supposed to set examples for the rest of us, who are incapable of making our own life choices?

Hat Tip: rachel gurstein