Tancredo Breaks Pot Promise but Remains Pro-Choice
Former Colorado congressman Tom Tancredo, who endorsed Amendment 64, his state's marijuana legalization initiative, was so sure it would fail that he made a bet with Adam Hartle, a documentarian covering the issue. If this thing passes, the conservative Republican told Hartle, I will smoke pot for the first time in my life. Amendment 64 won by a 10-point margin, and last week Tancredo said he intended to follow through on his promise. But now ABC News reports that Tancredo, "under pressure from his wife and grandchildren," is reneging. Even while backing out of the bet, saying he does not want to send the wrong message to the youth of America, Tancredo highlighted his libertarian turn on drug policy:
My conservative friends just believe what I'm doing is encouraging people to smoke it. I don't think people should. That decision is up to an individual. An adult, in this society, is not something the government should have any control over.
Similarly, when he announced his support for Amendment 64 in a September 21 op-ed piece published by the Colorado Springs Gazette, Tancredo not only cited the futility and cost of marijuana prohibition but also said this:
In addition to the economic and public safety arguments for ending marijuana prohibition, I also support Amendment 64 for a much broader, philosophical reason.
Marijuana prohibition is perhaps the oldest and most persistent nanny-state law we have in the U.S. We simply cannot afford a government that tries to save people from themselves. It is not the role of government to try to correct bad behavior, as long as those behaviors are not directly causing physical harm to others.
Tancredo has been moving in this direction for years. As a member of Congress from 1999 through 2008, he repeatedly supported legislation aimed at denying the Justice Department funding for medical marijuana raids. Seeking the Republican presidential nomination in 2008, he described his position as a matter of federalist principle:
It's not about marijuana, it's about states' rights. The federal government has no right to interfere when a state makes that kind of decision…The federal government should stay the hell out of it.
Tancredo and Ron Paul were the only Republican presidential candidates that year to receive an A+ grade from Granite Staters for Medical Marijuana. The following year, in a speech to a Colorado Republican group, Tancredo questioned the war on drugs in general, saying, "I am convinced that what we are doing is not working." He voiced support for marijuana legalization on pragmatic grounds that same year. Nowadays, even if he declines to smoke pot, Tancredo is defending the right to do so for explicitly libertarian reasons that apply to all illegal drugs, not to mention myriad other things that are restricted or prohibited on paternalistic grounds.
Tancredo is chairman of the Rocky Mountain Foundation, which includes a Center for Individual Liberty that criticizes the war on drugs. Tancredo's stance on immigration, as you may recall, is a bit less libertarian.
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Good for him, not succumbing to peer pressure.
The question seems to be more "to which peers' pressure does one succumb?"
We should write an aftercongress special about this courageous man.
Yeah.
I'm waiting for an incumbent to say "Legalize it" while in a close re-election race.
Come on Tom, TOKE IT!
If they made jumping off bridges legal, would you go jump off a bridge?
Everyone knows jumping off bridges is a gateway to other activities.
Only if Tom Tancredo jumped off the bridge...
Lame.
Anti-pot, pro-choice... way to be an asshole.
+1 unborn sarcastic fetus.
As long as he maintains the "I won't do it, but you should be free to do so if you chose" position, then I don't care if he welches on a bet he made in jest.
Exactly.
I actually think 'I won't do it, but you should be free to do so if you choose' is the most principled position to have on something like this. If you like pot and want pot to be legal, what does that prove? Everyone wants the things they like to be legal. I have more respect for people who don't like pot, but still think other people should have the right to do as they choose.
However, I have little respect for people who respect me*, so, sorry about that iggy.
*on the Groucho Marx Principle.
All I ever wanted was to have your respect. This is the worst day of my life.
Worst day of your life so far.
THIS^^
The things you'd have to do to get some people around here to respect you would totally destroy any respect you had for yourself...
And the few shreds of respect that I had for you. Wait... isn't that some sort of tautology? Or anti-tautology? Better get the coffee started.
Marijuana prohibition is perhaps the oldest and most persistent nanny-state law we have in the U.S. We simply cannot afford a government that tries to save people from themselves.
Nicely said, Tom Tancredo. And while I don't think it makes you a bad person to have reneged on your promise, I still think you should've blazed that shit up.
Still....knuckling under to your wife?? Bad form!
Tell the grandkids your doing them a favor in trying to institute a more just world for them so they can just STFU and paying off!
....and paying off!
????
I swear to god I'm going to start paying a proofreader!
Or at least sit in a car while three stoners hot box a fattie.
Tancredo seems to be one of those genuine politicians who aren't corrupt compromisers... he's just an idiot is all, but not stupid enough to be blind to the fact that prohibition doesn't work... still dumb
Why is he an idiot?
He's a rabid immigration hawk. You can read about some of his more idiotic moves to stem the RagingBrownTide.
Got ya. I thought he was referring to this issue and I also had no idea he was a xenophobic dickhead.
Trying to out-Arpaio Arpaio? That's idiotic to me.
His grandkids sound like pansies.
Tancredo and Ron Paul were the only Republican presidential candidates that year to receive an A+ grade from Granite Staters for Medical Marijuana.
I'm sure that made them feel all warm and fuzzy inside.
He needs to get some cooler grand children.
Give them a chance.
My conservative friends just believe what I'm doing is encouraging people to smoke it. I don't think people should. That decision is up to an individual. An adult, in this society, is not something the government should have any control over.
Come on, Tom. You know the government should have at least a little control. Right?
Just the tip.
That paragraph just made Tancredo one of the only politicians that I don't despise on principle.
If he meant exactly what he said, that would make him infinitely cooler in my eyes. But I'm sure he didn't mean it exactly as he said it.
I don't know, Sparky. He's been given a million chances to back-pedal on his support for legalization and he's never flinched.
I'd expect him to be at the cusp of libertarian social issues going forward and wouldn't be surprised to see him at some Rand Paul events in the next couple of years.
Too bad the LP won't do the smart thing and try to get him to jump ship.
The point I dispute is:
An adult, in this society, is not something the government should have any control over.
If he really believes that, then he's essentially advocating for no government, because all government is is control.
Especially considering his anti-immigration policies. Admittedly, he might argue that people who aren't American citizens aren't 'in this society' but stopping them from coming here means you're controlling American citizens' ability to hire foreign labor.
This doesn't dovetail with the sentence Sparky quoted.
No. You're both right. I guess he should have said, "What an adult does to his own body is not something the government should have any control over."
And maybe he shouldn't be such a douchenozzle wen it comes to people coming to America.
Yes, that would have been a better statement.
So instead of teaching his grandkids about honor and individual responsibility for their actions he chooses to teach them that it is ok to lie. Nice lesson.
As an aside, he is actually fairy sane on many issues but he is batshit crazy on brown people from the south. And I mean BAT SHIT CRAZY!
THIS.
It was a stupid bet to make if he considers smoking MJ to be such a horrible thing.
What is he going to do for the first time when gay marriage is legalized in Colorado?
I believe he is a Top Man.
He'll be smoking something else.
Also, good luck with that, CO passed a constitutional ammendment back in 2006 defining marraige as being between a man and a woman. Although I suppose it's possible that they might ammend it again to overturn that someday.
Fresno cop (local story!) comes up with a pretty creative story to explain for his perjury. Too bad for him the video tells the story of what really happened.
Can the review board just issue its finding that he 'acted in accordance with proper procedure' now instead of making us wait several months?
Isn't perjury part of proper established procedures?
Are his grandkids Mormons? I don't know anyone who *wouldn't* want gramps to toke up...
Sometimes man, you jsut have to roll with it.
http://www.ImaAnon.tk
What is the stated reason for the FedGov forbidding marijuana use, again?
Is it because mj supposedly kills brain cells, or something?
Well, you can always say, "I didn't inhale".