State Department's Top Drug Warrior Says Legalization Must Be Tolerated

In remarks to reporters at the United Nations last week, William Brownfield, the assistant secretary of state for international narcotics and law enforcement affairs, called for flexibility in interpreting anti-drug treaties, saying signatories must learn to "tolerate different national drug policies," which means "accept[ing] the fact that some countries will have very strict drug approaches," while "other countries will legalize entire categories of drugs." It was a pretty striking departure from the U.S. government's traditional role as enforcer of prohibitionist orthodoxy. "I would have to take that position," Brownfield explained. "How could I, a representative of the government of the United States of America, be intolerant of a government that permits any experimentation with legalization of marijuana if two of the 50 states of the United States of America have chosen to walk down that road?"
Contrary to the position of the International Narcotics Control Board, Brownfield said the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs of 1961 and the subsequent agreements that expanded on it can reasonably be read to allow legalization of not just marijuana but "entire categories of drugs." Regardless of their own preferences, he said, signatories must accept "flexible interpretation of those conventions." Otherwise, he warned, "the world is going to divide between those who are exploring a more user-friendly approach and those who are adamant in their opposition."
Brownfield did insist that "whatever our approach and policy may be on legalization, decriminalization, depenalization, we all agree to combat and resist the criminal organizations—not those who buy, consume, but those who market and traffic the product for economic gain." But businesses that produce and sell marijuana or other drugs in jurisdictions that have decided to legalize those activities do not qualify as "criminal organizations." Brownfield suggested that drug warriors must accept such deviations if they want to maintain international cooperation against "transnational criminal organizations" that "both traffic in product and use violence and blood to accomplish their objectives."
Asked about the federal government's attitude toward marijuana legalization in Colorado and Washington, Brownfield described a policy clearer than anything explicitly promised by the Justice Department:
The deputy attorney general's words were that the federal government will not intervene in the application of the laws of Washington and Colorado on marijuana legalization, but will monitor and hold them responsible for performance in eight specifically designated areas….We have a national interest to ensure that this does not cause undue harm….
The United States of America reserves the right and can at any time it chooses enforce the law against marijuana and cannabis cultivation, production, sale, purchase, and consumption in Washington state and Colorado. The deputy attorney general in a public document has asserted that for now we will not do that unless it crosses the line in eight specifically identified categories in those two states.
Deputy Attorney General James Cole did not quite say that in the August 2013 memo to which Brownfield refers, although such restraint was strongly implied.
Brownfield mixed his talk of tolerance with plenty of prohibitionist boilerplate. "We have reduced demand [for] cocaine by nearly 50 percent" since 2004, he claimed, thereby ascribing that change entirely to government policies of dubious effectiveness. He emphasized his own opposition to legalization and continued the Obama administration's habit of caricaturing antiprohibitionists as people "who say, literally, 'Let us legalize everything, and the problem will go away.'" Literally? The administration has yet to produce a single actual example of such critics. "I actually believe there is a good and productive debate going on," Brownfield said. Stupid strawmen do not advance that debate.
"Illicit drugs are illicit for a reason," Brownfield declared. True, but not necessarily for a good reason. "They were made illegal initially," he said, "because they are perceived scientifically to be a toxic substance harmful to the human body in and of themselves and an addictive, or at a minimum, a dependency-producing substance which is both physically and psychologically harmful." Notice how the phrase "perceived scientifically" implies an objective basis for prohibition while leaving room for retreat. After all, it is pretty hard to defend the proposition that marijuana prohibition was based on perceptions that could fairly be described as scientific.
Even when a substance is accurately viewed as potentially addictive and harmful (a description that applies to all psychoactive drugs, along with pretty much everything else that people enjoy), that is not the end of the inquiry. Brownfield implies that prohibited drugs are more dangerous than legal ones, which is clearly not true, as the boss of Brownfield's boss could confirm. And Brownfield takes for granted that the use of violence is morally acceptable "to protect people" from their own choices. In other words, he is still a prohibitionist, but he is a prohibitionist who has been compelled by political circumstances in his own country to concede that there might be some value to other perspectives.
[Thanks to Mike Riggs for the tip.]
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How about denouncing the treaty altogether, rather than going cap in hand to international prohibitionist bodies asking for permission to have our own policies?
Yup, Article 46 allows us to escape from the treaty with proper notice -
(from the UN)
http://bit.ly/1o9urTY
Um, because "we" aren't the ones asking permission to legalize?
I had really hoped that by the end of it we'd be stringing some of these people up by their thumbs rather than accepting their newfound "tolerance."
Currently, on CNN's front page: Marijuana candy fears in Colorado
I'm more worried about the THC in the razor blades, myself.
All children have to learn to share not to bogart.
Also, your child is eating treats handed them by total strangers. Among the variety of unlikely but possible adulterants they might contain, THC would frankly be a relief.
Also, you are raising your children in a neighborhood with whose residents you make no effort to acquaint yourselves. Therefore, you must regulate the behavior of people who you have never and will never encounter.
Watch out for those adults who say "Boo!" when they give out the candy. *Especially* if it's preceded by "Let's blaze some".
Take this seriously. You can't risk children getting a taste of marijuana. They might end up enjoying cartoons even more than they already do.
"Hey Mom and Dad! These treats are for you!"
I would like to point out that Trick or Treating is morally reprehensible. Dressing kids in masks, going to peoples' doors demanding something lest they do something to me or my property is a terrible thing to teach kids to do. Not that I would ever do it, but poisioning a robber is defensible.
"...we all agree to combat and resist the criminal organizations?not those who buy, consume, but those who market and traffic the product for economic gain."
Got that?
Those who buy and consume - GOOD
Those who provide the product for those who buy and consume - BAD
just like big oil
Whenever I hear shit like that, it just makes me want to engage in counter-economics even more.
"I would have to take that position," Brownfield explained. "How could I, a representative of the government of the United States of America, be intolerant of a government that permits any experimentation with legalization of marijuana if two of the 50 states of the United States of America have chosen to walk down that road?"
The tone sounds like one of defeat... of surrender. I want my public officials to embrace my opinions... with gusto!
There's no such thing as a failed policy, only an underfunded agency.
I thought they were made illegal because of drug crazed Mexicans and sex crazed black men.
You are forgetting the inscrutable Chinese men and opium.
"I forgive you." - Amon Goeth, Schindler's List.
"I tolerate you." - William Brownfield.
Am I a bad person for thinking this as soon as I saw Brownfield's photo?
"How could I, a representative of the government of the United States of America, be intolerant of a government that permits any experimentation with legalization of marijuana if two of the 50 states of the United States of America have chosen to walk down that road?"
That's a rhetorical question, isn't it, Eric, I mean *William*?
Who is this man and why is he collecting a paycheck from this administration?
the assistant secretary of state for international narcotics and law enforcement affairs
Nothing. Left. To. Cut.
we all agree to combat and resist the criminal organizations
You created the criminal organizations, you dumb shit.
we all agree to combat and resist the criminal organizations
By forcing them out of their cozy black-market niches and into red-in-tooth-and-claw world of the open market.
Between Pfizer and MS-13, its not even a contest.
Let us legalize everything, and the problem will go away.
And more problems will emerge. I support legalization in principle, but having tried many drugs, I'm not so sure I want them to be easily available.
I'd settle for closing the gateway to the black market by legalizing marijuana. "Hard" drugs aren't easy to find, and keeping them illegal while making pot legal would make them even more difficult to find.
You need a gateway to the black market before you can gain access to its prohibited goods and services. Some stranger behind the counter at a liquor store isn't likely to recommend a cocaine dealer, and the same could be said about a shop that sells happy smoke. A guy selling illegal weed is another matter. And he's everywhere.
Not only that, but it would be a big whammy to the people who produce the drugs. They make most of their money from wacky tobaccy. Legalizing he good herb would seriously dent their profits.
I believe that's why many in the enforcement community do not want to see marijuana illegal. Because small-time dope dealers aren't just the addict's gateway to cocaine and heroin dealers, they're the cops' gateway as well.
Generally in a compromise with evil, only evil profits. But in this compromise you'd be undoing some evil while leaving less evil in place.
Better than nothing.
do not want to see marijuana illegal legal.
Duh-oh!
I really don't think any of what you're saying has any basis in reality.
The rare occasions I've bought marijuana it hasn't been sourced from people who have any connection to cartels. Granted my personal experience may be rare, but even what I've been reading indicates that "drug gangs" have little involvement in the pot trade nationally because the margins are too low and there are far too many producers to successfully cartelize the trade.
The Mexican cartels are murdering people by the thousands over cocaine. Cocaine can really only be produced in a few areas, by a relatively small number of people. Because the source (and the trade route) can be so easily controlled and the margins are enormous cartels have arisen to control the trade.
All of this is beside the point that nobody has any fucking business regulating what somebody else puts in their body. No. Fucking. Business. What. So. Ever.
Leave the utilitarian bullshit to police state worshiping twatwaffles like Tulpa.
'White boy' Biden calls tea party 'crazy'
Biden then went on to add "That Ted Cruz is one jive ass peckerwood turkey. You feel me, my man? Slap me on my good side if you do! Sheeeeeiitttt!"
That guy was a public pretender? Oh man. How many people went to prison thanks to his incompetence. . .
All of 'em?
I'm sure he ran up against prosecutors who were even more incompetent than himself, but yeah.
Think of all the men and women who enforce these laws! And their families!
If we stop enforcing drug prohibition, then they'll be out of work!
(Forget about all the families that are ruined by these enforcers. They don't have an organized voice. They are the unseen. Only pay attention to the seen. Bastiat's wisdom doesn't apply here.)
Think of the children!
Proper response from Colorado AG :
"Since we aren't really looking for conflict, we'll tolerate their presence. But if they attempt to arrest somebody using a null and void federal law, we will arrest them and put them in jail for kidnapping. And if they are armed when they commit their crimes, all normal assault weapon sentence enhancements wil be fully applied. Of course I'm only speaking about within the jursidiction of our state. Cause we still believe in juridictions and shit."
Federal government's response:"Supremacy, bitches!"
Here is what I heard, though I could be wrong -
"In spite of our wishes we will not be able to impose our will on the populace. We are going to have to make concessions according to their wishes, so suck it up boys."
Seems like a nice guy. Hope he has another job lined up.
Breaking treaties is no problem. Ask native Americans about how treatises can be broken.