Does the Constitution Protect the Right To Get High?
Columbia law professor David Pozen recalls the controversy provoked by early anti-drug laws and the hope inspired by subsequent legal assaults on prohibition.

The Constitution of the War on Drugs, by David Pozen, Oxford University Press, 304 pages, $27.95
When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, Justice Samuel Alito's majority opinion mocked "attempts to justify abortion" by asserting "a broader right to autonomy." After all, he wrote in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, that concept "could license fundamental rights to illicit drug use, prostitution, and the like." Alito thought it was obvious that "none of these rights has any claim to being deeply rooted in history."
Alito's blithe dismissal of a fundamental right to consume psychoactive substances reflects "constitutional amnesia," Columbia law professor David Pozen argues in The Constitution of the War on Drugs. It overlooks both the controversy provoked by the nation's early anti-drug laws and the hope inspired by subsequent legal assaults on prohibition. All of those challenges ultimately fizzled. But Pozen sees promise in "a model of rights review known as proportionality," which asks whether the burdens imposed by the drug war are commensurate with the corresponding benefits.
While some foreign courts have embraced that approach, it probably would not make much headway in U.S. courts, partly because it blurs the line between judges and legislators. Pozen's book nevertheless makes an important contribution to the drug policy debate by reminding us of the history that Alito ignored.
Alito was assessing the scope of the 14th Amendment, which bars states from abridging "the privileges or immunities of citizens." Although that clause is the most historically plausible source of rights that states must respect, the Supreme Court has instead relied on the amendment's command that states may not "deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." In applying restrictions to the states, the Court typically has resorted to "substantive due process," which encompasses rights that are "fundamental to our scheme of ordered liberty" or "deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition." Those rights include but are not limited to rights explicitly recognized in the first eight amendments.
Applying that test to abortion rights, Alito cited "the unbroken tradition of prohibiting abortion on pain of criminal punishment" prior to 1973. Leaving aside the accuracy of that gloss, anti-drug laws clearly do not have such a pedigree. When the 14th Amendment was ratified in 1868, state-level alcohol prohibition was a recent experiment that was legally contentious and generally deemed a failure. Americans were free to buy and consume drugs that are now "controlled substances" without a prescription, a situation that persisted into the early 20th century. "For the first 100 years of the nation," the longtime marijuana activist Dale Gieringer noted in response to Alito's scoffing, "the right to use drugs was taken for granted."
That sentiment was still prevalent in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. "If you asked a typical lawyer at the turn of the twentieth century whether the government could ban the possession or consumption of an intoxicant like alcohol, the answer would have been no," Pozen writes. "The federal government couldn't do so, it was understood at the time, because the 'police power' to regulate in the interest of public health, safety, and welfare had been reserved by the Constitution to the states." And although "state governments had broad discretion to legislate under their police power," Pozen notes, "many courts" held that such laws "must not interfere with purely private behavior."
In 1887, when the California Supreme Court blocked enforcement of a local ordinance that prohibited gatherings for the purpose of smoking opium, the majority opinion reflected that view, although it was not decisive in the outcome. "To prohibit vice is not ordinarily considered within the police power of the state," Justice Jackson Temple wrote. "Such legislation is very rare in this country. There seems to be an instinctive and universal feeling that this is a dangerous province to enter upon, and that through such laws individual liberty might be very much abridged."
In 1909, Pozen notes, the Kentucky Court of Appeals overturned "a conviction for bringing booze into a dry town." It is "not within the competency of government," the court said, "to invade the privacy of the citizen's life and to regulate his conduct in matters in which he alone is concerned, or to prohibit him any liberty the exercise of which will not directly injure society."
Such objections eventually gave way to state legislators' insistence that protecting "society" required them to "prohibit vice." Resistance to federal drug legislation took longer to overcome. Such laws initially were dressed up as revenue measures or, in the case of alcohol prohibition, authorized by constitutional amendment. Legislators dropped the tax pretense after the Supreme Court interpreted the power to regulate interstate and foreign commerce broadly enough to accommodate pretty much anything Congress wanted to do. As Pozen notes, that "New Deal settlement" proved to be a tradeoff for progressives who generally welcome economic regulation but object to the specific variety that drug prohibition entails.
Drug war dissenters attempted other strategies, such as claiming that the right to use drugs is part of a constitutionally protected right to privacy. That approach seemed promising after the Supreme Court's 1965 decision in Griswold v. Connecticut, which rejected a state ban on contraception. Griswold "recognized a new constitutional right of privacy and resurrected the protection of substantive liberty interests without a clear basis in the constitutional text," Pozen observes. And four years later in Stanley v. Georgia, the Supreme Court "recognized a right to possess and consume obscene material in one's home," even though it had said production and distribution of such material is not protected by the First Amendment.
Citing those two cases, former Supreme Court Justice Tom Clark suggested in a 1972 law review article that the Court "might find it difficult to uphold a prosecution for [marijuana] possession." But the privacy argument yielded no lasting victories against the drug war, with the notable exception of the Alaska Supreme Court's 1975 ruling in Ravin v. State, which held that possessing small amounts of marijuana at home for personal use was protected by the state constitution's explicit privacy guarantee.
The story of initial excitement followed by disappointment was repeated with other constitutional attacks on drug laws. Lawyers and academics offered arguments based on equal protection, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and the Eighth Amendment's prohibition of "cruel and unusual punishments."
Equal protection claims were stymied by toothless "rational basis" review of distinctions that do not involve "suspect classes" and by the intent requirement for proving racial discrimination. As with privacy, there was a conspicuous state court exception: In 1991, the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that the state's penal distinction between the smoked and snorted forms of cocaine—which, like a similar federal provision, had resulted in glaring racial disparities—violated the Minnesota Constitution's equal protection guarantee, which it said required a "stricter standard of rational basis review."
Although the Supreme Court has said "grossly disproportionate" criminal punishments can violate the Eighth Amendment, that test is almost never met in practice, notwithstanding a parade of draconian penalties for nonviolent drug offenses. In 1972, however, the Michigan Supreme Court rejected a 10-year sentence for passing a couple of joints to undercover cops. Three justices thought it amounted to cruel and unusual punishment; two concluded that the defendant, political activist John Sinclair, had been "entrapped"; and three perceived an equal protection violation in Michigan's "erroneous classification" of marijuana as a "narcotic."
In such deviant cases, Pozen sees the seeds of an argument based on the irrationality of drug laws. Although he acknowledges potential originalist claims under the Privileges or Immunities Clause or the Ninth Amendment, he is more excited about recent foreign rulings that overrode bans on low-level possession of drugs in general (in Argentina and Colombia) or cannabis specifically (in Germany, Italy, Mexico, South Africa, and elsewhere).
Those decisions, Pozen says, share "a commitment to investigating in earnest whether the privacy and autonomy costs of criminal drug bans are justified by the public benefit, not because drug use is 'fundamental' or enjoys special status in the constitutional text but simply because the decision to use drugs implicates individual freedom." That approach, he thinks, "does a better job of addressing critics' core objection to prohibitory drug laws—that they may limit people's liberty unnecessarily and counterproductively—than do the more categorical analyses performed by most U.S. courts." But this version of "proportionality" also sounds a lot like the policy judgments that legislators are supposed to make.
Pozen concedes that "the strongest claims for drug rights strain the bounds of professional legal reason," and his historical review provides little reason to expect that constitutional litigation will fundamentally change the war on drugs. The ongoing collapse of marijuana prohibition and recent moves toward legalizing psychedelics have been accomplished through ballot initiatives or bills approved by legislatures, not through judicial rulings. But changing the minds of voters and legislators was a prerequisite for those reforms, and the liberty costs that Pozen emphasizes could help persuade them to go further.
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"Those decisions, Pozen says, share "a commitment to investigating in earnest whether the privacy and autonomy costs of criminal drug bans are justified by the public benefit, not because drug use is 'fundamental' or enjoys special status in the constitutional text but simply because the decision to use drugs implicates individual freedom.""
Maybe a hard row to hoe with the "homeless" crisis showing a definite and obvious social cost to recreational drug use.
What homeless crisis? There are people too lazy to work and there are people stupid enough to give them money. That's not a crisis.
And there are people who have fried their brains.
No, a lot of the illegal invaders are frying their beans
And refrying them!
Yes, that is a crisis. The people who are giving them money are giving them MY money without my consent and calling it "taxes" while printing more money to pay for things not covered by taxation to the brink of official insolvency which, although not yet a crisis, will become one sooner rather than later.
So you're admitting that the war on drugs is a failure. And only ten decades too late. The only question left is why you think that the failure of your war on drugs is justification for continuing the war on drugs. Don't try to answer right away. I wouldn't want your tiny brain to overheat from the strain.
The point is that decriminalization has been a disaster.
Prohibition has been the greater disaster.
Alito is the conservative equivalent of Kagan.
Without the intellect.
I assume that Alito resorts to "history and tradition" arguments only when convenient, and only because he can pick and choose which pieces of history and tradition to cite.
Zero less zero is zero. Kagan is an imbecile.
Before Palito turned 21, nobody could use the word "pregnant" on TV. There's his "history and tradition." Pandering to tearmongering, girl-bullying male crybabies as pretext for stripping a woman of individual rights immediately after sex is Comstock law "history and tradition."
The problem with trying to find a tradition regarding a right to something, or the absence of that right, is frequently that previous to a certain time, it was not a matter of public controversy either way. There was no legislation on it because the subject just hadn't come up. So there's no evidence either way.
More importantly, the framers of the Constitution deliberately reserved ALL rights to the people at the time and specifically constrained future generations from abridging those rights.
That ship sailed about 200 years ago. And this philosophy may be even less popular than libertarianism.
Right on!
It is fortunate for the original Libertarian Party Platform that "popularity" sufficient to leverage repeal of cruel and aggressive laws violating rights amounts to 2% of the popular vote. Karl Marx's 16th Amendment was jimmied into the Constitution, and weak beer was made a constitutional felony by looter and dry party vote shares averaging about 2%. Since Gary got 3 to 4%, we don't give a damn for looter Kleptocracy babblings about "popularity." You lot should beware of your wasting planks falling prey to our leveraged spoiler votes. To us, winning is enabling voters to repeal bad laws. Freedom is winning!
There is if one is able to produce a clear definition of a political right, namely, a moral (non-aggressive toward other constitutional individuals) claim to freedom of action. For the benefit of those blinded by mystical fanaticism, "freedom" here implies exclusion of the initiation of force. This last part is lost on appointee-for-life PAlito.
Alito’s blithe dismissal of a fundamental right to consume psychoactive substances reflects
It be a NATURAL RIGHT!
Got it listed right after the “right to privacy”.
Wait, you deny that right exists too.
#FederalistSocietyAgainstRights
Specifically, all other unenumerated rights!
Sorry, but as much as I think prohibition has been a disaster and is lousy policy, this argument doesn’t really seem to hold water. I think you probably have very solid ground to assert no federal authority for prohibition. But, trying to use the 14th to make this claim at the state level is a textbook case of the courts abusing the law to push their agenda.
Does the Constitution Protect the Right To Get High?
Wrong question. The proper question is “Does the Constitution give the government the power to criminalize getting high?”
Remember that the Constitution is a document of enumerated powers and unlimited rights, not unlimited powers and enumerated rights.
“Does the Constitution give the government the power to criminalize getting high?”
But Sammy and Uncle Clarence would quickly say YES.
The pathetic failure of a President you defend every day is also a longtime Drug Warrior. And his DEI-hire VP used to lock people up for smoking weed (which she admitted smoking herself).
Your opposition to the War on Drugs is as sincere as your opposition to the Iraq War.
Sleepy Joe? The guy I said should drop out of the race immediately?
Oh I get it. Because I see the reality that the economy is red-hot that means I am defending him.
#DropOutJoe
You also insisted the economy was fantastic in 2022 and anyone who disagreed was brainwashed by "wingnut.com."
Do you regret torching your credibility on that laughable spin? Do you think your #DefendBidenAtAllCosts shtick would be more convincing in 2023 - 2024 if you hadn't lied so much throughout 2022?
#LessFamousMorePartisanPaulKrugman
The economy is always red hot in the final stages of a debt bubble, and this one's a doozy.
Apparently you have not read the Raich decision.
Those in favor of Federal marijuana bans were mostly on the left with Scalia joining. Justice Thomas wrote in dissent.
Exactly. Thomas has been wrong on the Constitution fewer times than anyone else on the Court. Which I suspect is the main reason the leftists opposed his nomination.
Wrong question. The proper question is “Does the Constitution give the government the power to criminalize getting high?”
This is one of those rare instances where I sort of agree with you. And, at the federal level, I think it's hard for me to say that it does. They needed an amendment (that has since been rescinded) to pass alcohol prohibition at the federal level. Given that, how you could turn around and say the default is that the feds have authority over other drugs is far from clear to me. I think you have to do a lot of contortions, though, to make the case that the several states don't have that authority.
I meant at the federal level. At the state level it would depend on the state constatations.
There have long been laws against public intoxication. To argue that at the state and local level there is a right to get high seems ahistorical, as the last paragraph points out that it "strains the bounds of professional legal reason".
Laws against public intoxication are not laws against drinking. Since getting high doesn't equal public intoxication I don't think your comparison is apt.
But "high" = intoxication, so there is not a right to being intoxicated by evidence of public intoxication laws.
You’re ignoring two words here. The first word you’re ignoring is “public” which means somewhere other than home. The second word you’re ignoring is “intoxication” which in the context of the law means “had too much.” So only if you ignore what those two words mean can you use “public intoxication” laws as precedent to outlaw getting high at home.
There is a traditional and obvious right to have sex (add "with your spouse" if you want to be extra traditional). But you can't do that in the street either. Don't think that means that sex can be banned or require a prescription.
""The proper question is “Does the Constitution give the government the power to criminalize getting high?”""
Yep.
Based upon which enumerated power?
He might have just been agreeing with you, that it's the correct question, as opposed to answering that question in the affirmative.
That’s how I read it.
How DARE you use the exact language of the written constitution to further political machinations in defense of individual rights? (Machination: The method employed by one's opponents in baffling one's open and honorable efforts to do the right thing.) To mystical bigots on and off the Supreme Court, "the right thing" begins with urging someone else to point a loaded service pistol at a pregnant girl or a long-haired teenager.
Well it's a Columbia professor so it's thought is probably arguing that there is a constitutional ammendment for a final solution to the Jewish problem
the constitution protects your right to do ANYTHING other than in a few explicitly enumerated instances where the government is granted specific limited powers to violate those rights. That's it.
government is granted specific limited powers
“Congress… shall do everything necessary and proper… to promote the general welfare… and regulate commerce.”
Leemits? We don’t need no steenking leemits!
Did it say "interstate" commerce?
Everything is interstate commerce now, even if you bought something locally that was made locally and used locally, because it affects the interstate market for that product somehow.
because it affects the interstate market for that product somehow.
Well yeah. If everyone grew their own parsley at home then nobody would buy parsley at the store, and that would have an effect on the interstate market for parsley. That gives the federal government the power to regulate how you grow parsley in your own home.
But FDR was totes not a fascist shitbag.
FDR was burdened by the 18th Amendment, Harrison Act and Wilson's announcement of income tax form content publicity the same day Austria invaded Serbia. Then Hoover foisted a Franco.-British Narcotics cartel "convention" on Germany in 1931. These things set up the economy for the Crash, the Depression, and WW2 brought about by the reactions of angry Christian National Socialists in defense of Big Pharma. Christian National Socialists hate popular vote democracy to this day--it's where they lose first of all.
So, in ACTUAL Constitutional law news:
https://redstate.com/jeffc/2024/04/22/brooklyn-man-convicted-over-gun-hobby-by-biased-ny-court-could-be-facing-harsh-sentence-n2173162
The Judge allegedly said "you can't argue Second Amendment. This is New York."
So, Reason... is this too local?
So as long as Christian National Socialists can soapbox local pistol events, let the word go forth that the Namsha Statehouse just legalized marijuana. The Progressive Caucus announced that control of the House and Senate would enable Dems to repeal laws against weed the LP has demanded for 52 years. Has anyone seen that plank in the Dem platform? Marijuana employees now number 440,000, a tenth of the votes Gary Johnson got before the anarchists added terrorist importation and girl-bullying to the platform. Girl-bullying bigoted MAGAts are the Democratic Party's best friends as platform planks now stand.
"My Body, My Choice"
sorry but that only applies to one very specific case and the rest of your body belongs to the state
Is that specific case male wanking, with the wanton destruction of millions of individual viable cells that are both alive and human?
“constitutional amnesia”
I would submit that every Court in the history of the United States of America since about 1812 has displayed signs and symptoms of this condition. Members of every generation since the Constitution was implemented have tried to ban one thing or another, passing laws that should have been immediately ruled unconstitutional while trying to circumvent the plain language of the Constitution and Bill of Rights – and largely succeeding – to the point where preceding violations of the Constitution have become the justification for each succeeding violation. Unfortunately, the Founders failed to build an automatic review of every new law and regulation by the Supreme Court into the system, so that now the Justices have become lazy at ruling on controversial issues and highly skilled at writing legislation from the bench in lengthy, twisted opinions that themselves violate the Constitution in order to justify social experiments that even Congress could not pass.
If I was king one of the first things I'd do is create a new house of Congress whose only power is to repeal laws. Then people would run for office based not upon what they would do, but rather on what they would undo. Hat tip to Professor Bernardo de la Paz.
Michael Badnarik said he would turn the Justice Department on the government itself, to start prosecuting the constitutional violations that are already illegal, but never enforced with criminal penalties. (The usual "remedy" is for the taxpayers to pay a large settlement to the wronged parties, if any action is taken at all.)
elected officials should be scared to death of screwing up and violating our rights. It should keep them up at night.
That’s some insurrection adjacent talk right there.
Ah, yes. Bob Heinlein's token anarchist. Bernardo specifically claimed anarchism as his due to his refusal to condone actual taxation. Unlike no-borders anarco-communists, De La Paz had no problem with providing for the common defense, forming a more perfect Union, establishing Justice, insuring domestic Tranquility, promoting the general Welfare, and securing the Blessings of Liberty to Luna's inhabitants and their Posterity. He was also in favor of so organizing priorities as to gain votes, rather than spit in voters' faces.
Glad to know I’m not the only one of this opinion.
"the 14th Amendment, which bars states from abridging "the privileges or immunities of citizens" vs. states may not "deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law."
These two approaches are not mutually exclusive, as much as some Justices might like to pick and choose. In fact, you can forbid states from abridging the privileges or immunities of citizens AND from depriving any person of those other rights without due process.
The 14th Amendment itself has a due process clause. It was amusing watching Democrats try to justify states enforcing section 3 of the 14th, while ignoring section 1 and section 5. It's not that long to read the whole thing.
The constitution doesn’t protect any rights. It grants limited and enumerated powers to Congress, the president, and the Supreme Court. If the Constitution didn't grant Congress the power to regulate something, it can’t (hence the need for the 18th Amendment to prohibit the manufacture, transportation, or sale of liquor).
At least that’s the way it’s supposed to work, and did, up until about 90 years ago.
^this
>>such as claiming that the right to use drugs is part of a constitutionally protected right to privacy
the right to be high is inherent. the privilege of government permitting and/or providing the source is no right.
A digression to Jake Sullum's excellent article, OK? In the April 1880 opium smoking case, California's upper benchers concluded "Holding these views, we think the respondent must be discharged." The accused dope dealer was so wealthy and connected they not only refrained from naming him on the record, but actually renamed the criminal defendant "Respondent," an honorific reserved for those called to court in civil cases. China's Corporations were financially capable in California politics. Momentum was also building nationally for Democrats to run Grover Cleveland on a platform to repeal "sumptuary laws which vex the citizen and interfere with individual liberty." Dems had libertarian cojones in those days.
Sullum's article led to serendipitous discovery of a 1916 tome challenging the slipperiness of the way organized mysticism's compulsory tithing morphed into taxation. Free on Gutenberg.org, THE INEVITABLE CRIMES OF CELIBACY, the Vices of Convents and Monasteries, Priests and Nuns by Thomas E. Watson opens with a bristling denunciation of how legalized looting destroys national economies: "But where robbery has disguised itself as Law, and one class has aimed the law-making machine at the others, saying "Stand and deliver!" whole regions have become deserts, and great peoples have been blotted out."
Alito is a F'En moron just begging to kill human rights in the US Constitution.
"Americans were free to buy and consume drugs that are now "controlled substances" without a prescription, a situation that persisted into the early 20th century."
.....
"the right to use drugs was taken for granted."
What was taken for granite was the free-market and the pharmaceutical gov-gun grift that occurred shortly after now running in hyper-inflation like everything else cut-out of Human Liberties and gov-gun controlled. $100+/pill BS. Only 'Guns' could sustain such an unbelievable price.
Think most legitimate constitutional scholars would agree that the U.S. Constitution (1789) and Bill of Rights (1791) were created to eventually “maximize” individual freedoms as long as one person’s exercise of freedoms didn’t infringe on another person’s freedom.
That’s why it’s legal to consume alcohol as long as the user doesn’t infringe on others. This freedom becomes illegal when an intoxicated person then drives a car or endangers other people.
What James Madison and the Framers did not support was a nanny-state government passing a constitutional amendment prohibiting alcohol use to everyone, even those users not infringing on other people’s rights.
Alcohol Prohibition was the first time a constitutional amendment was passed “taking away” (not maximizing) rights and freedoms. It was one of America’s greatest blunders, it actually created a huge illegal blackmarket and greatly increased crime.
Since the late 1960’s so-called “War on Drugs”, American taxpayers have spent about $1.5 trillion tax dollars for a completely failed program. Today there are more illegal drugs and the USA is the world’s top jailer - many in prison for a drug less harmful than liquor or nicotine.
Since the late 1960’s, those millions of prisoners for mostly non-violent drug convictions paid little to no income taxes and earned less income when released from prison. So instead of a boost to government treasuries and a boost to the economy, taxpayers wasted $1.5 trillion plus the loss of tax revenue and loss of economic growth.
Under the “Citizens United” U.S. Supreme Court ruling, marijuana manufacturers could possibly make a 14th Amendment litigation of equal treatment. Marijuana may not be good for you but the same standard applies to liquor or nicotine. Why is the corporate-person (marijuana manufacturer) penalized for selling a product safer than both liquor or nicotine?
If the government can play nanny-state (contrary to James Madison’s model) - why not prohibit fast food? Why not prohibit football? Why not prohibit soft drinks? Do we want government officials to intrude that deeply into our private affairs?