Elton John Condemns Marijuana Legalization, but Doesn't Mention Prohibition's Harms
Using force to make people give up drugs is both dangerous and morally wrong.

In a sign that the times surely are changing, pop music icon Elton John came out against marijuana in a Time magazine interview. Once known as much for his excesses as for his music, the long-rehabbed star regrets not only his own overindulgence, but also legalization efforts that free users from the threat of arrest and imprisonment. While we can appreciate the difficulties of the performer's own journey, he makes two basic mistakes: he ignores the damage done by prohibition, and he overlooks our right to do what we please without state interference so long as we harm nobody else. Both are serious oversights.
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You Make Terrible Decisions on Drugs
"I maintain that it's addictive. It leads to other drugs," 77-year-old Elton John commented about marijuana to Time's Belinda Luscombe during an interview naming him icon of the year. "And when you're stoned—and I've been stoned—you don't think normally. Legalizing marijuana in America and Canada is one of the greatest mistakes of all time."
John suffered through severe drug dependency, which he kicked in rehab, so his personal regrets are understandable. He says that after he started heavily using cocaine and other intoxicants, he belatedly discovered that "you make terrible decisions on drugs." Worse for the performer: Luscombe notes that "as John became increasingly dependent on drugs, the music got worse."
Those were excellent reasons for John to go into rehab and kick his dependencies, which he did decades ago. He's helped other performers, with various degrees of success, battle their own problems with intoxicants. But it's a leap from his personal problems to attacking reforms that reduce or eliminate legal threats against those who produce, buy, sell, and use marijuana. Whatever harms marijuana use may cause some people—and harm can to be found in excess consumption of anything—pale in comparison to the damage done by efforts to enforce prohibition against a resistant population.
War on Drugs Has Subjected Millions to Criminalization
"Since the declaration of the U.S. drug war, billions of dollars each year have been spent on drug enforcement and punishment because it was made a local, state, and federal priority," wrote Aliza Cohen, Sheila P. Vakharia, Julie Netherland, and Kassandra Frederique of the Drug Policy Alliance in a 2022 paper published in the Annals of Medicine. "For the past half century, the war on drugs has subjected millions to criminalisation, incarceration, and lifelong criminal records, disrupting or altogether eliminating access to adequate resources and supports to live healthy lives."
The authors note that "drug offences remain the leading cause of arrest in the nation; over 1.1 million drug-related arrests were made in 2020, and the majority were for personal possession alone." They add that "roughly 20% of people who are incarcerated are there for a drug charge." Racial disparities can be found in both arrests and incarceration, though nobody should be facing such perils.
Prohibition, they add, means drugs come in uncertain purity from unreliable suppliers because of the illegal nature of the business. "The most recent 'fourth wave' of the overdose crisis can be attributed to a fentanyl-contaminated drug supply caused by drug prohibition," as illegality drives buyers to black market sources.
Some of the victims of the war on drugs had problems comparable to those of Elton John in terms of dependency and impaired decision-making. It's difficult to believe that pursuits by police, arrest, and imprisonment improved their lot. Others were casual users who were certainly harmed by the intrusion of the criminal justice system into their lives. All suffer from the lingering effects of criminal records that make it difficult to find jobs, gain occupational licenses in our overregulated society, and even get access to housing when subjected to background checks.
Prohibition Breeds Corruption and Violence
In 2017, the Cato Institute's Christopher J. Coyne and Abigail R. Hall reached similar conclusions. They concluded that "the domestic War on Drugs has contributed to an increase in drug overdoses and fostered and sustained the creation of powerful drug cartels" that profit from the illegal trade and inflict corruption and violence on the societies around them. "Internationally, we find that prohibition not only fails in its own right, but also actively undermines the goals of the Global War on Terror."
They added that "prohibition may increase the benefits of using violence. By gaining a reputation for using violence, those involved in the drug trade may exert more effective control over the market." Also, their participation in the illegal drug trade enriches both criminal cartels and terrorist organizations. In Afghanistan, for instance, "the Taliban…developed a cartel over the country's opium production."
All of this indicates that use of drugs overall might harm some people who overindulge, but prohibition damages whole societies. And both the Annals of Medicine and Cato papers addressed the problem inherent in prohibiting any drugs. Elton John voiced regret over the legalization of marijuana, generally acknowledged to be the most benign of those drugs that have historically been banned.
Just as important as these practical issues, though, are the moral ones. For libertarians, the principle of personal freedom is a clear and obvious one. We have the right to create, buy, sell, and use whatever we please, and to engage in consensual dealing with other adults, even if the outcomes might hurt us.
Power Can Be Rightfully Exercised Only To Prevent Harm to Others
"The only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others," John Stuart Mill wrote in On Liberty. "His own good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient warrant. He cannot rightfully be compelled to do or forbear because it will be better for him to do so, because it will make him happier, because, in the opinions of others, to do so would be wise, or even right." Referring to efforts to, among other things, ban the import of opium into China, he wrote, "these interferences are objectionable, not as infringements on the liberty of the producer or seller, but on that of the buyer."
In truth, they sound like infringements on the liberty of the seller and producer, too, in their efforts to seek consensual dealings with buyers.
Prohibitionists argue that drug users harm society through lowered productivity, poor decision-making, and dependency. But that implies that we have an obligation to society to always be at our high-functioning best. It also ignores the "harm" done by a host of other things, including being unmotivated.
Then there's the damage done by prohibition itself: violence, corruption, and ruined lives. Even those who reject our right to live free must address the dangers inherent in prohibition.
Elton John is a remarkable performer who has defeated some personal demons and helped others do the same. He certainly has advice to offer when it comes to drug use and the damage it can do. But he needs to give more thought to the lives ruined and societies wrecked by trying to make people give up marijuana and other drugs by force.
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This senile old asshole can fuck right off.
Singers of songs know more about everything than us mere mortals.
My gift is this law and this one's for you
And I can tell everybody
This is my plan
Weed may be quite harmless, but it should be banned
I hope you don't mind, I hope you don't mind
If you're denied bail
How wonderful my life is
While you are in jail
Ha!
What a stupid illogical way of arguing you have
Doi you not see the abuse that libertrians should be recoiling from?
AND the ability to define what is a drug !!!!
1996 President Clinton declared nicotine an addictive drug and imposed strict limits
Maybe oreos or beer or whatever. C'mon, stop being so stupid.
Things don't come with 'drug' stamped on their ass.
Elton John should maybe say that homosexual perversion can be addictive, one might interview his first wife on that.
I condemn Elton John's wardrobe. One makes terrible decisions dressed like that.
Here he is after leaving his first wife, a woman, for this perv gold-digger
https://cache.diomedia.com/diocomp/01/AS/VF/comp/01AS-VFEG.jpg
Reason never really seemed to get that making common cause with progressives on criminal justice reform didn't make them on your side. They weren't against such laws in principle, they were just against laws that prohibited things they personally liked. Things they don't like, well you can make as much of that illegal as you want.
I kinda despise marijuana, and now that it's legal here, smelling it all the time is annoying. But I still think it should be legal.
Right there with you. It's easy to approve the things you like, but harder to resist the impulse to ban things you don't like. My life is materially better if I didn't have to smell weed all over the place. Society certainly would be better off without all the homeless and/or addicts in my town. On principle, I support drug legalization but I'm not going to complain about druggie problems being reduced. If we start from a position of personal responsibility then there's no reason a person shouldn't be able to do all the drugs they can afford at home. The progressives, including Tuccille, ignore/reject the personal responsibility component and are content with the harm done to others.
"If we start from a position of personal responsibility then there's no reason a person shouldn't be able to do all the drugs they can afford at home."
If we start from a position of personal responsibility, we should be skeptical about drugs. Elton John tells us they impair our ability to make sound decisions, thus eroding personal responsibility.
Drugs the big destroyers of homes. YOu should have said 'flophouse' or 'drug den"
With cannabis the harm to others is pretty minimal (most of the complaints seem to be about smelling it on the street or in apartment buildings). But with drug legalization in general, you are quite right, it needs to come with personal responsibility for bad behavior. You want to do drugs, fine, but if you do a bunch of junkie bullshit, you will not be seen as some kind of victim, but will face the consequences.
" it needs to come with personal responsibility for bad behavior. "
I don't think that's enough. As I wrote expecting personal responsibility to rule the day when drugs erode that capacity is disingenuous and self defeating. One of the most successful efforts I can think of in overcoming the negatives of substance abuse is the designated driver movement. It doesn't rely on personal responsibility so much as a collective effort, mutual trust and sacrifice.
Wow. A pop singer who was popular 50 years ago commenting about an issue that was interesting 30 years ago in a publication that was relevant 20 years ago.
Timing!
Yeah but the glasses always tie it all together.
The morality of old age.
"And when you're stoned—and I've been stoned—you don't think normally. "
Well, Sir, why then did you get stoned?
Bob Dylan ordered him to
Everybody must get stoned......
"I maintain that it's addictive. It leads to other drugs," 77-year-old Elton John commented
Except that it's not, and it doesn't.
What 'leads to other drugs' is the users curiosity about drugs or their mental damage they're trying to run away from, in Elton's case his homosexuality during a period of time where that was majorly frowned on one might think. Pot doesn't do that, it merely self selects among people who are...curious and interested in using drugs.
The idea there is any physical addiction attached to pot is belied by all data to date. What we do know is that people with various mental conditions self medicate with pot much like how schizophrenics turn to nicotine. We might not know exactly why that is, but like cats eating grass it's possible this substance actually helps those people, even if just a little. Probably not as much as some other drug might, but a lot of those drugs have pretty big downsides that pot simply doesn't have.
It's also probably true that Elton needs something to blame for his addiction challenges, and as part of rehab I'm sure they made sure to demonize all drugs equally as he is an addict. He has to believe this because it's a cornerstone of his rehabilitation. It's even possible that just smoking pot might lead him back to cocaine since...well...he's a cocaine addict and anything could send him back to it. Perhaps even just drinking beer. That's a feature of his personality.
"That's a feature of his personality."
Apparently Elton is somewhat of an introvert. I believe it's not uncommon for introverted entertainers to turn to drugs to help them cope with life in the spot light. Keith Richards and Amy Winehouse are another examples. I'm sure there are plenty of others.
You never know what street drugs are tainted with.
Supposedly currently legal marijuana has some quality control which makes users less likely to be exposed to worse drugs.
Legalization takes money away from black marketeers.
If you have a thrill-seeking addictive personality, it is not pot that leads to the hard stuff, is the thrill-seeking addictive personality.
My sermon for the day.
I ask not that you agree with me, only that you think about it.
You never know what street drugs are tainted with.
It turns out drug dealers are not likely to give away drugs, so there's never that big of a concern that pot is laced with anything. In fact, if it is, the dealer would probably tell you that as a specific selling point.
Absolutely agree on the personality bit though. If someone is likely to smoke pot, an illegal drug, they are equally likely to try some other drug because...they are a person interested in drugs.
Nobody worries that cocaine is a gateway drug to marijuana even though someone might start doing cocaine then later smoke some pot. Apparently few people were concerned that opioids might be a gateway to heroin either, which is amusing.
False even in its premise.
Safe drugs more easily let you live to go to harder stuff and destroy your family and commit crimes.
While I don’t smoke anymore and have a certain nostalgia for brick weed, a substance that people are going to use anyway is best regulated and not by locking people in cages.
The sophisticated social corollary is providing treatment options for addiction.
Who's going to pay for it?
Because if I have to, ban that shit hard.
I do not care what you do as long as it has NO impact on me.
If you were socially sophisticated, you'd know the experts would regulate it and the rich would pay for treatment options.
To hell with freedom from coercion, right?
Ya, “providing” things with other people’s money is always “sophisticated”.
And complicated. That money goes to all kinds of places it’s not supposed to. It’s the craziest thing! How does this happen?
Keep the faith tho, tony. Haha.
But then why call it 'addiction' in the first place.
Here, kiddo, is a nice recreatonal drug....[years later] Oh, you're hooked, your life destroyed , a weight on society -- how about some addiction help-- What !! Why are you calling it 'addiction'
Gosh, if only facts, logic and morals carried any weight with prohibitionists. Instead, prohibitionists are only interested in the power prohibition gives them over others. They only care about convincing enough others of the importance of their mission to grant them the authority they need to meddle with society whether they do any actual good or not. I blame the huddled, craven masses for this. The bible should have had a passage in it letting us know about the political sheep we would always have with us rendering unto Caesar instead of the poor.
Elton John never had to worry about being busted. And was one of his bad decisions marrying David Furnish?
If the movie Rocketman is anywhere near accurate, Elton John is a person who can't effectively cope with any level of addiction, so absolute sobriety is entirely appropriate for him. (The movie presents him as being unable to argue with other points of view in communication). At the risk of appearing to state the obvious, not everybody is like that, and that's a relevant fact for trying to engage with his point of view.
The movie presents him as being unable to argue with other points of view in communication
He's being presented as a gay white Kamala!
I didn't realize that it is incumbent upon anyone with an opinion to voice counterarguments without blowback from the peanut gallery
Assuming time travel is possible, what do you suppose the young Elton John would say to the current one preaching about the evils of weed? Probably nothing like gratitude or respect.
Which being the case, what's his point? He started with grass and moved on to other things, therefore wit was the devil's bridge? For him? Doesn't seem to have that effect on the vast majority of other people. I'll bet that a lot more people who become addicts drink milk when they're young. That's probably the real cause of drug abuse.
"because, in the opinions of others" those 'others' should get to Gov-Gun DICTATE how you should live your own PERSONAL life?
Yeah; That is NOT Individual Liberty or any notion of a free-nation.
No matter how 'right' one thinks they are. PERSONAL DICTATION is a curse and an evil within itself.
The Gov-are-Gods path is paved in horrible consequences.
So Elton the john thinks potheads should be robbed and beaten like queers were in the 1950s. Sounds karmic...
Now I see why you are so scatterbrained and incoherent with your rambling, time traveling posts. When you are brief and on topic you are….
……completely retarded.
While you are pretending to be sensitive...think about his first wife and the horror this did to her
Even the pervert proves more sensitive than you 🙂
"Sir Elton John feels 'huge guilt and regret' over first marriage"
"Elton John still loves ex-wife Renate 'I feel great guilt and regret for what I did'
ELTON JOHN confessed he found it hard to watch some of the scenes in the biopic Rocketman starring Taron Egerton. The movie shows the difficult emotional period when he married German Renate Blauel and tried to live a heterosexual life."
GODDAM HYPOCRITE, HE IS
Did you know Elton John is gay? Perhaps he could be a Libertarian candidate for something.
I think it's interesting that folks currently upset at Elton are all cherry picking the same lines. They neglect what I thought was the first and most powerful:
At first he found it freed him of his crippling shyness, but eventually it took over.
And this one: “It’s tough to tell someone that they’re being an a--hole, and it’s tough to hear,” he says. “Eventually I made the choice to admit that I’m being an a--hole.”
And this one: White, who contracted HIV from a tainted blood transfusion in the early days of the AIDS crisis and was shunned by his school and neighbors, showed him how selfishly [Elton John] was living.
And this one: “It was a shock to see how far down the scale of humanity I’d fallen.” Six months later he went into rehab.
In all of this, especially when you bring it back to his "greatest mistake of all time" - it has nothing to do with legality, and everything to do with it culturally. Elton is clearly decrying the normalization of drug culture; of pretending it's in any way healthy, cool, socially desirable, or at all beneficial in any way.
Drugs take over.
Drugs make you an a--hole.
Drugs push you into a selfish and self-destructive lifestyle.
Drug use is like intentionally kicking yourself down the ladder of human value.
He's not wrong. Not on any count. But notice how everybody would like to talk about "legality" than this. JD, like so many others, put 1200 words into intentionally missing the point. (Or maybe he was too stoned to get it in the first place.)
They can't admit that drug culture is a garbage culture, full of garbage people who are corrupted and made worse by it. At no point does JD attempt to explain the redeeming value of drug culture - because he knows he can't. Just like everyone else dissenting and then commenting on John's statements.
Elton John's statements were not an endorsement of prohibitive State action. They were statements - and truly heartfelt ones - about how much better society would be if they would completely reject, instead of indulging in, drug use.
Oh, and let's especially not forget his final point on the subject:
“I don’t really believe in the biblical God too much, but I have faith,” says John. “My higher power has been looking after me all my life; he’s got me through drugs, he’s got me through depression, he’s got me through loneliness, and he got me sober. He’s been there all the time, I think. I just didn’t acknowledge him.”
In pointing out all the destructive effects drugs have on a person, he also shines the light on who - even if he doesn't fully understand/acknowledge it - has proven all throughout human history to redeem and restore and uplift.
Certainly a far greater positive on the world than getting high.
You could asy all that nonsense about his gay affair with his business manager, the 3 year marriage to that poor woman, and on and on THe man has no center --- as my mother might say --- marijuana, gay sex, divorce, utter folly -- it's all a trip over the cliff
ELTON JOHN
"The film shows the tormented singer seeking solace in the arms of Renate, after years of drink and drugs combined with the damage caused by his cold parents and abusive gay relationship with manager John Reid."
Thanks for showing me true love, think I'll leave you for a man just to show how much I care. BASTARD
A pervert ,and a dumb pervert at that --- you pick him only as a stepping stone to give you boring drug spiel.
Marijuana legalization is very wrong but that doesn't mean you have a point. Feds should not be in this at all. Police power here is with the states. What I will not allow is that you childless REASON writers will tell me I must let my child have marijuana. Don't be Kamala , realize that you are rapidly making Libertarianism look like an appeal to get rid of parents, teachers, and anybody that knows a speck more than you do