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Opinion: Legalizing drugs is constitutional


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By Katie Kieffer

I believe states have the constitutional right to legalize drugs. For, the Constitution is silent on the federal government’s ability to regulate or ban substances that adults choose to digest at their own peril—or medical relief.

The Constitution is so silent on this matter of individual liberty (choosing to digest or use drugs) that in order to ban the sale of alcohol during the Prohibition era, we passed the 18th Amendment. When we wised up and realized that banning alcohol doesn’t work, we repealed the 18th Amendment via the 21st Amendment. I contend that federal drug laws are unconstitutional because they do not stem from a constitutional amendment.

Katie Kieffer

Since the Constitution defines our freedoms negatively, states and individuals retain all rights that are not explicitly delegated to the federal government. The 10th Amendment states: “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.” In other words, because the Constitution is silent on drugs, states alone have the constitutional power to regulate drugs.

Voters in states like California have exercised their constitutional right to legalize drugs, specifically medicinal marijuana to help cancer patients and those suffering from chronic pain due to autoimmune diseases like multiple sclerosis.

Californians aren’t flower power hippies. These voters realize that if it’s constitutional for individual Americans to binge on four-to-five alcoholic drinks in one sitting—drinks that incidentally do nothing to relieve chronic pain—it makes sense to legalize a far less lethal substance like marijuana with verified pain-relief benefits.

A prestigious medical study published by The Lancet in November 2010 reveals that alcohol is more lethal than heroin and crack cocaine and drastically more harmful than marijuana, ecstasy and LSD. On Jan. 6, 2012, The Lancet reaffirmed these findings with a global study revealing that: “marijuana was the world’s most widely consumed illicit drug … [and] the least likely of all illicit drugs to cause death,” as the New York Times relays.

We have not amended the Constitution to outlaw drugs. Nor did the war on drugs germinate in Congress. Instead, successive court rulings and executive orders have unconstitutionally banned drug use at the federal level—even to the point of overriding the sovereignty of states that explicitly legalize drugs.

And when the court decides to apply the Bill of Rights to state law, it winds up trampling … on the most important safeguard of our liberties: the division of power between the federal and state governments. … By the middle of the twentieth century the “due process” clause within the Fourteenth Amendment had come to be seen as the catchall phrase for federal intervention,’ writes author Jason Lewis in “Power Divided is Power Checked.”

Today, the Federal government, via the Department of Justice, has violated the separation of powers that the Founding Fathers wrote into the Constitution. Federal agents allege that medical marijuana dispensaries and growers violate “federal law”—ripping out medicinal cannabis plants and destroying legitimate livelihoods overnight.

The New York Times reports: “Federal law classifies the possession and sale of marijuana as a serious crime and does not grant exceptions for medical use, so the programs adopted here, in 15 other states and in the District of Columbia exist in an odd legal limbo. … federal prosecutors have raided or threatened to seize the property of scores of growers and dispensaries in California that, in some cases, are regarded by local officials as law-abiding models. At the same time, the Internal Revenue Service has levied large, disputed tax charges against the state’s largest dispensary, threatening its ability to continue.”

The war on drugs began when President Richard Nixon bypassed Congress and declared a war on drugs on July 17, 1971. He said that drug abuse was a “national emergency” and America’s “public enemy number one.” He signed the “war” into law on January 28, 1972. By unconstitutional executive order, Nixon created the first drug czar and also created an extra-congressional agency to regulate drugs called the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). Successive Presidents have sustained this war.

Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution gives Congress (not the president) the “Power … To declare war.” Federalist and framer Alexander Hamilton further explains the Constitution’s checks on executive reach in The Federalist No. 78. He says the president publicly declares and enforces the laws Congress makes and the decisions or appointments Congress approves: “The Executive not only dispenses the honors, but holds the sword of the community.”

Some might object that America’s 40-year-long and over $2.5-trillion fight against drug abuse isn’t technically a “war.” But that’s a hard position to defend when scores of innocent Americans and Mexicans have died throughout our combat with brutal Mexican drug cartels. Since 2006 alone, when President Felipe Calderón declared his own war against drugs, between 40,000 and 50,000 people (depending on your source) have died in this conflict.

Moreover, the right to own your entire person is a fundamental human right and it is foundational to the Constitution. Unless you use wrongful force against another person or their property, you retain full ownership over your body. As John Locke points out, reason tells you that you fully own your body. No one else owns your body—not your neighbors, your family or the government.

Rep. Ron Paul explains: “All of our freedoms – the freedom of religion and assembly, the freedom of speech, the right to bear arms, the right to be free from unnecessary government searches and seizures – stem from the precept that you own yourself and are responsible for your own choices. Prohibition laws negate self-ownership and are an absolute affront to the principles of freedom. I disagree vehemently with the recreational use of drugs, but at the same time, if people are only free to make good decisions, they are not truly free. In any case, states should decide for themselves how to handle these issues and the federal government should respect their choices.”

Freedom is the power to choose between good and bad options for our own private property and body; freedom is the power to opt for healthy behaviors like prayer, aerobic exercise and strength training over unhealthy behaviors like self-mutilation, chain smoking, binge drinking and inhaling pain thinner. I think the federal government needs to respect individual freedom by deferring to the states in matters like drug use where the Constitution is silent.

Katie Kieffer is a conservative multimedia personality, writer and public speaker who runs KatieKieffer.com.

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Comments

Comments (10)
  1. Bob says - Posted: January 27, 2012

    The government is in bed with the drug companies. They want to sell you their drugs and not have the public take one that can be homegrown.

  2. Careaboutthecommunity says - Posted: January 27, 2012

    I will correct just one statement, and leave it at that.

    Actually alcohol has been used throughout history for pain relief, as well as an antiseptic, and anesthesia.

    Would you clean a wound with marijuana? Would you care to be sliced open after a few tokes of marijuana?

    Alcohol, though abused by some through history, has also done much good.

  3. biggerpicture says - Posted: January 27, 2012

    Careaboutthecommunity,
    Every year in the US 160,000+ people die directly from the PHYSICAL effects of alchohal. Tobacco acounts for 460,000 deaths per year in the US.

    Deaths caused by the physical effects of marijuana per year in the US? ZERO!!!!

  4. Chief Slowroller says - Posted: January 27, 2012

    I stoped smoking back in 1985 and I do belive that being clean and sober is a better way to live

    being stoned robs you of time and money

    the only up side of the Pot industry is that it’s keeping our town alive with all the growers being able to pay there rents and bills.

  5. Hang Ups From Way Back says - Posted: January 27, 2012

    That’s you lifestyle chief,let the rest who want puff the pipe, do it in their own privacy.
    Not worth all the wasted man power, cash,court cost when there’s real violence that needs the attention.

  6. Hang Ups From Way Back says - Posted: January 27, 2012

    I also agree with Bob,if you could really retrace where big money,politicians, invest their easy made fortunes ,you can almost be certain that it’s in companies like Roche,Pfizer,Johnson-Johnson,Novartis,etc.
    These drugs they sell cost pennies to be made in foreign countries,when it finally gets to the American consumer they go to dollars ,upwards a piece.
    Billions of dollars of business, and the people dieing cancer can’t even get free samples.
    Our country needs to change this policy.
    2/3 of all bankruptcies are tied to health care cost.
    I also think it about time that this big fair country America gives people the right to die under the same rights as the ones who want live.
    Other cultures have made death a art, a dignified way to die,if you don’t want live, feel your time on earth been a good thing,why waste tax payers money, family inheritance on keeping people alive to want turn off their time zone?
    It is time people face this,it should be dealt with in the courts, made legal in all our states. People and their loved ones that have to watch a loved one die slowly each day from sickness is plan Cruelty.

  7. Careaboutthecommunity says - Posted: January 28, 2012

    Any drug that clouds your mind, and makes you lose clarity is bad, whether it be prescription drugs, street drugs, or alcohol. Much better to be present and enjoy life, but there will always be people who use these things, and many of us will at some point, but will usually grow out of it :)

  8. snoheather says - Posted: January 28, 2012

    This is a very well written article. It is time that the federal government stops stomping on the Constitution.

  9. John says - Posted: January 28, 2012

    Snoheather, it is far from well written. Even ignoring grammar, there is a Commerce Clause in the Constitution. If the author wants to go down this road, then she should at least address the international drug markets and why she beliieves the feds have no right to get involved in international markets as expressly authorized in the Constitution.

  10. sandsconnect says - Posted: February 3, 2012

    Very well written article.

    Pot would have been legal in the early 90’s if it wasn’t for big pharma filling politicians pockets and funding the Partnership for a Drug Free America.

    These are the same pharma companies that were lobbying to keep Heroin legal in the 60’s now they are funding the Partnership for a Drug Free America. Give me a break.

    Anyone who believes pot specifically robs you of time is crazy. I will defer to Joe Rogan (and I am paraphrasing here):

    People who have problems with pot are loosers and it’s only that pot got to them first that they have the problem. It could just as easily be gambling, eating, video games or wife beating they are addicted to it’s literally b/c pot got to them first.

    The bulk of the cannabis community is educated, active and actually nice to people and laugh when they read comments such as “Care”aboutthecommunities. To say it robs people of time is synonomous with saying that baseball robs people of time, it’s just doesn’t make sense.

    It would be a more valid argument to say watching the crap that is on TV robs you of time or video games rob you of time. Should they be illegal?

    This is another war declared by a scumbag president that was ultimately run out of office.

    Anyone who apposes cannabis just plain sucks at life and wants everyone else to suffer as they do, let people make thier own choices.