Navigate Left
  • New lounge bar servicing exclusive menu and new cocktails in Rawbar’s remodeled extension. Taken by Alina Babajko on April 14.

    Food

    The Rawbar reinvented: classy and oceanic

  • Chico State students bury the 2023 time capsule in front of Kendall Hall. Courtesy: Andrew Staples

    News

    Chico State’s annual Time Capsule Ceremony to take place on April 23

  • Jan. 26, 2005 printed issue of The Orion with the headline “Drinking nearly cost pledge’s life.” The article discusses investigations of Chico State’s Sigma Chi fraternity after a pledge nearly died from alcohol consumption. Accessed through The Orion Archives on April 13.

    News

    Chico State’s hazing history: pledge deaths, alcohol poisoning and more

  • “Flaming Wedgee,” controlled by Heather Vo, melting “Drone,” a lightweight flying robot, in an early fight. Taken by Nathan Chiochios on April 13.

    Sports

    ‘Flamethrowers allowed’ at Chico State’s first Robotronica

  • The inside of Eggroll King. Photo taken by Callum Standish.

    Food

    The Orion tries Egg Roll King

Navigate Right
Breaking News
Chico State's independent student newspaper

The Orion

Chico State's independent student newspaper

The Orion

Chico State's independent student newspaper

The Orion

Legalize it… as in everything

Drugs.jpg
Illustration by Miles Huffman

First of all, I want to say I’m a criminal justice major and the American legal system is mostly bogus and its harsher consequences on the impoverished are a tragedy.

The philosophy behind law is that people give up absolute freedom for a system that protects them – namely, life, liberty and property. By living in society, you agree to abide by certain restrictions, for an ultimately utilitarian perspective. That is your contract as a citizen.

Yet utilitarianism is largely incompatible with America’s ideals, partially because of our diversity. We don’t get the greatest good for the greatest amount of people, we get benefits for those already advantaged and punishments for those trapped.

And the greatest treatment disparity in criminal justice is drugs.

I presented the idea of legalizing all drugs and victimless crimes (e.g. prostitution, gambling, hustling, mala prohibita) in my political science class last semester expecting vocal retaliation and disagreement. I expected to feel like Oppenheimer after inventing the atomic bomb. Can I take it all back, guys?

Instead, my speech was met with general agreement. I think that not enough people are thinking about the lifting of prohibition, but a lot would agree with it, based on Western ideals of freedom and equality.

Most people pretty much know they shouldn’t have a right to decide what other people can and cannot do.

Even if applying consequentialism to legalization, the goods from legal cocaine, methamphetamine, opiates, marijuana, heroin, psychedelics etc. are overwhelming.

It would eliminate the black market, significantly lower incarceration rates and drug prices and change the anti-drug stigma. Probably a few generations from now, everybody’s going to be libertarian anyway.

In addition, our schools would adopt better drug education that could teach proper techniques and responses to accidents.

Drug abuse is defined as using an illegal drug or a legal drug improperly. There can be no standard for safe and correct use of harder drugs because currently, all use is abuse, and therefore there can be no standard for misuse.

Yet many illegal, highly-scheduled drugs yield questionable danger. Everyone knows by now that marijuana is illegal because of early 1900’s racism and special interests groups’ subsequent interference.

The role of partisanship in prohibition is frankly distasteful. Outlawing is hardly about safety. If that were true, flamethrowers, miniguns, thermite and tobacco would be illegal. Shit, even alcohol would be banned, serving no household medical purpose and only endangering human lives.

Pot lowers your sperm count but having sex while high is bomb.

I used to write raps with a dude in my hometown. One time I visited and his stepfather was passed out on the couch, tourniquet still around his arm, needle likely still nearby. There was a young girl around five-years-old playing with Barbies in the next room.

This is the result of poor drug culture. This is what happens when drug education fails to teach safety in the event of real-world encounters — with hard drugs and with people on them. This is enabled by American policies.

The nation as a whole is going to realize that to make things better, the war on drugs has to end and education has to start, and then legalization.

And to any future employers reading this, I haven’t done any more drugs than your son or daughter has.

William Rein can be reached at [email protected] or @toeshd on Twitter.

Leave a Comment
More to Discover

Comments (0)

All The Orion Picks Reader Picks Sort: Newest

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *