Radio of the absurdI don't know about you, but there are moments in my life when I have the feeling I've wandered into a Pynchon novella. One of them occurred this morning, though this was Pynchon with a touch of Tom Wolfe or Evelyn Waugh.
Yesterday the phone rang. It was a producer from KPCC's Air Talk, Larry Mantle's unusually civilized and intelligent news-talk show. What did I know, she asked, about Mexico's plan to decriminalize drug possession?
Not much, I said. I'd read the news coverage. The usual drug warriors were viewing it with alarm. It probably didn't matter much. Several countries had decriminalized (Spain, Portugal, Italy off and on). Most of Eastern Europe never had laws against possession.
Why had Vicente Fox proposed this now? the producer asked. Maybe, I said, as an anti-corruption measure, to prevent Mexican cops from shaking down small-time drug users and get them focused on dealers.
But accounts of the new policy seemed vague and inconsistent, I said. Had anyone gotten hold of the actual text of the law, or of someone in Mexico who knew what it was about? I mentioned a couple of people who might know. The producer said she'd try to get in touch with them. Meanwhile, would I do a radio interview tomorrow (i.e., this morning) with the Mayor of San Diego and Ethan Nadelmann of the Drug Policy Alliance? Sure, I said, but I'd be happy to be bumped in favor of someone who knew what the law was about.
After we got off the phone, I checked in with my old friend Ana Maria Salazar, a US/Mexican dual national who used to run drug policy for the Defense Department here and now is a journalist in Mexico. She filled me in on the facts.
Under current Mexican law:
1. Only the Federal Judicial Police (the "Federales") can make drug arrests. (This is intended as an anti-corruption measure.)
2. Possession of a small quantity for personal use carries no criminal penalty; instead, the defendant is required to undergo drug treatment. But "small quantity for personal use" isn't defined in law. Instead it determined on a case-by-case basis in court. As a result, some corrupt police and judges take bribes from dealers to classify the drugs the dealers were caught with as "personal use" amounts.
Under the new law:
1. All police will have the power to make drug arrests.
2. For each drug, a "personal use" quantity will be defined in law; any amount below that is automatically decriminalized, while any amount above that is defined as a dealer quantity.
If that's the case, the new law is effectively tighter than the old one. In particular, turning all the local cops in Mexico loose on drug users ought to be expected to greatly increase the number of arrests, although most of those additional arrests won't lead to jail time. But then, most current arrests of people who possess small amounts probably don't lead to jail time.
In a second preparatory call with a different producer, and then on the air this morning, I tried to explain all of that. The host seemed to understand. But then — this was the Pynchonesque moment — the conversation went right on about whether "Mexico's decriminalization" was a good idea or not, regardless of the fact that the new law doesn't actually seem to decriminalize anything that used to be subject to criminal punishment, but does seem to increase a drug user's risk of arrest by multiplying the number of police officers with the power to arrest him. We were there to talk about decriminalization, by God, and if decriminalization wasn't actually happening that was an interesting sidelight on the story but mustn't be allowed to interfere with the narrative, either for those who wanted to view with alarm or those who wanted to point with pride.
As it turns out, my account might have missed a crucial subtlety. The AP reports:
Currently, Mexican law allows judges the latitude of dropping charges against people caught with drugs if they can prove they are drug addicts and if an expert certifies they were caught with "the quantity necessary for personal use."The new bill makes the decriminalization automatic, allows "consumers" as well as addicts to have drugs, and delineates specific allowable quantities, which do not appear in the current law.
If that's true — if the old law required the drug possessor to prove that he was an "addict" to avoid criminal penalty while the new law removes that requirement — that would be a noticeable loosening to offset the other dimensions on which the changes constitute a tightening. How noticeable would depend on how hard it currently is to make and sustain the plea of "addiction."
In any case, the underlying weirdness of the experience remains. As I take it, the moral of the story is that in the contemporary media/political culture opinion and spin float free of mere fact.
Footnote The new Mexican law, as described, is precisely like California law: someone arrested with a small quantity of drugs is automatically eligible for diversion to a treatment program under Section 1000 of the Penal Code. Subsequent arrests for the same offense can lead to diversion to treatment under Proposition 36 or enrollment in a drug court, which is yet another variant of a diversion program. So where American enforcement agencies and politicians get off criticizing Mexico is beyond me. But that's an old story.
Update: Same [stuff], different day.
Well it's not like they don't criticize California too...
Posted by: Steve at May 2, 2006 04:03 PMWell, doggone it, Mark, if politicians can't criticize foreigners, especially foreigners who're undermining the good old USofA by sending agents to clean our swimming pools and pick our vegetables, what are they supposed to do for a living? clean swimming pools and pick vegetables?
Posted by: Michael O'Hare at May 2, 2006 06:12 PMI read your post while listening to Anderson Cooper do a story on the same topic. I may just have to cancel my cable subscription.
Posted by: Melissa Bass at May 2, 2006 07:38 PM"Under the legislation, police will not penalize people for possessing up to 5 grams of marijuana, 5 grams of opium, 25 milligrams of heroin or 500 milligrams of cocaine."
5 grams of marijuana? That's an insignificant amount. Another reason this won't really do much good.
Posted by: Geoff Brooks at May 2, 2006 09:02 PMWell, no. Five grams of cannabis is somewhere between 10 and 20 joints, depending on potency.
Posted by: Mark Kleiman at May 2, 2006 11:24 PM" in the contemporary media/political culture opinion and spin float free of mere fact."
- a phenomenon oft noticed by bloggers to the right of you, on a myriad of issues.
Posted by: Russell Gold at May 3, 2006 03:33 AMHmmm....after 70 years of Reefer Madness, the whole thing has assumed an "underlying weirdness". Gee, who coulda guessed that would happen?
Other than Paul Krassner, I mean.
Posted by: serial catowner at May 3, 2006 05:15 AMMark,
"Well, no. Five grams of cannabis is somewhere between 10 and 20 joints, depending on potency."
It is slightly less than .18 Oz. It is less than a "quarter bag", a very common retail amount here in the U.S. I imagine dealers will adjust packaging to account for the law, but it is certainly defining consumer amounts in the dealer range.
Posted by: fishbane at May 3, 2006 08:32 AMIn the same vein, 500 milligrams is less than standard reatila amounts for cocaine, even for street deals. (I'm assuming that this is the mass of the seized quantity, not the mass of pure cocaine contained in the seized quanitity.) Like fishbande, it seems to me that amounts that would be commonly regarded as consumer amounts will not meet these standards.
Posted by: bza at May 3, 2006 11:53 PMThe Best Drugs and The Best Pharmacy
Posted by: bdrug at July 10, 2006 02:14 PMGallery, a history etc. About Italy.
Posted by: moeis at July 14, 2006 02:45 AMAll About Italy.
Posted by: famas at July 14, 2006 05:27 AMil-mistero di sleepy hollow
tesina mistero
dentro il mistero
misteri di trapani
franca $misteri del lotto
miracolo mistero padre pio
mistero maria
misteri di fatima
il mistero della mummia
mistero video
processione dei misteri
almanacco dei misteri
mistero pietra
The Best Casino Games, Real Money.
Posted by: Denis at July 23, 2006 01:14 AMBest Casino Games and Real Support.
Posted by: Denis at July 23, 2006 04:49 AMThe Best Online Casino Games, keno, craps, black jack ...
Posted by: Fredi at July 28, 2006 11:30 AMThe Best Online Games and real Casinos, play keno, craps, black jack ...
Posted by: Supra at July 28, 2006 03:13 PMcasinogames casinogames
Posted by: casinogames at July 29, 2006 05:06 AMThe Best Online Casino Games, keno, craps, black jack ...
Posted by: Moris at July 29, 2006 11:43 PMThe Best Online Games and real Casinos, play keno, craps, black jack ...
Posted by: Naris at August 1, 2006 08:40 AMThe Best Online Casino Games, keno, craps, black jack ...
Posted by: Falko at August 1, 2006 10:22 PMThe Best Online Casino Games, keno, craps, black jack ...
Posted by: Krash at August 2, 2006 12:04 PMThe Best Online Games, keno, craps, black jack ...
Posted by: Fredi at August 3, 2006 01:46 AMThe Best Online Casino Games, keno, craps, black jack ...
Posted by: Naris at August 5, 2006 08:15 AMThe Best Online Games, keno, craps, black jack ...
Posted by: Naris at August 7, 2006 03:19 AMThe Best Online Games and real Casinos, play keno, craps, black jack ...
Posted by: Moralis at August 7, 2006 01:49 PMThe Best Online Games and real Casinos, play keno, craps, black jack ...
Posted by: Fredi at August 8, 2006 12:06 AMriverbelle online casino riverbelle online casino
Posted by: riverbelle online casino at August 13, 2006 10:53 PMcasinogames casinogames
Posted by: casinogames at September 5, 2006 01:32 PMpaydayloan paydayloan
Posted by: paydayloan at September 8, 2006 07:10 AMslotland slotland
Posted by: slotland at September 8, 2006 09:27 PMblackjacks blackjacks
Posted by: blackjacks at September 14, 2006 01:52 AMblackjacks blackjacks
Posted by: blackjacks at September 14, 2006 02:57 PMAre you sure 46160 about this?!?
Posted by: Flots Masriach at September 14, 2006 11:16 PMqawbgkphj qijtcugly hzfcbk ctghuv zgovy pivk rkqbwnax
Posted by: qsmc uyig at October 10, 2006 09:26 PMFOOD AND HEALTH INFORMATION Potassium chloride Function for vitamin k UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO HEALTH SCIENCES CENTER lifes Atenolol picture identification Healthy teeth diet AVANDIA MEDICATION
Posted by: rabbitvxw at October 20, 2006 10:42 AMancc
Posted by: Louis Hester at November 1, 2006 02:29 AMcoiacgesh
Posted by: Khalid Steiner at November 1, 2006 08:13 AMkjzmos
Posted by: Jay Richie at November 1, 2006 02:03 PMinsane clown posse fuck the world fuck movies TV host Oprah Winfrey gives audience members $1,000 (£526) each to donate to a charitable cause...
Posted by: Khalid Chiu at November 3, 2006 10:42 PMThen what if while he is at church he meets Jesus Christ and forms a relationship with God? Is that a bad thing? What if that is what is happening at many of the churches using these themes? I don't know if it is or not. I know it is at one or two churches I know personally. It seems there are many ways to reach people for Christ. This may not be your way, but it is a way. Don't do it if you don't like it. Just so you know, our church doesn't so I'm not getting defensive about our style being attacked or anything.
Veteran game show host Bob Barker is stepping down from hosting The Price is Right after 35 years...
Posted by: Jaylon Rojas at November 12, 2006 06:05 PMSinger George Michael lends the piano on which John Lennon wrote Imagine to an anti-war exhibition...
Posted by: Miles Hembree at November 16, 2006 06:43 PMSinger George Michael lends the piano on which John Lennon wrote Imagine to an anti-war exhibition...
Posted by: Miles Hembree at November 16, 2006 06:44 PMThe Rolling Stones cancel a gig in Hawaii and postpone other tour dates as Mick Jagger suffers throat troubles...
Posted by: Tobias Spears at November 22, 2006 06:03 AMThe Rolling Stones cancel a gig in Hawaii and postpone other tour dates as Mick Jagger suffers throat troubles...
Posted by: Davion Sutter at November 24, 2006 02:35 AMThe Rolling Stones cancel a gig in Hawaii and postpone other tour dates as Mick Jagger suffers throat troubles...
Posted by: Davion Sutter at November 24, 2006 02:36 AMDoctor Who takes three prizes at the National Television Awards in a repeat of its success last year...
Posted by: Cole Mccants at November 24, 2006 09:13 PMThe judge who put coded messages in his Da Vinci Code plagiarism trial ruling has written another...
Posted by: Elliot Vu at November 27, 2006 03:02 AMTo know what's what... Newton
Posted by: Newton at November 29, 2006 01:45 PMTo know what's what... Newton
Posted by: Newton at November 29, 2006 01:46 PMTo know what's what... Newton
Posted by: Newton at November 29, 2006 01:46 PMTo know what's what... Newton
Posted by: Newton at November 29, 2006 01:46 PMNeither here nor there... Julius
Posted by: Julius at November 29, 2006 01:51 PMNeither here nor there... Julius
Posted by: Julius at November 29, 2006 01:51 PMDoctor Who takes three prizes at the National Television Awards in a repeat of its success last year...
Posted by: Issac Soileau at December 4, 2006 07:25 PMWilliam Styron, whose Holocaust novel Sophie's Choice became a film and an opera, has died, aged 81...
Posted by: Isaak Ingalls at December 6, 2006 02:30 AMramona
Posted by: bambola ramona immagini hard at December 7, 2006 10:35 AMnella
Posted by: nella residenza spogliandosi at December 7, 2006 10:36 AMbmi
Posted by: pesapersone bmi at December 7, 2006 10:37 AMcasino
Posted by: online poker casino at December 7, 2006 10:38 AMrusso
Posted by: sesso russo at December 7, 2006 10:39 AMinfermiera
Posted by: attractive infermiera dildo at December 9, 2006 01:29 PMvenezia
Posted by: grand hotel venezia at December 9, 2006 01:31 PMmessina
Posted by: finanziamento messina at December 9, 2006 01:33 PMirsuto
Posted by: molto bollente irsuto at December 9, 2006 01:34 PMfotti
Posted by: cutie amante figa fotti at December 9, 2006 01:36 PMRecord company EMI sign a deal with the estate of crooner Dean Martin to use the singer's likeness...
Posted by: Wesley Wortham at December 13, 2006 09:32 AMRecord company EMI sign a deal with the estate of crooner Dean Martin to use the singer's likeness...
Posted by: Wesley Wortham at December 13, 2006 09:32 AMThanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)
(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)