Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Best Guitarists

I tend to surround myself with other music lovers, many of whom share my preference for guitar-centered classic and alternative rock bands. The debate invariably surfaces among us about who the greatest guitarists of all time are, and the subject tends to bring some strong opinions to the table. I've had the argument so many times now that I think it's time to publish my definitive personal list for the five greatest guitarists who ever lived so that maybe I can stop repeating myself.

The criteria for making my list includes a combination of the following:

1. Technical skill
2. Quality of music (this is biased, but an unavoidable one. Hey, it's MY list)
3. Emotion (kind of subjective, but refer to reasoning above)
4. Influence on other musicians
5. Stage presence

And now, on to the list:

1. Jimi Hendrix (The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Gypsy Sun and Rainbows, Band of Gypsys, Curtis Knight and the Squires, solo)


The man is a legend, and for good reason. His technical skill was off the charts; he could play guitar with his teeth about as well as anyone could play guitar period (see video). He introduced or refined a number of techniques to the electric guitar that have become staples since his time, especially the effects of distortion and feedback. He is revered in the guitar world for his complete lack of fear in trying new things, and his courage lead to the development of amplifier and pedal techniques that are still heavily used today. The quality of his music was similarly incredible; Bob Dylan may have created "All Along the Watchtower," but Hendrix perfected it, and songs like "Voodoo Child," "Fire," "Purple Haze," and "Machine Gun" deserve every bit of popularity they have acquired. Some of Hendrix's solos are boiling over with emotion, especially the anti-war "Machine Gun." It seems cliche, but few guitarists become "one" with their guitars quite like Hendrix did. His expertise had huge ripple effects; his influence casts perhaps the widest net of anyone on this list, with influences in blues, hard rock, heavy metal, and funk. Bands such as The Who and Cream, among many others, have specifically referenced Hendrix as inspiration for their music. As far as stage presence is concerned, few in any genre of music approach him (Freddie Mercury and Robert Plant come to mind). His performance at Woodstock speaks for itself, and his "Live at Fillmore East" album remains in my opinion one of the best live albums ever recorded. Given my criterion for greatness in "guitaritry," Hendrix is an easy choice for number one, as he incredible in every category.

2. Eric Clapton (The Yardbirds, Cream, Derek and the Dominos, solo)


Often times the debate boils down to Hendrix and Clapton, and there is certainly an argument to be made for Slowhand being the best ever (or at least having the coolest nickname). His technical skill is strong, for proof of that just listen to "Layla" or "Crossroads" and prepare to be amazed by what he can do with a guitar. The quality of his music may be even stronger than Hendrix, the man has sold a gazillion albums for a reason, and what might be most impressive is his ability to churn out hits from multiple genres on one album. Clapton's strongest attribute is emotion; some of his songs are just dripping with feeling (watch him play "Tears in Heaven," a ballad about the death of his young son, and try to come up with an artist who injects more emotion into his music. Good luck.). As far as influence goes, the man is a blues legend, and he has effected psychedelic rock, blues-rock, and pop music in similar ways. When Clapton performs, even in collaboration with other bands or artists, his guitar nearly always dominates the stage, and some of his deeper blues songs can send shivers up your spine. Another plus for Clapton is how highly regarded he is among other rock legends; he has played with Jimi Hendrix, The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, and The Allman Brothers Band, among others. It also shouldn't go unsaid that Clapton has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame three different times, once with The Yardbirds, once with Cream, and once as a solo performer.

3. Jimmy Page (The Yardbirds, Led Zeppelin, Page and Plant, The Black Crowes)

(note: that's a young Eric Clapton who joins Page in the middle, he's the one with the cigarette)

Stairway to Heaven, anybody? Yeah, Jimmy Page could shred with the best of them. His technical skill is rivaled only by Hendrix; he made the double-necked guitar famous (which is very difficult to play), sometimes played with a violin bow, and was one of the first to use the "tapping" technique, which is one of my favorite guitar effects. I don't have to say much for the quality of his music, the guy was in Led Zeppelin for cryin' out loud. He certainly had emotion in his music, maybe not to the level of Clapton or Hendrix, but it's certainly there to be heard. His influence on other musicians is off the charts. This Wikipedia entry probably does his influence the most justice:
"Allmusic states that "just about every rock guitarist from the late '60s/early '70s to the present day has been influenced by Page's work with Led Zeppelin".[1] For example, his sped up, downstroke guitar riff in "Communication Breakdown" is cited as guitarist Johnny Ramone's inspiration for his punk-defining, strictly downstroke guitar strumming, while Page's landmark guitar solo from the song "Heartbreaker" has been credited by Eddie Van Halen as the inspiration for his two-hand tapping technique after he saw Led Zeppelin perform in 1971. Page's solo in the famous epic "Stairway to Heaven" has been voted by readers of various guitar magazines, including Guitar World and Total Guitar, as the greatest guitar solo of all time, and he was named 'Guitarist of the Year' five years straight during the 1970s by Creem magazine."
As far as stage presence goes, Robert Plant may have been the face of Led Zeppelin, but Page was its heart and soul, and his solos are legendary. Basically, Jimmy Page is just the man.

4. Eddie Van Halen (Van Halen)


I consider that video above to be one of the greatest solo guitar performances ever, even though parts of it are repetitive and annoying. The finger tapping technique he uses in "Eruption" (above) and "316" is to me one of the coolest sounds anyone has produced from a guitar ever. While he didn't discover the finger tapping effect, he ran the farthest with it, and it is the reason I give him high marks for technichal skill as a guitarist. If you doubt his abilities, just take a gander at the above video around 4:50, 7:10 (!!), and 9:50. Quality of music is O.K., as a band Van Halen was able to put out some pretty good stuff (Panama, Hot for Teacher, You Really Got Me), but would probably be ranked 5/5 of the major bands on this list. Van Halen isn't known for emotional music, but I would contend his connection with his guitar during a solo is one of the more emotional things you're going to see on a stage, especially if you appreciate musical ability. Van Halen popularlized the finger-tapping technique, which is probably the longest reach of his influence, but he was also a model for an entire generation of rock artists. Wiki:
"Edward Van Halen's approach to the guitar involves several distinctive components. His innovative use of two-handed tapping, natural and artificial harmonics, vibrato, and tremolo picking, combined with his rhythmic sensibility and melodic approach, have influenced an entire generation of guitarists...Though rarely discussed, one of the most distinctive aspects of Van Halen's sound was Eddie Van Halen's tuning of the guitar. Before Van Halen, most distorted, metal-oriented rock consciously avoided the use of the major third interval in guitar chords, creating instead the signature power chord of the genre."
Van Halen has incredible stage presence, with the ability to silence crowds during his awesome solos. He is often overlooked because Van Halen was only an above average band, so he was unable to produce some of the singles that have made the guys above him on this list rock icons. Behind the band's relative mediocrity, however, lies an incredbily gifted guitarist.

5. David Gilmour (Pink Floyd)


Speaking of great guitar solos, how about David Gilmour in "Comfortably Numb" and "Another Brick in the Wall pt. 2"? Few will call Gilmour's guitar skill prowess into question. Like Clapton, Gilmour's roots are in the blues, and he has a wide range of skills. He even played bass on some Pink Floyd songs. Gilmour gets four stars for his quality of music, as Pink Floyd produced some incredible records and still sells millions of copies of their albums. With Gilmour at guitar, Floyd's music can be mesmerizing; sometimes their six minute tracks seem to go by instantly because you're so into the song. Floyd's music is also teeming with emotion, largely because of Gilmour's guitar, as this is the criteria where his blues background comes into play. Great blues artists have the ability to convey feeling and meaning, and Gilmour is no exception. In the influence category, they could teach classes on Pink Floyd alone as far as setting a standard for a genre, Gilmour himself even has two "tribute guitars" designed after him. Finally, Gilmour was very good at showcasing his talents on stage. His solos are electrifying, and he makes them look almost effortless.

Honorable mentions: Allen Collins (Lynyrd Skynyrd), Duane Allman (Allman Brothers Band), Slash (Guns N' Roses), Brian May (Queen), Neal Schon (Journey), Kirk Hammett (Metallica), Les Claypool (Primus), Buckethead, Don Felder/Joe Walsh (Eagles), Tom Morello (Rage Against the Machine), Jeff Beck (The Yardbirds), Frank Zappa, Angus Young (AC/DC), Kim Thayil (Soundgarden)

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Quantam of Solace

The night I saw Quantam of Solace, the latest installment of the James Bond series, two of the three people I was with were pushing us to see Transporter 3 instead.  I had heard the bad reviews from friends and other critics alike, but my thought process was:  "It's Bond, how bad can it be?  The last one was great, I'm sure this one will be fine."  Then I saw the movie.

We should have seen Transporter 3.

My criticism of Casino Royale had been its lack of familiarity with the rest of the Bond franchise; the departure from the traditional looking Bond, the conspicuous absence of reoccurring characters like "Q" and Moneypenny, and the shrunken role of gadgets (especially in regard to Bond's car).  Casino Royale was able to overcome those defencencies with a strong plot, a good performance by Daniel Craig as Bond, and some exciting action scenes.  The 2006 film gave some interesting background on the Bond character, from his beginnings as the raw and newly promoted 00 to the superagent Commander Bond.  Quantam of Solace, however, offered no reprisal to the disappointing turn away from traditional Bond.  Perhaps the most frustrating aspect of the movie were its action scenes; they moved so fast and used so many cuts that it was difficult to process what was going on.  The action scenes reminded me of The Bourne Ultimatum, which won an Academy Award for its film editing.  The difference between the two is that while Ultimatum was fast paced, and modern, Quantam's action scenes were frantic and unwatchable.  

The plot also left much to be desired.  Like the action, it was far too difficult to follow to be enjoyed.  The villain was lame, especially by Bond standards (seriously: Goldfinger, Dr. No, Mayday, Jaws...Dominic Greene?).  One of the few bright spots of the film was the Bond girl Camille, played by the stunngingly beautiful Olga Kurylenko, but her performance and beauty were wasted.  There wasn't even a love scene between her and Bond, which is quite a feat for a series that has made its name on the chemistry of Bond and his leading ladies.  There was next to zero effort to flush out Kurylenko's character with background or history; indeed, the deepest look we get into Camille is the depths of her cleavage.  This is another area where Quantam fell far short of Casino Royale, where the Vesper Lynd character had depth and substance.

As a huge fan of the series overall, I am usually easily entertained by Bond movies.  They don't have to do much to hold my attention.  Even some of the Pierce Brosnan clinkers like Tomorrow Never Dies and Die Another Day I enjoyed.  This was the first Bond movie I have ever seen (and I've seen them all) where I was ready to walk out halfway through.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Vacation

I'm on my annual trip to Duck, North Carolina with a close friend, and will not return until August 9th.  I am planning a post shortly after my return with my opinion on the Brett Favre fiasco, a subject which I am beginning to build a strong opinion on.

Anyone who hasn't visited this stretch of the Outer Banks should give it a try one summer.  This is my third year in the Duck/Corolla area, and it is truly a great place to take a relaxing vacation with family and friends.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Fad or Revolution? Looking Back on Ron Paul's Bid for the Presidency

While Congressman Paul's presidential campaign had been winding down for some time, he officially called it quits on June 12, 2008, contributing the remainder of his campaign finances to a new lobbying group called "Campaign for Liberty."  This was Paul's second serious run at the presidency, with his first ending in relative obscurity as a Libertarian candidate in 1988.  As a self-identifying Libertarian I supported Dr. Paul during the primary process, an effort which proved to be difficult to maintain commitment to as the campaign failed to pick up meaningful momentum, receiving oblique and somewhat patronizing coverage by the mainstream media.  Most of Dr. Paul's press revolved around his fundraising success, which was indeed noteworthy considering his lack of relative support in the polls and delegate counts.  Despite his status as a cult hero among independent conservatives and Libertarians, Paul revealed himself in the campaign to have a handful of glaring faults that contributed to his inability to get a foothold in the primary process. Unfortunately he did not possess the necessary social and aesthetic qualities to glaze over these shortcomings (ala Barack Obama).

Nothing made me cringe more during Dr. Paul's public appearances than when he would, with admirable vigor, proclaim the United States' complicity in the threat it faces abroad from Islam.  This was a position that obviously did not endear him to the mainstream of the Republican Party, as it was that very part of his party he was indicting in the Iraq fiasco.  He blamed the FOXNews crowd and its constituents as troublemakers in a conflict he insisted the United States had no role while downplaying the significance of Islam as a catalyst, even going so far as to lay the blame for Islamic terrorism at the doorstep of the U.S. for its overreaching foreign policy.  Paul's inability to articulate a coherent foreign policy, other than asserting that the Iraq war and just about every war previous since WWII has been "unconstitutional," was clearly a weakness in his campaign.  His naivety on the subject of Islamic terrorism seemed to amount to nothing more than a stubborn refusal to recognize that there are people out there with some pretty ridiculous ideas about the world who mean to do us harm.  While Paul was right to recognize that Iraq was a war of choice with a questionable beginning, he fails to notice that had Bush not chosen to invade we still would be facing a determined enemy of Muslim maniacs.  Even if Bush and the neocons are guilty of exploiting the threat, there is no denying the presence of a considerable foreign danger.

While Paul's positions on terrorism served to keep him safely tucked into the fray of the Republican Party, his weaknesses as a politician kept him from being taken seriously by a general audience as well.  Dr. Paul is a well below average TV debater;  even his fellow debaters on the stage seemed to be befuddled by his questions and answers.  Unlike the insufferable media darlings Clinton, Obama, and McCain, the Congressman is no social butterfly, and makes no sacrifices of his principles to score cheap points with the media (Obama: see campaign finance et al., McCain: see ethanol et al.).  

But I am not so foolish as to think that if Dr. Paul was indeed a gifted politician and orator that he would be a contender in any primary or general election.  It is of course the content of Paul's message that is his roadblock to prominence, a message that seems to travel further and further from influence as the party and the country continue to move to the left. 
His classic Republican positions on spending, social programs, immigration, and foreign policy fall more or less on deaf ears as the party continues to be ruled by "movement" conservatives.  While McCain and Obama will bicker endlessly until November about who is more an agent of change, Dr. Paul will retreat again into the shadows of a fading ideological camp of the Republican Party.  While he has likely made his last foray into national politics, this old style Republican hopes that Paul's name appears on the ballot, so that me and others like me may (quietly) voice our opposition to the direction of the party.  And as we stubbornly refuse to fall in line with the mainstream, we will wait patiently for the next articulate voice of the true conservative message.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

UI is Under Construction...

The blog is undergoing yet another facelift, hopefully the last one as I settle on a permanent look for the outlet of my thoughts.  The bird's eye view of Oriole Park at Camden Yards may seem strange as a title picture, but it will seem less unusual as I expand the scope of the blog beyond political jibjab (not that I need an excuse to feature the most beautiful stadium in baseball in my title section).  UI will soon begin to include book, music, and movie reviews, and some of my many opinions on professional sports.  I'm hoping this expansion in topics will result in more frequent posting by me, since I should be motivated to write more often as more of my interests will fall under the purview of the blog.

I've been grateful to those few who have read my writing, and fewer still, to those who have taken the time to make comments and offer criticism.  I hope the introduction of new topics to the blog will encourage more opinions to be heard in the comments section.  Thanks to those who have emailed me in support  of the blog; I would probably do it anyway if no one read it but it is nice to know that my thoughts are being absorbed by at least some people.  As always, I welcome comments, questions, and suggestions as to the new style of Unbridled Inquiry.  Thanks.

Matt J.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Judicial Junk: Modern Jurisprudence in the Supreme Court

The United States Supreme Court is truly one of the unique establishments of our government.  Of the three branches as outlined by the Constitution, it is the only one whose members are not elected by public vote.  American voters have no direct say in the men and women whose job it is to interpret the most far reaching law of the land.  Supreme Court justices are provided with just about the most job security anyone will find anywhere, especially in government; their tenures can only be ended by voluntary retirement, impeachment (to which only Associate Justice Samuel Chase has been subject to in the Court's history, in 1805, and he was acquitted), or death.  At first glance, this would seem to be antithetical to a democracy, but the framers of the Constitution, in all their brilliance, reconciled this supposed inconsistency with two ingenious safety devices.  Firstly, nominees to the Supreme Court are chosen solely by presidents, who are of course popularly elected.  The second device is precisely what makes these choices nominees, in that in order for them to become Supreme Court justices, they must be approved by the Senate (in one unfortunate mistake, the framers did not specify what constituted Senate approval). The framers must have recognized that the citizenry could lend its input to the Judicial branch through its votes in the Executive and the Legislative.  

While it is not included in the text of the Constitution, it was quickly established after its ratification in Marbury v. Madison (1803) that the mandate of the Supreme Court is to be the chief arbiter of the Constitution.  As one of the earliest and most defining decisions of the court, this interpretation of the its duties became the widely accepted responsibility of the court.  This makes perfect sense, for as Chief Justice John Marshall wrote in the opinion of the court in Marbury:  
If then the courts are to regard the constitution; and the constitution is superior to any ordinary act of the legislature; the constitution, and not such ordinary act, must govern the case to which they both apply.  Those then who controvert the principle that the constitution is to be considered, in court, as a paramount law, are reduced to the necessity of maintaining that courts must close their eyes on the constitution, and see only the law [e.g., the statute or treaty].  This doctrine would subvert the very foundation of all written constitutions.
This defined role of the Supreme Court, known as judicial review, is a third and critical safeguard for the relative undemocratic nature of the Supreme Court.  Admittedly, this doctrine is not found in the original text of the Constitution, but it has been established for so long, and for so long was the operative method of the court, that it has become woven into the fabric of our judicial system.  You would be hard pressed to find a more unchallenged example of stare decisis (precedent) in the court's history.  As unelected officials, these justices do not have power to make laws, rather, to interpret the existing laws as outlined in the Constitution.  They are bound by the foundational laws of the Constitution which cannot be challenged or disputed unless by amendment, a process in which the Supreme Court plays no role.  Critics will say that this requires justices to have a nearly supernatural ability to discern some underlying meaning, or original intent, of the text itself and apply it to a wide range of cases that go beyond the scope of the Constitution.  They will also say that this requires judges to strike down all laws violating the Constitution despite the consequences of their ruling.  Thinking of this sort widely expands the power of the Supreme Court, and is the source of the famous "legislating from the bench" approach to jurisprudence.  How can we reconcile this with the indirect nature of how the court's members are chosen, and still purport to be a democracy?  How can we expect accountability to the law from nine people whose tenure is without public review, barring the exceedingly rare case of impeachment?   We cannot, on both counts. 

I am not so radical as Clarence Thomas.  I do not expect Supreme Court justices to make guesses on exactly the mindset of the framers when they put quill to parchment, and then apply them to the modern and complex cases that come before the court today.  I believe there will be good and bad arguments as to the interpretation of the Constitution that will scale with evidence, reasonableness, and logic.  There is a reasonable argument to be made, for example, that parts of the Constitution establish a right to privacy, specifically the Ninth Amendment.  Arguments such as those made by Sandra Day O'Connor in Grutter v. Bollinger, regarding the University of Michigan's use of racial preference in its law school admissions, clearly draw not even tenuous support from the Constitution, and in the case of Grutter, are even contradictory to it.  It seems to me that any mechanism that lends preference to one person over another solely on the basis of race is in clear violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, especially as it has historically been interpreted by the court.  Also in Grutter, O'Connor seemingly put an expiration date on the ruling:  "We expect that 25 years from now, the use of racial preferences will no longer by necessary to further the interest approved today."  Is this a Supreme Court justice talking, or a legislator?  Is she interpreting the law, or making it up based on what Justice O'Connor deems society needs?  If it is the latter, isn't that the responsibility of the legislature, and not the Supreme Court?  Perhaps the most salient question is this:  If the use of racial preference in Michigan's admissions will be unconstitutional in 25 years (I'd love to know where she got 25 years, by the way), why is it constitutional now?  How do future societal changes, whatever they may be, change anything about what the Constitution says on the matter?  The answer is simple:  she isn't making her ruling based on any real interpretation of the Constitution.  This is distinctly different from arguments for rights to privacy, because right or wrong, many privacy rights advocates draw their logic from the words of the Constitution.  

Sadly, O'Connor's jurisprudence is not unusual among her fellow Supreme Court justices or in the lower courts.  "Activist" judges such as these draw their ruling inspiration from politics, personal values, and other illegitimate forms of evaluating cases.  Even the champions of originalism, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, are not impervious to the temptation to obfuscate their mandate as Supreme Court justices (see: Bush v. Gore).  Where does this leave us with our judicial system? The Supreme Court confirmation process is manifestly broken, as nominees are largely able to tread water just enough to be confirmed with little real investigation as to their jurisprudence.  It also emphasizes the importance of the upcoming election, for that is where the people have the most power to influence their Supreme Court. With John Paul Stevens at 88, Ruth Bader Ginsburg at 75, Antonin Scalia at  72, and Anthony Kennedy at 71, the next president will almost surely have an opportunity (or three) to nominate someone to the Supreme Court.  The question voters must ask themselves is simple:  which candidate is more likely to nominate judges who will honor their mandate as arbiters of the Constitution, and not agents of social change?  If you believe in the importance and influence of the Supreme Court, this question will significantly guide your choice in November.


Monday, June 9, 2008

When Myth Becomes Law: The Prohibition of Marijuana (Part 2/3)

Anyone with some familiarity of World War II history will recognize Hitler's "the bigger the lie" concept, and while eons less sinister, it is similar to how marijuana has come to be so terribly misunderstood. Cannabis is one of those sad examples of where legislation is not based on the evidence, indeed, it seems the foundations of marijuana law are based on just about anything except an objective perception of the facts. It is useful to investigate the source of marijuana prohibition, its history, and its motives.

Prior to the 1900s, not only were there no laws prohibiting the use of cannabis, it was a staple commodity in the United States, highlighting its many uses and functions. Chief of these functions was hemp, which was used to make rope, clothing, and sails. In the late 1800s, cannabis was used more frequently in medicines, and was available at pharmacies without restriction. At the turn of the century, however, cannabis regulation began to pop up in the District of Columbia, Massachusetts, Maine, California, Texas, and Indiana. Also at this time, cannabis was being referred to more commonly as "Indian hemp," referring to traditions in some Native American tribes that used the psychological effects of cannabis as a spiritual aid. As more Native Americans were assimilated into the U.S., coupled with an increase in immigration from Mexico, where recreational use of cannabis was far more widespread (introducing the term "marijuana" for the first time), more Americans became aware of the use of cannabis as a drug.

In response to the increasing opium problem China, the United States sponsored the International Opium Convention in 1912, which was the first international initiative to control drug trade. The Convention became exponentially more significant when it was incorporated into the Treaty of Versailles (ending World War I). The Convention's original agreement made no mention of cannabis. In 1925, however, as scrutiny of "marijuana" and "Indian hemp" increased, the United States together with Egypt and China, signed a revised agreement prohibiting hashish to be traded among countries that had outlawed its use (Completely speculation on my part, but the rise of terms like "marijuana" and "Indian hemp" to describe what had always been known as cannabis seems to be indicative of a racist component of these prohibitions. I would imagine associating hashish with Indians and using the Spanish word for cannabis would be powerful propaganda tools at a time where prejudice toward these two groups flourished in the United States). As cannabis had yet to be federally outlawed in the U.S. and its importation was still allowed in the form of hemp, its prohibition had yet to reach its zenith.

As the influence of the federal government grew, so did the prohibitions of cannabis. The Uniform State Narcotics Act of 1932 established a standard of drug trafficking enforcement that gave the states power to more strictly police illicit trade of banned substances. The Federal Bureau of Narcotics strongly encouraged all state governments to adopt the law. By this time, almost all of the states had some kind of cannabis regulation for non-medicinal use. For the first time, there was federal and multiple state collaboration in policing cannabis trade for recreational use. The Federal Bureau of Narcotics (FBN) and its head, Harry J. Anslinger, are the Nazi Party and Adolf Hitler of my original analogy, respectively. Anslinger used the FBN to spread propaganda about the dangers of marijuana use, and myths about marijuana exploded into the public consciousness. Anslinger claimed marijuana caused people to commit violent crime, act overtly sexual, and overall irrational. Through the FBN, Anslinger organized the production of propaganda films (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bM_vLk1I6G4), radio advertisement, and print advertisement (pictured), that echoed his message. Theories about Anslinger's motives abound, but it is clear his motivation had much to do with the 21st Amendment, repealing the prohibition of alcohol, that had been established in the 18th Amendment (and we should note how much of an unmitigated disaster the prohibition of alcohol was). Anslinger, previous to his leadership of the FBN, was the Assistant Prohibition Commissioner in the Bureau of Prohibition, which was charged solely with enforcing the prohibition of alcohol. When this group was dissolved, many of Anslinger's employees and friends were left unemployed, and the infrastructure that had been in place for alcohol prohibition was left abandoned. Some believe Anslinger filled the void by implicating marijuana as a drug dangerous to public health. Other historians believe Anslinger was misled by racially driven and inaccurate studies of cannabis use at the time, which claimed to be of scientific origin. Whatever the reason, Anslinger had begun a cycle of ignorance that continues to be felt to this day.

If Anslinger is the Adolf Hitler of our sad story, William Randolph Hearst is the Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels. Hearst, who was the most powerful media mogul of the time (perhaps akin today to Rupert Murdoch, but even more influential), used his newspapers to propagate the myths permeating society about marijuana. It should be noted that any coordination or cooperation between Anslinger and Hearst's efforts are tenuous, although some strange coincidences exist. I invite you to investigate these further at your own pleasure. Nevertheless, Hearst was an agent in the dissemination of lies about marijuana that would eventually lead to its full prohibition and in the 1937 Marihuana Tax Act and its later cousin, the Controlled Substances Act. Hearst was known to have significant financial interest in the timber industry, which controlled the production of paper. This industry was threatened by the discovery in 1916 that hemp could be used to make paper that was "favorable over that made of pulp wood." As hemp was readily available and relatively easy to produce, it posed a potentially significant problem for the timber industry. The problem would never manifest itself, however, as the Marihuana Tax Act and its related laws would ensure in 1937, as Hearst's publications continued to criticize marijuana. Interestingly, New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia, who was in strong opposition to the Marihuana Tax Act, started the LaGuardia Commission, investigating the fantastical claims against cannabis that were becoming entrenched in public opinion. Prepared by the New York Academy of Medicine in 1944, the LaGuardia Commission systematically contradicted claims that smoking marijuana results in insanity, deteriorates physical and mental health, assists in criminal behavior and juvenile delinquency, is physically addictive, and is a "gateway" drug to more dangerous drugs. Despite this scientific study, no changes were made to national policy, a reoccurring theme in subsequent studies on the subject that found similar results, such as the Nixon Administration's National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse.

As time went on, no self corrections were made in either public opinion or federal legislation. The damage had been done. Soon, mandatory sentencing guidelines were passed in the 1950s, repealed, and then reestablished in the 1980s. The fractured agencies that had previously enforced drug laws were combined in 1973 into the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). In 1975, the Supreme Court ruled that it was "not cruel or unusual for Ohio to sentence someone to 20 years for having or selling marijuana." In 2005, the Supreme Court ruled that it was constitutional for the federal government to ban marijuana, even medicinal use, under their interpretation of the Commerce Clause of the Constitution. What a sad state of affairs.
The third and final section of this three part piece on marijuana in the United States will focus on the economic consequences of marijuana prohibition.
Sources:

Friday, June 6, 2008

Defying Reason: The Prohibition of Marijuana (Part 1/3)


This will be the first of a three part look into marijuana policy in the United States. As I have made my way in the world as a young adult, especially in my experiences at college, I have interacted with heavy and casual marijuana users. I was initially surprised when I noticed a pattern developing in conversation with these people: they suffer little or no adverse physical affects from smoking, do not consider themselves addicted to it, and consider the use of alcohol and tobacco to be more dangerous to their health. My first reaction was to dismiss this as "pot-heads" rationalizing their use of illicit drugs. Marijuana, after all, is illegal in all its forms in the United States, with the exception of those few states that have decriminalized its medicinal use as prescribed by a physician. The illegality of cannabis and its stigmatization in the public eye had lead me to assume, to this point in my life, that it is a dangerous drug to public health that should remain steadfastly prohibited. As I have looked into the subject more deeply, however, I have come to believe that the prohibition of marijuana is one of the most illogical domestic policies currently active in the United States.

What reason does the government have for actively prohibiting the use of drugs? Clearly the first answer would be in the interest of public health and safety. This case is easily made for drugs of abuse such as LSD, heroin, cocaine, ecstasy, PCP, etc. These are substances that carry serious short and long term health consequences. All of them carry great risk for overdose leading to death, and in the case of heroin, cocaine, and similar drugs, there is a risk of physical dependence and addiction. As a Libertarian I have philosophical objections to prohibiting free citizens from doing anything in the privacy of their own home, but I do not deny the practicality of prohibiting drugs of this sort. The problem, however, is that none of these dangerous characteristics can be attributed to cannabis.

In reaction to a more open attitude toward cannabis in the 1960s, President Nixon in 1972 started the National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse, expecting its findings to support the long standing prohibition of the drug. The Commission's report, however, drew some damning conclusions for U.S. marijuana policy:

"Marijuana's relative potential for harm for the vast majority of individual users and its actual impact on society does not justify a social policy designed to seek out and firmly punish those who use it. This judgment is based on prevalent use patterns, on behavior exhibited by the vast majority of users and on our interpretations of existing medical and scientific data. This position is also consistent with the estimate by law enforcement personnel that the elimination of use is unattainable."
Washington, D.C.: National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse, 1972.

The Nixon Administration promptly swept the Commission's findings under the rug, and no federal policy changes were made as a result. Sixteen years later, there was still no credible evidence that smoking marijuana poses imminent health risks, as the Drug Enforcement Administration's Law Judge, Francis Young, concluded:

"In strict medical terms, marijuana is far safer than many foods we commonly consume. For example, eating ten raw potatoes can result in a toxic response. By comparison, it is physically impossible to eat enough marijuana to induce death. Marijuana in its natural form is one of the safest therapeutically active substances known to man."
U.S. Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement Agency, 1988.

So, unlike almost all other illicit drugs, there is no known lethal dosage of cannabis. This in and of itself should be an indictment of public policy toward marijuana. However, studies have also concluded that cannabis has no physically addictive properties. In fact, less than 1% of Americans use cannabis on a daily basis (United States Department of Health and Services, 2002). Also differing from most other illegal drugs, cannabis has little or no adverse effects on a developing fetus (Parents Resource Institute for Drug Education). As far as its long term effects, marijuana smoke does contain some irritants and carcinogens that can be damaging to the lungs with heavy use, however the lack of dependence on cannabis results in more moderate use that does little cumulative long-term damage. Furthermore, studies measuring cognitive impairment and brain deterioration have failed to identify marijuana as a cause of these effects (Ali, S.F., et al. "Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior").

The evidence overwhelmingly supports the determination that the use of cannabis, especially responsible moderate use, has no debilitating or dangerous physical or cognitive effects, long-term or otherwise. There is no lethal dose, there is no risk for physical dependence, and the long-term effects are minimal outside of daily and excessive use. It is reasonable to conclude, upon some research into reputable sources, that cannabis should be decriminalized on its own merits. Where the prohibition of cannabis really becomes absurd is when it is compared to other, legal, substances. Concerns about the health of American citizens are red herrings in this debate, as the legality of alcohol and cigarettes attests. The fact that people are being thrown in jail for nonviolent marijuana offenses, while alcohol remains a staple commodity, is a travesty almost beyond description. By any standard one wishes to apply, alcohol is the more dangerous substance. Its lethal dose is rather easily achieved, and its role in causing car accidents is beyond dispute. Alcohol's tendency to relieve people of their inhibitions leads to violence, unplanned pregnancy, the spread of sexually transmitted diseases, and spousal abuse. Alcohol is well known to be addictive, and its prolonged use can result in devastating neurological impairments, liver cancer, heart disease, hypertension, liver cirrhosis, prostate cancer, stroke, and even breast cancer (Center for Disease Control, 2001). The consumption of alcohol by pregnant women is known to be extremely toxic to a developing fetus, resulting in fetal alcohol syndrome, premature birth, low birth weight, and growth retardation. According to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) alcohol use directly resulted in the known deaths of 75,766 people in the U.S. alone in 2001, a number that only increases with each passing year.

Nicotine and cigarettes also do not hold up in comparison to marijuana. Countless scientific studies attest to the highly addictive properties of nicotine, resulting in its physical dependence. According to the CDC, in 2004 81.3% of smokers smoked daily, and of these, 28.4% smoked 5-14 cigarettes per day (http://www.cdc.gov/MMWR/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5444a2.htm). The consequences of this behavior is well-documented. The CDC estimates that about 438,000 people die each year from smoking tobacco. Cigarettes are attributed to lung cancer, heart disease, arterial diseases, emphysema, chronic airway obstruction, lip and esophagus cancers, stomach cancer, pancreatic cancer, cervical cancer, and leukemia, also according to the CDC. In fact, adverse reactions and misuse of over the counter drugs like aspirin and ibuprofen, account for an estimated 7,600 deaths and 76,000 hospitalizations in the United States each year. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission estimates that since 1995, vending machines have killed 37 people in the United States, and resulted in 113 hospitalized injuries. The CPSC now requires vending machine manufacturers to provide warning labels for all public machines. Marijuana kills no one. It seems that almost everything human beings do; driving cars, flying in airplanes, cooking, walking down the steps, playing golf, is more dangerous than smoking marijuana in the privacy of one's own home.

Where does all of this leave us in regard to marijuana laws in the United States?  On the federal level, marijuana remains a "Schedule 1" drug, a category reserved for highly addictive, dangerous drugs with no approved medical use.  By contrast, cocaine and some amphetamines are "Schedule 2" drugs, which are legal under certain conditions and are stringently regulated. To this day, people are still recieving life sentences, without the possibility of parole, for growing, selling, distributing, buying and possessing certain quantities of what is, in fact, a natural occurring plant. Cancer patients and paraplegics have been sentenced to years in prison for using marijuana in a medicinal context (a practice which has significant support among many doctors and researchers). Owners of garden supply stores have been given similar sentences because their customers were caught growing marijuana. Are there no bounds to the irrationality that can dictate our laws and the way in which we govern ourselves? The fact that we have allowed policies of this sort to continue for almost a 100 years borders on collective masochism. The government, nor anyone else for that matter, has any legitimate right to dictate what I will and won't do that does not infringe on the civil liberties of other people, especially in the case of marijuana, which has no discernible health risks that call for its prohibition.

Part 2 of this 3 part piece on U.S. marijuana legislation will focus on the common myths associated with cannabis. Part 3 will center around the economic consequences of our marijuana laws.

Sources:
From the CDC:
From the CPSC:
From the American College of Physicians:


Other sources were cited directly in-text.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Hillary Clinton at Millersville University

Anyone who reads my blog knows I am no Hillary supporter, but when a college friend invited me to see her in nearby Millersville (outside Lancaster), my curiosity won over and I accepted the invitation. As luck would have it, we got in just in time for her appearance (thousands were still in line even when it was over). Even though her performance was no doubt well rehearsed, I was surprised at how well she spoke. She had the crowd going throughout her speech, and even more impressive, held my attention more or less the whole time. She advocated a lot of politics I disagreed with, but I found myself applauding a few times.

I will get the negatives out of the way first. I've never written about it here (I intend to sometime before the election), but universal healthcare is not a good idea, especially her version of it. She explained the difference between her healthcare plan and "her opponent's" plan, which is that she would require every American to own the universal plan, while Obama would make it optional. Any policy that removes personal choice from the equation, especially in the domain of healthcare, shoves us further down this steep slope of government intrusion in our lives. I fail to see the legitimacy of a bureaucracy deciding the who, what, and where of my own health insurance.
When I think of things that should be sacred, personal, and individualized, healthcare is near the top of my list. There are also practical ramifications of UH, and these should not go unnoticed. It never ceases to make me chuckle when I hear democrats scream about the outlandish deficit spending of the Bush Administration, and in the next breath, advocate socialized medicine (and what a sad state of the Republican Party when democrats are in a position to criticize "conservatives" for excessive spending). Clinton performed this very stunt at MU. In her speech, she explained how closing a tax loophole that "benefits big business and the rich" would go toward paying for her healthcare plan. I have no doubt that corporate CEOs and billionaires manipulate the complexities of the tax code for their benefit. I have significant doubt that funding Clinton's healthcare plan wouldn't require some national tax hike, which she failed to mention on her stump in the MU gym. It is hard for me to imagine a scenario where universal healthcare is implemented, and at the same time the national debt is reduced. Lastly, removing free market competition will invariably lower the quality of services like healthcare, and that benefits no one.

Hillary spent a few minutes railing against the greed and selfishness of big business, citing CEO salaries and oil company profits as examples. All I have to say to that is: welcome to the United States of America, Senator Clinton. Capitalism was and is the driving force of this country's success, no matter how many social programs and business restrictions Clinton and her peers advocate. To what else could we attribute the amazing quality of life we enjoy? Even most of our poor know nothing of the strife faced by the poor overseas, where non-capitalist economies are unable to create enough jobs or generate enough overall wealth to support the less affluent. Penalizing businesses for making money is antithetical to the capitalist nature of this country. I am well aware of the commodities some of these companies control, like energy, and I understand that their profits can seem to be at the expense of average Americans. In reality, it is the market that dictates value and cost, and the market is controlled by us, not Exxon Mobile or any CEO. The demand for energy is created by the American public. It is our choices, not big oil's, that make energy expensive. Fuel inefficient vehicles, lack of genuine support for energy alternatives, and our decisions to drive so much in the first place, all lend themselves to high energy costs (it is important to note that it is the Japanese and other overseas car companies that lead the way in fuel efficiency). The funny thing is that in her speech, Hillary seemed well aware of America's failures here, as I will get to in more detail later, but she still couldn't resist plenty of zingers at big oil, surely in an attempt to pander to her antibusiness base. Lastly, it is useful to highlight the circumstances beyond our control that are contributing to expensive energy. The emergence of countries like China and India on the world economic stage, with their massive populations, are spiking the demand for energy worldwide. The growth of rural centers in these areas also increases the need for automobiles in countries where public transportation has always been more convenient. As the world economy grows, the demand for energy will increase prices for everyone.

Clinton paid some lip service to the war, but I was surprised at how little time she spent on it. She advocated a "responsible withdraw" from the war she voted for, saying she would begin bringing troops home after 60 days in office. I'd love to know where she came up with 60 days, as if that's any better than bringing them home in 16 or 6 days. I won't go into it much here, but it seems to me that Iraq is a failed project. The Administration was caught with its pants down after it took Baghdad, seemingly at a loss for what to do next. There is a lack of political will among the Iraqis to agree on anything, most notably the allocation of oil reserves, and the religious divisions within the region seem insurmountable. This is purely speculation on my part, but Clinton's 60 day withdraw plan seems to be merely a way to distinguish herself from Obama, who would remove troops more aggressively. It seems to me that waiting 60 days and calling it "responsible" is disingenuous in the first place, and downright stupid in the second. As the number of American casualties closes in on 4,000, Clinton will pay politically against Obama, who's more aggressive withdraw policy will draw more support from democrats.

On to the positives. Hillary said she would "end the Bush Administration's war on science," and that one of the first things she would do as president would be to "ask congress to send me that stem cell research bill for my signature." Good for her. The Bush Administration's position on stem cell research has delayed a science that could provide therapeutic breakthroughs for a host of diseases and ailments (diabetes, burn victims, certain types of cancers, and Alzheimer's, just to name a few) , tacitly prolonging the suffering of millions of current and future human beings. While there is a legitimate secular debate to be had about the morality of abortion, the indignation some on the right have for stem cell research is incoherent at best, and downright unethical at worst. The facts are these: embryonic stem cells are compromised of blastocysts, which are made up of about 100 cells (for comparison's sake, there are over 100,000 cells in the brain of a fly). These blastocysts have no neurons, much less brains, and have no nervous system or quantifiable consciousness. There is no reason, therefore, to believe this miniscule collection of cells suffers its destruction on any level. The stem cells that are acquired through in vitro fertilization are due for destruction whether or not they are used for scientific purposes or not, and yet research of this sort has still been criminalized. Bush's legacy will no doubt contain his complicity with the opposition of a science that could save millions of lives at the expense of none.

Clinton also proposed a presidential commitment to energy independence, which I find to be a solid idea. She correctly pointed out that the political will for the moon race was created by JFK in 1960, when he promised that we would land on the moon by the end of the decade. He was right, and the country was the better for it. Hillary eloquently articulated the argument for energy independence, and said she would fully commit her office to the goal of clean and safe energy alternatives to relieve our dependance on foreign oil. She pointed out, again correctly, the economic potential of such a goal, as a new and burgeoning energy industry could be a catalyst for new jobs, both in the scientific realm and the actual creation and distribution of an alternative energy. I agree with her that a good use of her office would be to spearhead this effort in coordination with the private sector, just as JFK imagined for NASA at the outset of his presidency.

My last major area of agreement with Clinton during her speech was the complete abandonment of No Child Left Behind, which has been an unmitigated disaster. President Bush's lack of humility on this subject, by the way, is obscene. He continues to support an endeavor that has clearly failed, and even deludes himself, and by extension, attempts to delude us, with misleading signs of NCLB's "successes." Don't be fooled. It is an unfunded mandate, it promotes testing over actual learning, and it is too restricting to local boards of education, who should have the authority to dictate their own terms of education based on the needs of their district (which is the way education was done for hundreds of years in this country until the last half century, as educational performance has declined). I go into some more detail about NCLB toward the end of my previous post on American conservatives.

Overall, I was more impressed than I expected to be with Senator Clinton, even though I know that is what these rallies are designed to do. She still won't get my vote, but my opinion of her has changed in the positive direction.