Respectfully, Mr. President

2 Apr

If the internet is a race, I certainly won’t win this one. But remember this? (If you don’t, maybe there’s a little more to Obama’s gentle jibe than I’m prepared to admit. )

All kidding aside — which, as Ta-Nehisi Coates points out, isn’t a bad strategy when discussing this topic – I’m generally with Sullivan on this one:

The chuckle suggests a man of his generation. The dismissiveness toward the question of ending Prohibition as both a good in itself and a form of tax revenue is, however, depressing. His answer was a non-answer. I’m tired of having the Prohibition issue treated as if it’s trivial or a joke. It is neither. It is about freedom and it’s deadly serious. As for your online audience, Mr president, have you forgotten who got you elected?

In Obama’s defense, I get that he’s navigating tricky political waters here. Were he to take a strong, rational stance against the violence promoted by the drug war, the knee-jerk response of Americans his generation and older would likely reduce his political capital, making it more difficult to bring about change on other important issues.

But there’s no two ways about it. His dismissive response was insulting not only to the people who demanded he answer the question, but to the people for whom a more serious answer is most pressing. I thought we were done with the teasing style of W (who referred to reporters by insulting nicknames) and the taunts of W’s daddy (my grudge against whom I only recently let go of, nearly 17 years after he tried to win election by calling us “spotted-owl people”).

Obviously, not everyone agrees with me on this one — if they did, the violence of the so-called “War on Drugs” would be history. It’s just that Obama’s star shines brightest when he brings us together, when he shows respect in the face of dissent. Please, Obama, don’t fan the flames of the dying culture war. Don’t slip now.

As I said a year ago after reading Obama’s interview in The Advocate:

Obama teaches us to speak to each other in a way that makes it no longer necessary to make that first look around the room to see who’s listening. The respect that Obama has learned to show people who disagree with him on an issue has the welcome affect of lowering the temperature in our political debates, which is why Obama draws the support of many reasonable people who don’t agree with him on every issue.

Would you care to rephrase your answer, Mr. President?

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One Response to “Respectfully, Mr. President”

  1. David April 2, 2009 at 7:30 pm #

    Greetings Bunny,
    I thought you might appreciate a little background on why cannabis is a “joke” to most public officials.
    http://www.green.net.au/gf/what_is_industrial_hemp.htm
    With enemies like the timber lobby, the oil lobby and others, cannabis has little chance of being legalized for industrial use or otherwise. President Obama has in fact accepted contributions from oil industry employees and their wives. Even if he hadn’t accepted money, an endorsement of cannabis would have created for him powerful enemies given the influence of the aforementioned lobbies in Washington. This begs the question, where is the power?
    Power to the people

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