Chris Christie has gone to pot

     New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, R-N.J. takes a questions during a town hall meeting with area residents in Londonderry, N.H., Wednesday, April 15, 2015. (Jim Cole/AP Photo)

    New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, R-N.J. takes a questions during a town hall meeting with area residents in Londonderry, N.H., Wednesday, April 15, 2015. (Jim Cole/AP Photo)

    Amidst all the early GOP jockeying – Jeb Bush is vacuuming big donors; Scott Walker is scoring in the New Hampshire polls; Ted Cruz, Rand Paul and Marco Rubio have made it official; Ben Carson vows to announce soon – let’s check on our Jersey boy. What’s happening with Chris Christie?

    Well, the tough-love guv surfaced this week on a radio show and ranted about reefer madness.

    Host Hugh Hewitt, whose show is a required pit stop for Republican aspirants: “Right now, we ‘ve got the states of Colorado and Washington (defying) federal law by allowing people to sell dope legally. If you’re president of the United States, are you going to enforce the federal drug laws in those states?”

    Christie: “Absolutely. I will crack down and not permit it. Marijuana is a gateway drug. We have an enormous addiction problem in this country. And we need to send very clear leadership from the White House on down through the federal law enforcement. Marijuana is an illegal drug under federal law. And the states should not be permitted to sell it and profit from it.”

    • WHYY thanks our sponsors — become a WHYY sponsor

    Granted, the status of weed is not the weightiest issue in America; it’s not as important as Christie’s pitch to raise the normal Social Security retirement age to 69. And if federal prosecutors announce indictments in the George Washington Bridge probe or in the other Jersey probes – as expected soon – Christie is probably toast anyway. But still. His reactionary pot stance is a window into his alienation from the Republican mainstream. Not to mention the American middle.

    Start with the fact that his key line – “Marijuana is a gateway drug” – is empirically ignorant. (Deposed Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett also invoked the gateway canard, and we all know what a brainiac he was.) Christie has been saying it a lot. Last month, for instance: “Every bit of objective data tells us that it’s a gateway drug to other drugs.”

    That’s a lie, an insult to the actual science.

    In 1999, the Institute of Medicine, part of the American Academy of Sciences, concluded: “There is no evidence that marijuana serves as a stepping stone on the basis of its particular physiological effect.” In 2002, the British Journal of Addiction concluded: “While the gateway theory has enjoyed popular acceptance, scientists have always had their doubts. Our study shows that these doubts are justified.” In 2006, the American Journal of Psychiatry concluded: “The likelihood that someone will transition to the use of illicit drugs is determined not by the preceding use of a particular drug, but instead by the user’s individual tendencies and environmental circumstances.”

    In plain English, the scientific consensus is that weed is typically a gateway drug – or, more precisely, a starter drug – for people who are already predisposed to use drugs. And that for many of those people, the real starter drugs are alcohol and cigarettes.

    Plus, we have the federal drug-use stats: In the five years from 2007 to 2012, the number of monthly marijuana users reportedly rose from 14.4 million to 18.9 million – yet, during that same span, the number of monthly cocaine users fell from 2.1 million to 1.7 million; crystal meth, from 530,000 to 400,000. Heroin use (still a fraction of pot use) has gone up, but the gateway drug for those users appears to be prescription painkillers.

    Christie’s ’30s-era gateway canard might click with anti-science conservatives, but otherwise his hardline pot stance is a political loser. At this point, with prohibition on the wane (68 percent of Millennials – the future of America – want legalization), there’s little appetite for a Big Brother crackdown on the states that have legalized recreational and medical use. Last month, the Pew Research Center reported that 59 percent of Americans – including 54 percent of Republicans – want Washington to leave those states alone.

    Indeed, Christie has staked out a position far to the right of the likely Republican field. Jeb Bush, Rand Paul, Ted Cruz, and Rick Perry all have the 10th-Amendment ‘tude that states should decide for themselves. It’d be fun to watch Christie debate his rivals on stage about marijuana policy.

    Assuming that he even makes it to the gateway.

    ——-

    The latest on ChipotleGate: Hillary’s aide, who paid for that lunch in Toledo, didn’t put money in the tip jar.

    There goes Ohio!

     

    Follow me on Twitter, @dickpolman1, and on Facebook.

     

    WHYY is your source for fact-based, in-depth journalism and information. As a nonprofit organization, we rely on financial support from readers like you. Please give today.

    Want a digest of WHYY’s programs, events & stories? Sign up for our weekly newsletter.

    Together we can reach 100% of WHYY’s fiscal year goal