These Democrat States Are Declaring War on ICE
Putin Ally Threatens Nuclear War Against Europe If This Happens
This Doctor Mailed Abortion Pills to Louisiana. Now This Democrat Governor Is Protecting...
No More Taxes Until the Fraud Stops
CNN Guest Tries Accusing ICE of Nazi Recruitment Tactics, Makes a Fool of...
Germany Finally Admits Trump Was Right About Energy
New York's Mamdani Doubles Down on Race-Based Government Policy
Left-Wing Mobs in Minneapolis Now Stopping Cars and Interrogating Civilians
'A Viable Option:' Calls for Trump to Invoke the Insurrection Act in Minnesota...
Flashback: There Was a Time Tim Walz Was Willing to Call in the...
‘They Are Killing Their Own Children’: Iranian Commander’s Daughter Speaks Out Amid Nation...
Trump Threatens to Tariff Countries Opposing His Effort to Control Greenland
Pentagon Leaker Charged for Possessing Classified Documents on the Venezuela Raid
Venezuelan Opposition Leader Gifts President Trump Her Nobel Peace Prize
Fraud and the ‘Fundamental Transformation’ of America
OPINION

Sha'Carri Richardson's Suspension Highlights an Arbitrary Distinction That Makes Less Sense Than Ever Before

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
AP Photo/Ashley Landis

President Joe Biden's take on American sprinter Sha'Carri Richardson's one-month suspension for marijuana use was similar to hers and correct as far as it went. "Rules are rules," he said on Saturday, and "everybody knows what the rules are going in."

Advertisement

Biden added that "whether that should remain the rule is a different issue." But as the collapse of pot prohibition continues apace in the United States, that issue is unavoidable. Now that 44 percent of Americans live in states that treat marijuana like alcohol, the lingering distinction between these two intoxicants makes less sense than ever before.

Richardson, who tested positive for an inactive THC metabolite during U.S. Olympic Team Trials on June 19, said she used marijuana in Oregon, where voters approved legalization in 2014, after learning about her biological mother's death. Had she reacted by having a drink or two, that choice would have had no impact on her athletic career.

But under the 2021 World Anti-Doping Code, which the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency enforces, THC is considered a "substance of abuse," so designated because it is "frequently abused in society outside of the context of sport." Although the same obviously could be said of alcohol, that drug is not considered a "substance of abuse."

Counterintuitively, Richardson's infraction had nothing to do with "doping" as it is usually understood, since the USADA concedes that her marijuana use was "unrelated to sport performance." Nor does her positive test result indicate that she was under the influence of marijuana during competition, since the THC metabolite cited by the USADA can be detected in a cannabis consumer's urine for days or weeks after the last dose.

Advertisement

Richardson's cannabis consumption nevertheless had severe consequences. It nullified her first-place finish in the 100-meter trials, making her ineligible for that event at this summer's Olympics, where she had a good shot at winning a gold medal.

The 21-year-old runner responded to this crushing disappointment with remarkable grace. "As much as I'm disappointed, I know that when I step on the track I represent not only myself, I represent a community that has shown great support, great love," she said on NBC's Today show. "I apologize for the fact that I didn't know how to control my emotions or deal with my emotions during that time."

The USADA said Richardson's suspension was reduced from three months to one "because her use of cannabis occurred out of competition and was unrelated to sport performance, and because she successfully completed a counseling program regarding her use of cannabis." The idea that Richardson needed "counseling" because of her perfectly understandable response to her mother's death, as if that decision revealed her as an incipient drug addict, is irrational and more than a little insulting.

Other athletic organizations have recognized that arbitrary rules like the USADA's can no longer be justified (if they ever could). In 2019, the National Hockey League and Major League Baseball stopped testing players for marijuana.

Advertisement

Businesses also are adapting to the new reality of widely legal cannabis. Last month, Amazon, the nation's second largest private employer, announced that it would no longer test job applicants for marijuana and would instead treat cannabis consumption "the same as alcohol use."

The Biden administration initially indicated that it also would take a more tolerant approach, saying in February that it would allow people with a "limited" history of marijuana use – a description that encompasses at least half of American adults – to work in the Executive Office of the President. A month later, however, The Daily Beast reported that "dozens of young White House staffers have been suspended, asked to resign, or placed in a remote work program due to past marijuana use."

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement