The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Wednesday, May 1, 2024
Episode Date: May 1, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 12:19)Will Marijuana Make President Biden Cool? Democrats Look to Court Young Voters by Loosening D...rug Classification of MarijuanaAs He Exits Congress, Blumenauer Wants His Party to Embrace Pot Legalization by The New York Times ( Kayla Guo)Part II (12:19 - 20:20)Check Your Health Insurance Plan, It Might Fund Transgender Surgeries: Federal Appeals Court Rules Lack of Coverage for 'Gender Reassignment' Surgeries is DiscriminationCourt says state health-care plans can’t exclude gender-affirming surgery by The Washington Post (Rachel Weiner)Part III (20:20 - 25:58)One If By Land, One If By Sea, One If By Elephant? Determined Indian Voters Will Withstand Sweltering Heat and Creative Travel Arrangements So Over 900 Million Citizens Can VoteSign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.
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It's Wednesday, May 1st, 2024. I'm Albert Moller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
Sometimes when you look at big moral issues, the change comes fast. Sometimes it seems to come slow.
But as we're going to talk about today, there have been two issues of vast moral significance, not the same moral significance, but both vast moral significance that have followed a very similar trajectory.
That has been the rise of LGBTQ rights and the rise of the rise of.
of normalization of the use of marijuana. And on that second story, quantum leap yesterday.
Major media are reporting that the Food and Drug Administration and other federal agencies are
moving towards a reclassification of marijuana so as to reduce it from a Schedule 1 drug,
which is very highly restricted, the use of which is illegal in certain circumstances.
Any use has to be justified by some special circumstance or state law. You're looking at the fact that
The Food and Drug Administration is announcing it's looking at moving marijuana from Schedule 1,
very, very restrictive to Schedule 3, restricted in one sense under some circumstances,
but a completely different lesser category.
Now, behind this is a lot of really interesting history,
but in the present we really are talking about some very big moral issues that also relate to the rule of law,
just giant issues here.
So let's get started.
First of all, in history, the use or abuse of certain kinds of substances for,
some kind of physical effect or psychological effect, that's very, very old. And indeed, it goes back
in many cultures into prehistory. That is, before we actually have a lot of records, certainly
before you have any kind of law enforcement or pharmacological records. The use of marijuana
in the United States became a very controversial issue earlier than you might think in the
20th century. It was known as Reefer Madness at one point at about the middle of the 20th century,
and there was a tremendous amount of public uproar over marijuana.
In the United States, marijuana became a part of the hippie culture
and the student revolutions of the 1960s.
By the way, no one was making arguments back then
about a medicinal purpose for marijuana.
It was instead seen as a part of a cannabis subculture
that in many ways dominated the cultural left
and increasingly made inroads in other parts of the society
in the 1960s, 70s, and beyond.
One of the basic facts that's in operation now is that many of those who were hippies in the 1960s and in the similar period, there really are pretty much pro-marijuana.
And so it's interesting that even as you think of marijuana as a young person's issue, it often continues through the age span.
We wouldn't be talking about this if so many people who are now baby boomers had not experimented with marijuana, if not more than that, actually, during the time that they were teenagers, college students.
and beyond. But the big point here is that marijuana was seen as a symbol of cultural and moral
rebellion back in the period of the hippies, the 1960s and the 1970s. It's really hard to transgress
if you normalize the behavior. That's exactly what's taking place on marijuana. But we also need to
understand that even as the federal government has expended a vast amount of time and energy
in trying to limit marijuana, and even as state governments and local governments had made
millions of arrests when it comes to marijuana, there has been political pressure to lower its
rating in terms of its illegality, to change it from Schedule 1, which is, after all, where some of the
most dangerous drugs known to humanity are classified, and to move it down the scale. But there's
been resistance to this, and we need to understand that resistance is not irrational.
The resistance to this, on the one hand, has been that the Schedule 1 drugs are those that have a
particular danger to society, of physical danger to individuals, and also that have no clear
medicinal purpose. And that's where the moral shift on marijuana probably couldn't have taken
place without the rise of the argument of so-called medical marijuana. So going back, say,
even 20 or 30 years in the United States, you had some governments at the municipal and state
level experimenting with the so-called medical use of marijuana. Now,
Quite honestly, that medical use was very generously defined.
And at the same time, you also had a change in marijuana.
And by that, I mean an actual change in the composition of the substance.
Because marijuana, as it is sold now, or cannabis as it is more formally known,
is a quantum stronger in terms of its potency than it was back in the 1960s.
And this is not accidental because there has been an effort to try to accentuate
and exaggerate the potency of marijuana or cannabis as it has become sold.
Now, there's a lot to unpack here, but one thing is that you have states that have turned
from the legal opponents of marijuana to the legal supporters of marijuana.
And a part of that's just the politics of the situation, changes in terms of cultural values
and cultural convictions, moral convictions on marijuana.
But the other part of it is that the states have decided that they can look to marijuana
like they look too many tobacco and alcohol products as opportunities for revenue.
So if we're going to be talking as we have to talk on this program about the morality of marijuana,
it gets really complicated because you have state governments that in the main were given the
responsibility of protecting people from threats who have now decided they're going to line
their own coffers with revenue that will come by the commercial licensing and legal distribution
of those same substances, even if the substances are now much more potent,
than they were when they were originally made illegal.
But another aspect of this is the fact that general cultural resistance to marijuana has been going down pretty fast.
As a matter of fact, remarkably fast.
I mentioned the fact that it has moved at least largely in tandem with the moral change on the issue of homosexuality or the larger LGBTQ movement.
But in particular, let's just say, LNG, and it comes to lesbian and gay rights, as they have been presented and argued for in the United States,
States. We went in a period of just about 15 years. Indeed, you could say a period of even fewer
years, say the years of the administration of President George W. Bush. We went from a moral
position on homosexuality that was overwhelmingly negative in terms of the population to one that was
almost by the same survey numbers reversed, 70, 30 by some calculations. A change from 70%, for example,
against same-sex marriage to 70% for same-sex marriage in a period of no more than five to seven or eight
years. On marijuana, quite frankly, it has been similar. And as Christians would need to reflect on the
process of moral change, recognizing that eventually a society in which there's not really a
consensus that something is wrong, it pretty quickly moves into a consensus of, you know,
there's money to be made here. Now, there's another footnote to this, and that is the
fact that as we've talked about in states like New York or California, there is open conversation
about the fact that the majority of marijuana sold today is sold illegally, not legally. And there's
a reason for that. Once the state begins to collect revenue by charging taxes, well, the black
market just becomes all that much more attractive. But there's something bigger than a footnote here
as well. And that is that as you look at marijuana prosecutions, they take up an awful lot of time,
they take up an awful lot of police time, they take up an awful lot of legal space in the courts,
and I think at this point, even though I think this is wrong, I think it is simply a fact that
the vast majority of Americans don't believe that a marijuana offense is all that morally significant.
And so eventually this becomes an opportunity in political terms for somebody, and right now
it looks like that opportunity is being seized by President Joe Biden, no surprise there, who is
in trouble with younger Americans at the same time. No one's going to be able to tell me these things
are not connected. The president's in big trouble as a Democrat with his own base, particularly
with young adults, many of whom are very upset with him over the war between Israel and Hamas.
But there's a lot more to it than that. Joe Biden, by definition, isn't cool. And frankly,
no one in his position and at his age can be cool. But you can at least play some cool moves
according to the cultural left. And it's not coincidental that just in the course of the last few days,
there have been open calls from prominent Democrats for the Biden administration to take the lead
precisely because they've been arguing openly it will be to the president's political advantage.
So let's just look at an article that appeared. It's more than half a page in the print edition
of this Monday's New York Times. So this is just two days ago. Here's the headline. His farewell message to
fellow Democrats, embrace pot legalization. In this case, we're talking about a man who's retiring
after serving a very long time in Congress. In this case, it is Representative Earl Blumenauer
of Oregon, and he is now retiring, but one of his causes all along has been the legalization
of marijuana. And he is now in this article, this was just as past Monday, arguing openly
that President Biden can repair a lot of the political damage that he has. He has,
has now experienced with his younger base if he will just move to legalize marijuana. And in this case,
what we're talking about with this FDA proposal, it's not a full legalization, but it's a massive
step in that direction. Representative Blumenauer spoke of his advice to President Biden saying,
quote, I take every chance I get to nudge my friends in the Biden administration. The quickest way to
engage young people, minority voters, to break them old, is to come out four square for legalization,
for compassion for people who have been caught up in the legal morass of the failed war on drugs and make a clean break of it.
End quote. So here you have a retiring senior Democratic member of Congress, long known for his advocacy for the liberalization of marijuana.
And now just a day after that article appeared, you have this announcement coming, by the way, leaked from the DEA, that is the Drug Enforcement Agency.
And when you have a leak like this and a political season like this, that's a pretty big tip off.
Based upon the leaked information, the Associated Press last night ran with an article that said,
quote, the proposal which still must be reviewed by the White House Office of Management and Budget.
By the way, I think that's not going to take too long.
Quote, would recognize the medical uses of cannabis and acknowledge it has less potential for abuse than some of the nation's most dangerous drugs.
However, it would not legalize marijuana outright for recreational use.
So if this is true, then the step taken by the Biden administration is,
not yet equivalent to what Representative Blumenauer called for in terms of full legalization.
But let's face it, if you do reclassify from Schedule 1 to Schedule 3, you are coming pretty close to
putting marijuana on the same kind of rank as cough syrup. Now, another big issue that we simply
have to mention before moving on is that there are a lot of accusations that the prosecution of
marijuana crimes has been disproportionate when looking at certain minority populations.
And that raises, at least in part, the question of cause and effect. But it also adds, we need to know, to the political momentum towards the Biden administration taking this kind of action and in the midst of a presidential campaign doing so in a way that is clearly calculated to maximize its positive political effect. It is likely indeed to have a very positive political effect. And for Christians, that in itself is a very revealing development.
Okay, now we have to shift also on the subject of moral change and trying to track and to understand what's taking place in this moral change on LGBTQ issues and in particular on the T, the transgender front, a massive number of headlines just in the last several days.
You have the president's proposal that is to say the Biden administration's proposal in terms of a revision of Title IX rules when it comes to higher education.
And by the way, it's not just higher education.
It's wherever tax support follows education.
And you're also looking at the fact that the Biden administration has also revised rules at the United States Department of Health and Human Services.
And as a headline in the Washington Post said, quote, Biden administration reinstates LGBTQ plus protections in health care.
You have numerous news articles about that and other developments.
And then you have the decision that was handed down just in recent days in Richmond by the Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
saying the health care coverage must pay for certain forms of, quote, gender affirming surgery.
Now, to look at this is to understand we have a couple of big issues here.
One of them has to do with the court making this decision.
This is no insignificant court.
The district court held for those who were suing saying that the health care plans should be forced to pay for their sex reassignment surgeries, as they were called,
or gender affirming surgeries in the Orwellian Center.
that terminology is used these days. But it was reaffirmed just in recent days at the Fourth Circuit,
which covers a good many states or portions of states, including Maryland, Virginia, the Carolinas.
Just think Middle Atlantic here, and add West Virginia to the mix. So you're looking here at a
development that technically is binding only on the jurisdiction of the Fourth Circuit,
but quite frankly, this is likely to influence other federal appellate courts as well.
Now, as you look at the arguments that were made in this case, from a Christian perspective,
this is really interesting stuff.
Now, I'm going to read to you a sentence that is uttered by David Caleb, who was an attorney
for the state of West Virginia in this case.
And I'm just going to read you the sentence and let it settle in for a moment.
This attorney for the state of West Virginia said, quote, there is no service that is covered
for a cisgendered person that is not covered for a transgender person meeting the same
criteria, end quote. So here you have the attorney for the state of West Virginia, I think pretty
brilliantly arguing that, look, this is not discrimination against so-called transgender people,
because so long as the physical need for the surgery presents itself, it doesn't matter to us
the sexual identity or orientation of the person, again, quote, there is no service that is
covered for a cisgendered person that is not covered for a transgender person meeting the same
criteria, end quote. Now, here's the point. When you look at that particular language, we're looking at a
world that wouldn't make sense probably to you, and by the way, it shouldn't make total sense now
in terms of understanding rationality. But understanding the way language is being used these days,
my guess is that you go back five or six years and very few listeners to the briefing would have
ever heard the term cisgendered, which in this context means that you're biologically male
and you identify as male. It's very sad. We have to even explain the term, but that's where we are,
and it was used by an attorney against the forced inclusion of transgender procedures in these
health care plans. But looking at this further, it's also clear that the attorney is making the point.
Look, here is a list of surgical procedures. These are surgical procedures that are covered by
insurance. In the state of West Virginia, we require insurance carriers to cover these
surgical procedures. When are they deployed? They happen whenever the medical personnel gives an
adequate justification for the necessity of this surgery. These are the covered surgeries. If you are
transgendered and you qualify for the surgery, you qualify for the surgery. If you're not transgender
and you qualify for the surgery, you qualify for the surgery. Now, left off the list of approved
surgical operations was anything specific to the whole category, which is now, you know,
called gender affirmation or gender reassignment. So in other words, the attorney for the state was saying,
look, whether you are transgender or not, the same rules apply. This is not a covered surgical procedure.
Now, I have to say, I think that's pretty much an evidence of invincible logic. That's simply the case.
You have no discrimination between transgender and non-transgender person because you're just talking about a list of covered surgical procedure.
But the majority of the judges on the Fourth Circuit went with the other argument, ruling in favor of trans rights.
Judge Roger Gregory, writing for the majority, reports the Washington Post, quote,
called the restrictions obviously discriminatory based on both sex and gender, end quote.
So there's the big thing.
The Biden administration and the cultural left have been pushing the redefinition of sex and gender,
and now you have a major appellate court, a major circuit in the United States, in our federal judiciary.
saying, you know, those definitions now pertain.
Why? Because we say they do.
Meanwhile, one of the conservative judges who voted the other way that would be Judge J. Richardson
said that there was no role at all for the federal courts in the entire question.
This is an insurance matter.
And if it is a legal matter, it is a state matter.
It's not a matter for the federal courts.
But once again, you have the division between the activist judiciary that is really seeking to make new law.
That's what's taking place here.
And you have a more restrained judiciary.
That's evidenced by Judge Richardson.
Judge Richardson went on to critique the majority opinion.
Again, this is from the Washington Post.
Judge Richardson wrote that the majority, quote,
treats these cases as new fronts upon which this conflict must be waged,
but not every battle is part of a larger war.
In the majority's haste to champion plaintiff's cause,
today's result oversteps the bounds of the law.
End quote.
That judge is absolutely.
right. But I'm also absolutely convinced that the majority of the court in this case doesn't care
that the result oversteps the bounds of the law. They have a very different conception of the court
and of the law. I mentioned also, of course, that the Biden administration was pushing through
this redefinition of Title IX, adding sexual orientation and gender identity to protected classes.
Even though the administration is not saying this out loud and certainly not underlining the point,
this does mean that you're going to have biological males on girls and women's teams.
That's inevitable given the logic and the language of this proposal.
So just in a matter of a few days, all of these developments coming at once, and I think we
recognize this is not an accident.
We're looking at what happens in cultural change when a certain momentum is reached and
when cultural authorities gain the majority.
And in this case, elections have consequences.
The Fourth Circuit was a conservative U.S. Appellate Circuit for a long time.
Just recently, it has flipped to liberal, and that's all because of the consequences of presidential elections.
Elections have consequences, and now it's coming right down to these states, and even who is covered for what medical procedure on what terms.
Another point here is that this also means that in the covered territory here, your insurance plans are going to have to recalibrate, which means,
you, if covered by one of these plans, are now going to be caught in a system whereby you are helping
to fund and to underwrite these very same procedures. But finally, for today, we can often think of
the complexity of a federal election in the United States. For one thing, even though it is a
national election, it takes place at the state level, and most voting still takes place very much
at a local level. This is a very complex system in the United States, and frankly, in recent
years has been quite controversial, but there is a worldview reason behind it, and that is, most importantly, for
conservatives, federalism, meaning that we are not a nation that accidentally has 50 states. The 50 states
have their own absolute rights and responsibilities that are not specifically granted in the
constitution of the federal government, and the administration of elections is one of them.
And thus, you have 50 states. In one sense, you have 50 different elections going on.
on. And that also fits the presidential election with the understanding of the electoral college,
state by state. But in the United States, that means looking at between, say, 200 and 300 million
Americans who at least should have the right to vote, could be registered to vote. So let's just
take a mid-range error. Let's just say something like a little over 200 million voters.
what about a situation in which you're trying to conduct a national election when you have not, say, between 200 and 300 million voters, but you have something like 970 million voters, that's almost a billion voters.
And quite frankly, you're looking at a nation that is both geographically and politically, historically and sociologically, very complex when it comes to trying to carry out such an election.
But that's another trivia question.
And what is the world's most populous democratic government? It would be India. India is the nation.
According to the list of those that are democracies and non-democracies, India is the biggest most populous
of the nations in the category of democracies. And India is right now undergoing a vote.
Prime Minister Nehendra Modi is running for a third term. And just looking at the challenges
of undertaking a vote, a pleblocite, a voting process, a voting system under the
these circumstances. Do you know that some of the poll workers arrive by train, some arrive by
bus, some arrive by foot, some arrive by elephant? And this election is going to be particularly
hot. And I mean politically hot, yes, but I mean it is going to be very hot. As the Wall Street
Journal reports, quote, the India Meteorological Department is warned that during this year's
election, which started earlier this month and runs until early June, most parts of the country
will face higher than usual temperatures for the time of year and potentially twice as many heat extreme days.
That includes multiple days in which the ambient temperature might reach as much or exceed 120 degrees Fahrenheit.
You have to love this description, quote, held in stages, India's elections are by their very nature of feet of endurance.
Voters can spend hours listening to local candidates at outdoor rallies or waiting in lines to vote.
Election workers criss-crossed the country by helicopter and boat.
Hitch rides on Eleanor.
or trek on foot in the Himalayan Mountains to ferry the country's 5.5 million voting machines
to the far-flung hamlets due to vote next."
Now, Americans in various precincts can vote in unusual context.
But I think it's fair to say no voter in the United States is waiting for a voting machine
to arrive by elephant.
If so, give me a call.
Modern India's first Democratic election was held over the years, 1951, 1951.
And I say over that period because that first election took four months to conduct. India has tried to have faster elections, but, you know, it just doesn't work. It takes an awful lot of effort. You have to go to an awful lot of trouble to get voting machines and all the tabulation and the workers and all that is required across such a vast country with such a varied terrain. Thus, the elephants. This year's election is scheduled to last about six weeks.
And on the one hand, that sounds like a very long time.
On the other hand, when you look at the challenge, that seems like a remarkably short amount of time.
But there's something very important for us to recognize here, and that is the preciousness of the vote, the stewardship of the vote.
This takes on such importance because voters in India understand that the vote is a privilege, it is a right, it is a stewardship.
They are determined to fulfill, even if that means waiting for hours and sweltering,
120 degree heat. And so I mentioned this not just as a matter of curiosity, but as a matter of
encouragement to Americans who have far less excuse for not voting. And I appreciate this kind of
news coming out of India because it is a reminder to all of us of what is driving so many of those
Indians to the polls. And that is the importance of what is at stake. And as you know, the issues
are important not only in India, but right here and wherever you have.
are. Thanks for listening to the briefing. For more information, go to my website at
Albertmogler.com. You can follow me on Twitter, I go into Twitter.com forward slash
Albert Mowler. For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to
SBTS.edu. For information on voicecollege, just go to voicecollege.com.
I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
