When Dieudonné highlights the absurdity of cannabis prohibition
Humor can sometimes be an effective weapon for highlighting a society's contradictions. In one of his sketches recently captured in Belgium, Dieudonné portrays this absurdity through a grating dialogue between an alcoholic father and his cannabis-smoking son. Behind the audience's laughter, a social and political critique resonates with a bittersweet flavor.
The scene: father on Ricard, son on a joint
The sketch is based on a simple but highly effective contrast. The son, a teenager, asks a question full of common sense: why ban pot, a natural plant that has been consumed for thousands of years, when we allow alcohol, which is responsible for considerable health and social damage?
Opposite him, the father embodies a French cliché In the name of the law and morality, he condemns his son. The humor comes from this reversal: it's the alcoholic who lectures the smoker, in the name of an incoherent legal system.
Dieudonné pushes caricature to the point of absurdity. The father tells cannabis use has improved family life: his previously depressed wife is smiling again, arguments have calmed down, and even his own alcohol consumption has decreased. But there's only one word on his lips: «it's illegal».
Echo of Coluche
In the 80s, Coluche had already made the comparison between alcohol and cannabis a comic and critical springboard. He also pointed out that alcohol, despite its harmful effects, is tolerated because it is part of our cultural heritage, while cannabis, though less harmful, is relegated to the margins and associated with delinquency.
Dieudonné picks up this thread but brings it up to date. In a society where you can legally transform your body to the extreme, and where alcohol is on every table, banning cannabis seems increasingly incoherent.
The sketch goes further than a simple joke about alcohol and cannabis. It paints a portrait of a society that prioritizes drugs not according to how dangerous they are, but according to their history and cultural status.
The comedy culminates when the father suggests that his son replace the joint with... a bottle of alcohol, presented as a «civilized» solution. It's the whole French system that's being mocked here: passing on alcohol addiction as a cultural heritage, while demonizing cannabis as a threat to youth, as the Mildeca's latest campaign.
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