Pubdate: Mon, 29 Sep 2003
Source: Vanguard, The (AL Edu)
Copyright: 2003 USA Vanguard
Contact:  http://www.usavanguard.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2827
Author: Kenneth Norris

LEGALIZE IT!

USA Student Thinks The Costs Of Marijuana Prohibition Outweigh The Benefits

The question of marijuana legalization raises many issues that affect each 
of us in some way. My purpose herein is to explore some of the moral, 
cultural, legal and economic issues related to marijuana legalization.

Most Americans agree that drug abuse is immoral because it distorts 
perception, impairs judgment and can jeopardize one's health. As a 
Christian, I agree that drug abuse is wrong and stupid and sets a bad 
example. However, these criticisms apply equally to alcoholism, which 
shares the exact same faults while remaining legal. Alcohol, tobacco and 
obesity each kill tens of thousands of people, yet there is not a single 
documented case of a marijuana overdose.

The drug trade affects our culture by destroying individuals, families and 
communities. However, the harms caused by the drug trade stem from its 
prohibition. The suppression of any market creates a black market that 
increases the profitability of trade in the prohibited product. Naturally, 
people tend to be protective of their profits and their livelihoods. 
Participants in legal markets settle their disagreements in court, but 
traders in black markets cannot risk exposing their illegal activities in 
civil suits, so many of them use violence to settle disputes.

The solution to the problem of violence stemming from Prohibition (1920 - 
1933) was to legalize and regulate alcohol, which lowered its profitability 
and increased the monitoring of its distribution through licensure. 
Although alcohol continued to destroy lives and relationships, the violence 
around the trade in alcohol diminished greatly.

It seems reasonable to believe that regulating marijuana could produce 
results similar to those of the legal trade in alcohol and tobacco. Local 
governments could issue licenses to businesses so authorities may monitor 
the distribution of marijuana as they do with alcohol. Furthermore, 
citizens could petition licensing boards and zoning commissions to prevent 
marijuana distributors from setting up shop in a particular neighborhood. 
It is unlikely that one could negotiate a similar agreement with an illegal 
drug dealer.

Many concerned Americans oppose marijuana legalization because they believe 
it would send the message that drug use is socially acceptable. Their 
argument reflects the legitimate concern that the legalization of marijuana 
implies the acceptance of its use. However, most of us can agree that there 
are acts we consider immoral but do not wish to make illegal. For example, 
few people approve of marital infidelity or gluttony, but even fewer would 
want to incarcerate anyone for these misdeeds.

I honestly feel that we send a bigger mixed message to our children by 
placing our faith in so many pills to solve our problems. We live in the 
most medicated society on the planet. We tend not to follow the directions 
printed on the prescription bottles, we store unused pills in our medicine 
cabinets to self-medicate at will or to give them away so friends and 
family members can self-medicate. Moreover, we have a pill for nearly every 
desire, from hair restoration to weight loss. Why wouldn't our youth think 
they could find happiness in a drug?

The advertisements of pharmaceutical companies are pervasive on television 
and in magazines, although only a licensed physician can prescribe them. 
Pharmaceutical companies know the dirty truth about the American health 
system: too many doctors tend to prescribe requested name-brand drugs just 
to appease demanding patients. Most of us lack the specialized knowledge to 
make an informed decision about prescription drugs, but we do not care as 
long as we can pop the pills that make us happy.

Americans already pay the highest per capita medical expenses in the world, 
and the trend of larger employee contributions for medical benefits only 
exacerbates the concern that legalizing marijuana could increase our health 
care costs. However, the economic costs of alcohol abuse, tobacco usage and 
obesity vastly exceed the cost of treating marijuana users. Furthermore, 
the legality of marijuana usage does not affect whether insurance companies 
can continue to refuse coverage of employees who have had accidents while 
testing positive for drugs in their systems. Consequently, there is no 
reason to believe that insurance premiums would increase merely from 
marijuana legalization.

Taxation of legalized marijuana can raise revenue to expand drug education 
and rehabilitation programs, which are far more cost-effective than 
incarceration. The United States already has the largest prison population 
(about 2 million inmates) and the highest rate of incarceration in the 
world, but a whopping 55.5 percent of the prison population serves time for 
nonviolent drug offenses! That figures out to about 1.11 million offenders, 
each costing taxpayers about $25,000 annually. That is $27.75 billion each 
year we spend keeping them locked up, but does not include the other costs 
of law enforcement for the "war on drugs."

Wouldn't it be nice to have billions of dollars to spend on programs that 
keep our youth off drugs voluntarily and still have more than enough money 
left to rehabilitate everyone whom our wrongheaded policies have let down?
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman