Pubdate: Sun, 19 Apr 2009
Source: Daily Reveille (Louisiana State U, LA Edu)
Copyright: 2009 Daily Reveille
Contact: http://www.lsureveille.com/submit_a_letter
Website: http://www.lsureveille.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2879
Author: Eric Freeman Jr.

FREEMAN OF SPEECH: PROHIBITION DIDN'T WORK ONCE, ISN'T  WORKING NOW

Raise your hand if you remember Chicago in the early  1930s, at the 
height of alcohol Prohibition.

The early '30s saw mafia warfare at its highest,  featuring all-time 
highs in black market profiteering  and bootlegging what so many 
enjoy on a nightly basis  today.

Alcohol was prohibited by the 18th Amendment, but for  the next 16 
years, alcohol sales thrived underground  while violence and murder 
rates skyrocketed.

Prohibition was eventually repealed in 1933 by  President Franklin 
Roosevelt at the height of the Great  Depression.

Yet today, the country faces another pandemic as a  black market 
incites violence caused by demand of an  illegal product.

Today, Americans want to smoke marijuana.

Over 100 million people, including President Obama,  have admitted to 
smoking weed and another 25 million  admit regular use over the past 
year, according to The  Washington Post. Moreover, in 2007, 62 
percent of those  who admitted first-time use of the drug were under age  18.

Marijuana is by far the most commonly used illicit drug  in the U.S., 
yet the substance itself stands alone in  comparison to legal drugs 
like alcohol and tobacco.

In 2000, alcohol by itself, without counting drunk  drivers, claimed 
the lives of 85,000 people. Tobacco  holds a rate six times higher, 
killing 435,000 people,  according to the Journal for the American 
Medical  Association.

Not a single person has ever died from a marijuana  overdose, yet 
775,137 people were arrested for simple  possession in 2007.

The momentum from the 1980s in fighting our "War on  Drugs" has taken 
a different turn, as more and more  citizens plead with lawmakers to 
produce legislation to  decriminalize, regulate and tax marijuana.

Chairman Betty Yee of the California State Board of  Equalization 
endorsed a bill in February to regulate  the estimated $14 billion 
marijuana market, citing a  potential income for the state of $1.3 
billion. The $14  billion figure came from eliminating expenses in 
marijuana law enforcement and a taxation level  comparable to alcohol 
and tobacco.

The state currently collects $14 million from marijuana  dispensaries 
- - marijuana shops legal under state law -  a figure that will grow 
after U.S. Attorney General  Eric Holder announced Feb. 26 the DEA 
would no longer  raid them.

In the medical community, scientists have produced  repeated studies 
about the benefits of marijuana,  specifically for those who suffer 
from glaucoma,  hepatitis, HIV/AIDS and certain cancers, primarily 
those who suffer from loss of appetite.

Marijuana legalization will not come easily. But  leaders need to be 
more honest about the nature of  marijuana and what it does to people.

The truth changes from person to person.

"The problem is that it's difficult to tell what the  effects of 
marijuana will be for any given person at  any time, because they 
vary based on the person, their  drug history, how much marijuana is 
taken, and its  potency," according to the National Institute on Drug  Abuse.

Obama recently addressed legalization in terms of  stimulating the 
economy at an online town hall meeting  in the White House.

After pointing out the weed question was the No. 1 most  asked 
question in three different categories, including  the economy, law 
enforcement and health care, he  belittled the online audience and 
hypocritically  dismissed legalization altogether.

If Obama was arrested for his weed use, he wouldn't be president.

Instead of lighting up a substantive debate over  decriminalization, 
regulation and taxation of  marijuana, Obama ignored the plea of a 
nation dealing  with border violence, overflowing prisons, crippling 
diseases and a stagnant economy.

Presumably he doesn't want to be remembered as "the  weed president," 
but he shouldn't worry.

We don't remember FDR for legalizing Jell-O shots.

- ---------------------

Eric Freeman, Jr. is a 22-year-old political science  junior from New Orleans.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart