HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html End Marijuana Consumption, Cease Violence
Pubdate: Tue, 10 Feb 2009
Source: Gamecock, The (SC Edu)
Copyright: 2009 The Board of Trustees of the University of South Carolina
Contact: http://www.dailygamecock.com/2.2453
Website: http://www.dailygamecock.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2319
Author: Ryan Quinn

END MARIJUANA CONSUMPTION, CEASE VIOLENCE

Americans Should Stop Smoking Weed to Prevent Mexican Bloodshed, Make 
Step Towards Legalization

A couple of weeks ago, The Daily Gamecock featured an editorial that 
stated that U.S. demand for marijuana funds drug cartels in Mexico. 
Students reacted with letters to the editor and the online version 
was besieged with comments. Most of these students recognized that 
their use of pot fed the violence in Mexico, yet they failed to take 
any responsibility for it.

Almost ubiquitous among these comments was the suggestion that the 
government legalize weed. It is true that if weed were legalized, 
Mexican drug cartels, which mainly rely on marijuana, would be dealt 
a lethal blow and many U.S. problems would evaporate. But the 
responsibility for the bloodshed in Mexico can't be entirely blamed 
on our government. We buy the product. We are the consumers, and in a 
capitalist society, the power of the dollar is often more influential 
than the power of the vote.

The argument of the aforementioned students is completely illogical 
at best, sadistic at worst. They say that it's the government's fault 
that people are dying due to their hobby. They fail to realize that 
they can put down the joint at any time.

I believe that weed should be legal. I have smoked weed before, but I 
pledge to do it no longer. I support marijuana rights, but that 
doesn't mean that I'm going to keep using it and contributing to the 
degradation of an entire country.

This is how you should convince to government to legalize it. Put the 
drug down. Show them that it's not an addiction. Show them that you 
would rather save lives than get high. March on Washington D.C. 
Assemble, protest, write to Congress.

Don't put up a Bob Marley poster, get stoned and rant on The Daily 
Gamecock's Web site. You're not helping the pot movement. You're 
showing the rest of society that you would rather do something 
illegal and fund drug cartels than show responsibility and petition 
for legalization in a smart legitimate way.

Sure, if everyone keeps on smoking pot it will no doubt be legalized. 
But it will be at a high cost. Many compare the situation in Mexico 
to that of the U.S. during prohibition. Yes, everyone kept on 
drinking and eventually the 18th Amendment was repealed. But not 
before illegal consumption of alcohol ushered in the gangster era and 
tore this country apart. If only people had put down the moonshine - 
thus discrediting reason for prohibition in the first place, the idea 
that people couldn't responsibly handle alcohol - and marched on 
Washington demanding their rights back. Or simply voted in people who 
supported alcohol. Bob Marley said legalize it. He also sang about 
peace. You can have both things, you just have to go about it the 
right way. Put the joint down, pick up a picket sign, and we'll see 
legalization sooner than you think. 
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