Friday, November 29, 2019
If Marijuana Were To Be Legal Essays - Drug Control Law,
  If Marijuana Were To Be Legal         Drugs are a major influential force in our country today.  The problem has gotten so out of hand that many options are being  considered to control it or even solve it. Ending the drug war  seems to be a bit impossible. The war on drugs seems to be  accomplishing a lot but this is not true. Different options need  to be considered. Legalization is an option that hasn't gotten a  chance but should be given one. Although many people feel that  legalizing marijuana would increase the amount of use, marijuana  should be legalized because it will reduce the great amounts of  money spent on enforcement and it will increase our country's  revenue. There are also many benefits that can be uncovered to  help people if legalization of marijuana is given a chance.            Legalizing marijuana would increase our economy's  revenue. During Prohibition alcohol use was still sold and used,  but people were doing it illegally. The 21st amendment repealed  prohibition and alcohol taxes were increased. The same thing  should happen with drugs. Marijuana should be taxed heavily to  increase our revenue. Marijuana and other drugs would be made by  the same people who make aspirin so the quality would be assured,  containing no poisons or adulterants. Sterile hypodermic needles  will be readily available at corner drug stores. These could be  taxed heavily because the users will be assured of "clean drugs."     Making drugs legal will reduce the great amounts of money  spent on enforcement every year. Drug dealers and users are one  step ahead on the enforcement process. If one drug lord is  caught, another one will show up somewhere else. We cannot win.  "In 1987, 10 billion dollars were spent alone just on enforcing  drug laws. Drugs accounted for about 40 percent of all felony  indictments in the New York City courts in 1989. This figure is  quadruple what it was in 1985. . Forty percent of the people in  federal prison are drug law violators" (Long 114). One can only  imagine what this figure would be like today. Too much money is  wasted on a cause that seems to be no end to. "In 1989, a  Republican county executive of Mercer County N.J. estimated that  it would cost him as much as 1 billion dollars to build the jail  space needed to house all the hard-core drug users in Trenton  alone" (Long 128). All of this money could be used on better  things.       By lifting the ban on marijuana use and treating it like  other drugs such as tobacco and alcohol, the nation would gain  immediate and long-term benefits. This change in the law would  greatly improve the quality of life for many people. Victims of  glaucoma and those needing antinausea treatment, for example,  would find marijuana easily available. Also, the cloud of  suspicion would disappear, and doctors could get on with  investigating marijuana's medical uses without fear of  controversy. In the essay, "Drugs", Vidal states, " Nevertheless  many drugs are bad for certain people to take and they should be  told why in a sensible way" (321-322). It might become possible  to discuss the dangers of marijuana use without getting caught up  in a policy debate..       Meanwhile, the black market would disappear overnight. Some  arrangement would be made to license the production of marijuana  cigarettes. Thousands of dealers would be put out of business,  and a secret part of the economy would come into the open. It is  difficult to say whether this change would reduce crime because  criminals would probably continue to sell other drugs. But it  would have an impact on the amount of money flowing through  criminal channels, and this might weaken organized crime.       The legalization of marijuana would benefit the federal  budget in two ways, the federal revenues would increase, because  marijuana cigarettes would be taxed at the point of sale. In  return, the companies that make the cigarettes would also pay  income taxes.. Second, there would be a reduction on the amount  spent on law enforcement efforts to apprehend and prosecute users  and sellers of marijuana. The drug enforcement authorities might  reduce their budget requests, or, more likely, focus more  intensely on hard drugs and violent crimes. The courts would be  relieved of hearing some drug cases, as well.       The most important gain would be in the quality of  government. The sorts of temptations and opportunities that lead  to corruption would be significantly minimized. The illogical  pattern of law enforcement, which now treats marijuana as more  dangerous as alcohol, would end. It would set more achievable  goals for law enforcement, and this would lend strength and  credibility    
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