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Marijuana An Argument For Legalization Essay Research

Marijuana: An Argument For Legalization Essay, Research Paper


Currently, drugs remain high on the list of concerns of politicians,


and drugs are considered one of the major problems affecting our


country. Stories are on 11:00 news every night about people


being murdered on the streets because of drugs. Many people


think that drugs are only an inner-city problem, but in reality, they


affect all of us; non-users and users. I believe that the negative


effects associated with drugs would be reduced greatly if the


United States adopted a policy towards the total legalization of


marijuana. By this I mean completely legalizing marijuana for


recreational, medicinal, and other uses. The current drug policy


of our government is obviously failing. Drugs are quite present in


our society, and the United States drug policy has not deferred


drug trafficking to the point where it is beneficial. Drug laws have


created corruption, violence, increased street crime, and


disrespect for the criminal justice system. Besides that, the


American people should be allowed to enjoy what they like to do


responsibly and law enforcement could focus their attentions to


other more serious crimes.


Marijuana comes from the hemp plant, which can readily be grown


on fields across the nation and was cultivated heavily in the


colonial period. After 130 years of being able to grow and


consume marijuana, the potential problems of marijuana were


brought into the public eye in 1932. Harry J. Anslingler, the


commissioner of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, authored the


book Marijuana: Assassin of Youth (Goldman 88). In his book,


Anslinger portrayed images of Mexican and Negro criminals, as


well as young boys, who became killers while under the influence


of marijuana. With this and other added public pressure from


Anslinger’s book, President Franklin Roosevelt signed into law


the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937. This law made the use and sale of


marijuana federal offenses, and at this point marijuana vanished


from the public eye.


In the mid-1960’s marijuana reappeared and the “Hippy” emerged.


Hippies were viewed as the abnormal people who did not “fit in”


and were often referred to as freaks. Widespread objection to the


use of marijuana remained because of the lifestyles associated


with hippies. Contrary to the belief of the population, the use of


marijuana appeared in colleges and among middle-class youths in


the suburbs. Marijuana became a symbol of a counter-culture,


youthful rebellion, and freedom for the non-hippie users. During


the next ten years marijuana use escalated to a point that it was


literally everywhere. Marijuana could be found in cities, towns,


suburbs, the country, and just about anywhere a person could


think of. People rooting from all different backgrounds were using


it, and consequently, marijuana was becoming more accepted


across the nation. For example, in 1997 a teacher at Pine View


School for the Gifted in Sarasota, Florida was “relocated to a


different school” because it was found that he was growing


marijuana for personal consumption. The users of marijuana, and


the attitudes about the danger of marijuana broke down. In 1970,


the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act


reduced the classification of simple possession and non-profit


distribution of marijuana from felonies to misdemeanors


(Himmelstein 103-104). However, President Richard Nixon


declared a war on drugs in 1973, and over the next 20 years, each


succeeding president continued to escalate the drug war. This


particular “drug war” is not only against marijuana but also against


harder drugs that are more dangerous. This policy has obviously


done nothing to stop the recreational use of marijuana in this


country; on the contrary, it is causing great harm. The policy is


preventing many people who could benefit from marijuana


medicinally and us costing the taxpayers money with little results.


It is time to try something new.


When some people imagine the legalization of marijuana, they


fear a marijuana free-for-all with everybody constantly getting


high and the United States Government being burdened by


legalization. In fact, the process of legalization would include a


law passed by Congress allowing the government to control the


content, quality, and distribution of marijuana. The laws would be


similar to the current laws regulating alcohol and tobacco,


including laws governing age, limits for driving, and distribution.


A thorough investigation of the costs and benefits of legalization


must be examined before any policy is implemented. In reality,


legalization will only make legal what many people do everyday.


There are a number of myths associated with the use of marijuana


which people who are opposed to the legalization of marijuana


repeatedly cite. One of these is that Marijuana causes brain


damage. People who are opposed base their claim on a study by


Dr. Robert Heath of the rhesus monkey in the late 1970’s. Heath’s


work was criticized for its insufficient sample size of only four


monkeys, its failure to control experimental bias, and the


misidentification of normal monkey brain structure as “damaged”


(Hager 1). Actual studies of human populations of marijuana users


have shown no evidence of damage to the brain (Hager 1). In fact,


the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA)


conducted two studies in 1977 and they showed no evidence of


brain damage in heavy users of marijuana (Hager 1). Later that


same year the JAMA came out in favor of the legalization of


marijuana (Hager 1). If marijuana did cause brain damage, would


the JAMA be in favor of legalizing it?


Another myth is that marijuana damages the reproductive system.


This is based on the work of Dr. Gabriel Nahas, who


experimented with tissue cells isolated in petri dishes. The cells


were dosed with near lethal levels of THC


(Delta-9-tetrahydocannabinol). The scientific community rejected


Nahas’s connections between the petri dishes and human beings


because the data was invalid. Studies of actual human


populations have failed to demonstrate that marijuana adversely


affects the reproductive system (Hagar 1). A persistent myth


about marijuana is that it is a gateway drug, which is a softer drug


that leads to the use of harder drugs. The Dutch partially


legalized marijuana in the 1970’s and since then the use of heroin


and cocaine has sharply decreased. The opposite of this gateway


affect is also present the United States. In 1993, a study by the


Rand Corporation compared drug use in states that have


lessened the penalty for marijuana use and those that have not. It


found that in states where marijuana was more available, hard


drug abuse (as measured by emergency room episodes)


decreased. What science and real experience tells us is that


marijuana tends to substitute for much harder drugs like alcohol,


cocaine, and heroin (Hagar 1).


Another common misconception is that marijuana is more


dangerous than alcohol. Extremely high doses of marijuana cause


death. “Extremely high doses” is the essential phrase. Scientists


have concluded that the ratio of THC,


Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol the chemical that produces a high


(comparable to a ‘buzz’ from alcohol), needed to get a person


intoxicated (stoned) relative to the amount necessary to kill him is


1 to 40,000. That means that to overdose on marijuana a person


would need to consume 40,000 times more THC that a person


normally would to become intoxicated. The ratio of normal alcohol


consumption versus overdose varies between 1 in 4 and 1 in 10.


Over 5000 people die of alcohol overdoses each year, and no one


has ever died from overdosing on marijuana (Hagar 2). Many


would argue that this fact is because marijuana is illegal, but


consider the fact that marijuana is approximately a $46 billion


dollar industry (NORML).


Health care, increased crime and social aspects are the three


general areas which marijuana is not beneficial. One of the


definite proven disadvantages of marijuana is the fact that it is


more dangerous than cigarette smoking. Two marijuana


cigarettes (joints) create more airway impairment than do an


entire pack of cigarette (Miner 44). One joint contains three times


more tar than cigarettes do and marijuana is considered four


times more dangerous (Courtwright 54). Marijuana dramatically


increases the pulse rate and blood pressure during use. Many


politicians and some medical professionals project that lung


cancer cases will increase if marijuana is legalized. (Miner 44).


These are all valid arguments, but cigarette smoking is legal, and


the end result for many years of use is the same as marijuana;


lung cancer.


The American Civil Liberties (ACLU) advocates the full


legalization of the use, possession, manufacture, and distribution


of drugs (ACLU 1). The ACLU believes that marijuana being illegal


is unconstitutional. The following is an excerpt from their policy


on drugs, which was adopted in 1994:


“Criminalizing the use, possession, manufacture, and distribution


of drugs violates the principle that the criminal law may not be


used to protect individuals from the consequences of their own


autonomous choices or to impose upon those individuals a


majoritarian conception of morality and responsibility.


Enforcement of laws criminalizing possession, use, and


manufacture of distribution of drugs engender violations of civil


liberties. Because drug enforcement is aimed at behavior, which


is inherently diffi

cult to detect and does not involve a complaining


“victim,” it necessarily relies on law enforcement techniques.


Such techniques include the use of undercover operations,


arbitrary or invasive testing procedures, random or dragnet


seizures, and similar measures that raise serious civil liberties


concerns. These enforcement techniques lead in practice to


widespread violations of civil liberties guarantees, including


those secured by the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Amendments” (ACLU


1).


The enforcement of the drug laws criminalizes the possession,


use, manufacture, and distribution of marijuana and this is what is


causing the violent crime. If a “marijuana black market” did not


exist there would not be any reason for illegal activity to be


associated with marijuana. Allen St. Pierre, Assistant National


Director of the National Organization for the Reformation of


Marijuana Laws (NORML), says that legalization will wipe out the


already 60-billion dollar black market by placing marijuana in the


open market. (NORML information pack 3). This war on drugs is


wasting the money, as well as the lives of American people. The


widely recognized opinion maker William F. Buckley, Jr. writes:


“…The time devoted to tracking down, arresting and then trying


marijuana users and then trying marijuana users is perhaps the


greatest exercise in lost time in contemporary activity. In the last


two years, approximately 750,000 arrests were made in our mad,


quixotic effort to stamp out marijuana. What this adds up to is


millions of police hours spent on bootless missions, millions of


hours of court time wasted, and millions of months in jail, using up


space sorely needed to contain people who can’t wait to get out


in order to resume mugging and murdering”


(Politics-Commentaries).


The drug law imprisons a multitude of otherwise law-abiding


people for non-violent acts that are directed at no one but


themselves (ACLU 1). Most small-time drug offenders were


growing marijuana for personal consumption or were posessing


marijuana for personal consumption. There were not driving


intoxicated of imposing a threat on anyone. Instead of eliminating


drugs, the prohibition of them merely fosters an illegal industry


able to inflate prices. This is hauntingly familiar to the prohibition


era of gangsters when alcohol was illegal in the 1920’s. The black


market is obviously the only place where drugs in general can be


sold and because of this fact violence is created, along with


deaths due to no quality regulation, and diseases are spread from


sharing illegal drug paraphernalia (ACLU 1).


The supporters of legalization believe that it will benefit society


in three ways, including revenue enhancement, medical benefits,


and hemp production. The largest and most appealing argument


for marijuana legalization is revenue enhancement for the United


States Government. Much of the money normally spent of law


enforcement, court time, and the cost of incarcerating prisoners


would be saved and used towards something more beneficial


(Schmoek 3). The United States spent roughly one billion dollars


on marijuana enforcement last year and the DEA has proposed a


400% increase in anti-pot spending within the next 10 years, yet


domestic marijuana production has only been reduced by 10%.


Furthermore, in 1989, 314,552 arrests were made for simple


possession (NORML 2). That’s 314,552 people that taxpayers paid


to hold in jail, for just having marijuana or marijuana paraphernalia


in their possession. America’s annual marijuana harvest was


worth $50.7 billion in 1989 and $41.4 billion in 1988. In comparison


to corn, a $31.4 billion harvest, marijuana grosses $28 billion more


and has the potential to become leading agricultural product in


the United States (NORML 2). With trade regulations, industry


regulations, and consumption taxes on marijuana, NORML has


estimated that legalization would produce over $40 billion in


taxable revenue (NORML 3).


Legalization offers Congress a resolution to the national debt


because marijuana sale could provide the needed funds to help


our economy and reduce our debt. In addition, marijuana could


help America’s medical patients. Advocates of legalization


constantly tout the medicinal benefits of marijuana. For cancer


patients, marijuana reduces nausea and increases the appetite


(Cauchon 4A). Marijuana also reduces epileptic seizures and


reduces nerve disorders in multiple sclerosis patients (NORML


3). I believe that if marijuana offers suffering patients extra quality


time from their life then attempts to legalize it needs support.


Legalizing marijuana for medicinal purposes, as California did in


1996 with Proposition 15, could possibly provide cures for


diseases, allow patients to feel relief, and allow research to be


conducted for future purposes.


One area that does not gather too much publicity in the


legalization issue is hemp production. Marijuana comes from the


top leaves and flowers of the female hemp plant. The fiber from


the top is used to make clothing, paper, rope, and methanol fuel.


Methanol is a liquid alcohol fuel that burns much like gasoline. It


is widely used in the manufacture of windshield washer fluid,


gasoline fuel additives, formaldehyde and other chemicals, and


methanol has promise as a transportation fuel. (Methanol Fuel 1)


(Some speculations is that the energy companies that hold a


strong say-so are against legalization because of the fuel that can


be derived from hemp) Hemp is also a versatile plant because it


grows in poor soil, thus not taking up any valuable agricultural


land (NORML 4). Male hemp plants (does not contain THC) now


grow in the U.S. because of its heavy production in the 18th and


19th centuries. Seventy-five to Ninety percent of all paper used


before 1883 was hemp paper, including the first two drafts of the


Declaration of Independence (Young 25). Hemp is also safer for


the environment. Hemp requires 40% fewer chemicals to produce


paper and over a time span of twenty years, one acre of hemp can


produce four times as much pulp versus an acre of trees (NORML


4). Therefore, the production of hemp would save trees, and


saving trees promotes cleaner air, and manufacturing marijuana


plants creates more jobs for people.


The push for legalization of marijuana is making news across


America just as it did in the 1960’s. Marijuana is the only illegal


substance that people can talk about, sing about, make movies


about, wear clothes that display the well-know marijuana leaf, and


basically tell the world “I smoke marijuana.” If a police officer asks


a person if they are intoxicated and a person says, “yes I smoked


marijuana,” and that person is not driving a vehicle the worst that


happens is the person spends a night in jail. Everyone knows


marijuana’s presence and it is totally accepted but if a person is


caught growing it, consuming it, or possessing it; it is only then


illegal. Marijuana use is glorified in movies like Dazed and


Confused and Half Baked and by music groups like Cypress Hill


and Busta Rhymes.


Increasing public support and media attention will slowly force the


legalization issue into the forefront of the political arena. If the


widespread acceptance and consumption continues among the


powerful new voting block, college students, the policy towards


marijuana could change in the near future. Weighing both the


costs and the benefits, the legalization of marijuana seems


inevitable. Many of the purported myths about its harmful effects


have been proven false. The current war on drugs is clearly


failing, and costing too many lives and too much money. There are


many benefits to be gained from the Cannabis plant: increased tax


revenue, safety due to governmental regulation, decreased crime


and use of hard drugs, and the environmental benefits of hemp to


name a few. With all these reasons taken into consideration the


legalization of marijuana seems like the best idea for America.


messageboard


The Legalization of Marijuana


Cauchon, Dennis. “Marijuana: Medical Enigma.” USA Today 1 Oct.


1996, national ed.: 4A.


Courtwright David T. “NO!” American Heritage Feb. – March


1995: 43, 50-56.


Goldman, Albert. Grass Roots. New York: Harper & Row 1979.


Hager, Paul. “Marijuana Myths.” ICLU drug task force literature.


Internet.


http://www.parinoia.com/drugs/mariijuana/facts/marijuana-myths.


(22 Jan. 99)


Himmelstein, Jerome L. The Strange Career of Marijuana.


Westport Connecticut: Greenwood Pres, 1983.


Miner, Brad.”How Sweet is Mary Jane?” National Review 25 June


1996: 44.


National Association for the Reformation of Marijuana Laws


(NORML).


“Marijuana: Facts and Figures.” Information Pack.


Washington, DC: NORML, N.D.


National Association for the Reformation of Marijuana Laws


(NORML). Internet. http://www.norml.org. Copyright 1998, (15


Feb. 99, 24 Mar. 99)


Natural Resources Canada. “Methanol Fuel.” Engergy


Publications (n.d.). Online.


http://energy-publications.nrcan.gc.ca/pub/atf/methanol.cfm (6 Apr.


99).


“Politics-Commentaries by Others.” Online. (Author Unknown)


http://members.iquest.net/ bummer/comments.html (5 Mar. 99).


Rosenfield, Jim. ACLU Drug Policy adopted April 1994:


“Decriminalization of Drugs.” [Board Minutes, April 8-9, 1994]


Internet. http://www.primenet.com/%7Eslackk/wosd/aclu0001.txt.


(25 Jan 99)


Young, Jim. “It’s Time to Reconsider Hemp.” Pulp and Paper


(1994): 25.

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