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Legalizing Marijuana Safer: So Why Are We Driving People To Drink?

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Marijuana is the counter-opposite of a Schedule 1 drug and should be legalized or rescheduled. Marijuana is used for medicinal purposes and has been for hundreds of years if not thousands. Also, marijuana can be taxed and regulated like alcohol to contribute to schools and reduce crime. Moreover, the reasoning behind the Marihuana [sic] Tax Act of 1937 denigrates American citizens of color. Marijuana is restricted at the highest level which expansive research for medicinal use. According to the United States Drug Enforcement Administration’s (DEA) website, Schedule 1 drugs are classified as a substance or chemical that are not currently accepted for medical use and poses as a high potential threat for abuse (DEA). Not only is marijuana listed …show more content…

The Co-Founder and Strategic Advisor of National Cannabis Industry Association (NCIA) Steve Fox et al. wrote a book called, “Marijuana is Safer: So Why Are We Driving People to Drink?” to highlight the positive effects of legalized marijuana it exposes how the only harm caused by illicit drugs is the simplicity of it being illegal. In the foreword of this book is a direct message from Seattle's former chief-of-police Norm Stamper. Norm shared his experience arresting individuals by the non-violent drug and supports that marijuana is safer than alcohol (Fox). Stamper said the only reason he arrested people who possessed marijuana was because he had to enforce the law. As aforementioned, marijuana is medically safer under doctor’s orders when compared to the legal over-the-counter drugs such as alcohol and tobacco. Reports from the National Vitals Statistics System (NVSS) shows that in the United States, tobacco use is liable for the deaths of 480,000 and alcohol claims an average of 88,000 lives per year from 2006 to 2010. Yet, marijuana alone is responsible for zero deaths …show more content…

According to Mitch Earley, Ph.D., a psychology professor at the State University of New York at Albany and the editor of “Pot Politics: Marijuana and the Costs of Prohibition”, says, the United States government spent over five-billion-dollars on marijuana prohibition in 2000 (Earley 24). Earley also stated that legalizing marijuana would generate over six-billion-dollars in revenue annually if it were taxed like tobacco and alcohol (Earley 29). The national reporter for The Huffington Post, Matt Ferner wrote "Why Marijuana Should Be Legalized: 'Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol.” In this article, Ferner concluded that Colorado will revenue about 60 million-dollars and experience a stimulation in job growth. In the same article, Ferner stated that “marijuana use among high school students in Colorado has decreased significantly since the state began regulating the sale of medical marijuana.” Not only will America have the ability to profit, but simultaneously regulate who purchases

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