Marijuana Control, Regulation, and Education Act

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    Government February 24, 2015 Should Marijuana be legalized by the federal government? There has been a sudden spark of interest in the debate about the legalization of marijuana in communities across the United States, but most people are misinformed with the way the government portrays marijuana, reading research that doesn’t provide clear sources and attempts to criminalize the use of marijuana. Only six percent of all medicinal research goes toward the study of Marijuana for medical use, but most people

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    Over the years State powers has changed. The States have gained less power relative to the Federal government. Originally the States were the sole governing power through the Articles of the Confederation due to the fear of the development of a monarchy that the U.S. had fought so hard to rid themselves of. Thus gave creation a new form of government through the constitution which fundamentally began the shift of power from state to federal. Next, though significant historical events such as the

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    Legalization of Marijuana Marijuana is the most frequently used illegal drug globally; different types of the drug have been used for many years for their social, aesthetic, and medicinal effects. International laws and treaties have forbidden farming, possession, and selling of marijuana. This makes lawbreakers out of more than the 125 million people marijuana consumers and those who supply them. The trade makes illicit markets totalling to billions of dollars per year, some of the illegal activity

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    which is used for the purpose of mimicking the effects of illegal chemicals and/or that which contain stimulant, depressant, or hallucinogenic properties (Minnesota Department of Human Services, 2015). Products of this nature, such as Synthetic Marijuana are becoming an increasing threat to public health (primarily affecting youth), resulting in hospitalizations of users, and in the worse cases, death (Carter, 2011). The purpose of this paper will be to examine existing policy concerning synthetic

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    Due to the elevated desire of marijuana in the United States, “advocates think legalization reduces crime, raises tax revenue, lowers criminal justice expenditures, improves public health, bolsters traffic safety, and stimulates the economy” (Dills, et al.). Twenty-eight states have now been legalized for medicinal use of marijuana; of those twenty-eight states, six states have also legalized recreational marijuana. Marijuana is described as “The dried leaves and female flowers of the hemp plant

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    carrying a small possession of marijuana, their punishment could involve ten years of incarceration, which is a long time for a petty crime. Activists for legalizing recreational marijuana have presented this argument too frequently, stating that one of the effective ways to end racial profiling, is to put an end to the marijuana ban. Though many states are on the fence as to whether or not legalizing recreational marijuana will benefit them, just by decriminalizing marijuana, minorities are at a less

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    situation. The Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 was the single most effective law passed to help alleviate the effects of improper drug use. The Act accomplished three things: 1) It created the Food and Drug Administration in Washington that must approve all foods and drugs meant for human consumption. The very first impact of that was that the patent medicines were not approved for human consumption once they were tested. 2) The Pure Food and Drug Act said that certain drugs could only

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    It seems that drugs should be legalized because, “the existing evidence suggests that net costs for drugs are higher under probation-substantially higher in some cases” (Miron, 839). Miron is proposing that prohibition leads to significantly high prices for drugs which creates incentives for suppliers to develop a black market and make enormous profits. By legalizing drugs, he argues that the price will be driven down so that the black market will be eliminated because the profits will not be

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    Anti Drug Use And Abuse

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    college students and the military during the 1960s. In the midst of the 1960s Lyndon B. Johnson took office as President of the United States and helped to create even more legislation in regards to The War on Drugs including the 1965 Drug Abuse Control Amendments which were enacted to deal with problems caused by abuse of depressants, stimulants and hallucinogens (Significant Dates in U.S. Food and Drug Law History. (2014, December 19). Fast forward a little further to 1969 and into the Nixon administration

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    of loss of productivity from drug-related incarcerations is considerably higher than the cost associated with drug use. In light of this, the prime minister is weighing options of proposing new legislation which experiments with models of legal regulation of certain illicit drugs, including the decriminalization of

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