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  1.     
    #1
    Junior Member

    PROHIBITION(bad)MARIJUANA(good)

    Recently, narcotics officers raided the house of a suspected marijuana dealer in Wisconsin. The unarmed suspect, who offered no resistance, was shot to death in front of his 7-year-old son. His crime? Possession of 1 ounce of marijuana. In Oklahoma, a wheelchair-bound paraplegic who used medicinal marijuana to control muscle spasms caused by his broken back was sentenced to 10 years in prison. His crime? Possession of 2 ounces of marijuana. Another Oklahoma man is serving 75 years in prison for growing only 5 marijuana plants. (These are not misprints.)

    Prohibition is the number one cause of America's exploding prison population. Many non-violent drug offenders are now serving longer prison sentences than murderers, rapists, and other violent criminals. It costs taxpayers $30,000 per year to imprison just one non-violent drug offender. Politicians are spending billions of tax dollars to build new prisons and jails so more and more non-violent drug offenders can be warehoused. Meanwhile, funding for education and other services are being strained.

    Reducing drug abuse is a desirable goal, but law enforcement methods used to obtain that goal are counterproductive. Prohibition costs billions to enforce, creates a black market that generates violence and corruption, and makes criminals out of millions of productive and harmless adults. Adult use of alcohol and tobacco is accepted, but adult use of marijuana is considered criminal behavior. Why?

    The main rationalization for Prohibition is to keep marijuana away from children. That rationalization does not reflect reality. Several surveys reveal that teenagers can obtain marijuana easier than they can obtain the legal drugs of beer or wine. In Holland, where sale of marijuana to adults is openly accepted, the percentage of teenagers using marijuana is less than half that of American teenagers. Because America's marijuana trade is totally unregulated, marijuana dealers are on the streets selling to anybody--especially teenagers. Regulating marijuana like wine would put street dealers out of business, would make marijuana dealers pay taxes, and would restrict sales to adults only. Prohibition does not make it difficult for teenagers to obtain marijuana. Tougher marijuana laws have not reduced marijuana use. Marijuana use has increased every single year since 1991.

    In 1937 (the last year that marijuana was legal) only 100,000 Americans used marijuana. Now that marijuana is illegal, 30 million Americans use marijuana, and marijuana is easily available to anybody who wants it--including children and prison inmates. 600,000 Americans are arrested for marijuana violations every year and thousands of them are sent to jail or prison, where many of them can still obtain drugs. The government can't even keep drugs out of its own prisons, yet the politicians keep telling us they can rid the entire nation of marijuana by spending more tax dollars. The government now spends $15 billion every year (a 1,500% increase since 1980) waging a war on marijuana smokers--a war that has lasted 60 years and is impossible to win. Another $5 billion per year is lost in tax revenue that could be generated if marijuana was regulated and taxed like wine.

    For all practical purposes, Marijuana Prohibition is a $15-billion-per-year government subsidy for drug traffickers, organized crime, and street dealers. Because the government prohibits well-regulated liquor stores from selling marijuana, the government ensures that organized crime and street dealers will flourish. Prohibition escalates violence and corruption as mobsters, street gangs, and thugs fight for control of the marijuana trade. Just as Alcohol Prohibition escalated violence and corruption during the 1920s, Marijuana Prohibition does the same today.

    Once all the facts are known, it becomes clear that America's marijuana laws need reform. This issue must be openly debated using only the facts. Groundless claims, meaningless statistics, and exaggerated scare stories that have been peddled by politicians and prohibitionists for the last 60 years must be rejected.



    be good, peace and many kudos
    Buggsy Reviewed by Buggsy on . PROHIBITION(bad)MARIJUANA(good) Recently, narcotics officers raided the house of a suspected marijuana dealer in Wisconsin. The unarmed suspect, who offered no resistance, was shot to death in front of his 7-year-old son. His crime? Possession of 1 ounce of marijuana. In Oklahoma, a wheelchair-bound paraplegic who used medicinal marijuana to control muscle spasms caused by his broken back was sentenced to 10 years in prison. His crime? Possession of 2 ounces of marijuana. Another Oklahoma man is serving 75 years in prison Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    PROHIBITION(bad)MARIJUANA(good)

    Keep on torching the wool off of everyones' eyes, and let the light of truth rush in!

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    PROHIBITION(bad)MARIJUANA(good)

    This would be a really good article if only you had sources to proove your points.
    Quote Originally Posted by BlazinTreesX3
    We should have to grow potatos in our closet to make illegal french fries and sell em by the gram because obesity is 420 times worse then a marijuana hobby.

  5.     
    #4
    Senior Member

    PROHIBITION(bad)MARIJUANA(good)

    Ok,Here's a source for you...My girlfriend spent 2-1/2 years in a Federal Prison,and is still dealing with 3-1/2 years parole for posseion with intent to distrubite...she is 5'1" 100 lbs, a Very quiet, Peaceful Deadhead,Very active in the need to change these arcaic laws,and VERY firm in her beliefs!!!( has always been willing to risk her freedom to help thoes who NEED medical MJ) This pissed off the system,Oh no we can't have Peaceable poeple telling the truth abuot weed!! Oh Hell NO!! and while she was in we found that 71% of Feddy inmates are there for MINOR drug crimes!! most people who get incarcerated on a federal level also lose their homes,cars,savings, ( I'm Here to let you know that this cost us $80,000 in lost home,cars,savings,lawyer's fees) job oppertunitys, the abilty to vote in some states, the right ot hold public office, passport ect. a least on a state level one can ask for expongment of ones records and get your rights back!! Not if you spend federal time!!!

    Now for the rest of her life every she's stopped in her car,apply's for a job(at least one that pay's enough to live on)has ANY dealings with state officals,Goes to register her car,or anything having to do with the system she's gonna get run thru the mill!Hell her car insurince was cancelled cuz of this!! WHY?? Cuz she got caught with weed in her car in another state other than the one it was registerd in!!

    To Quote Bugsy..."Prohibition is the number one cause of America's exploding prison population. Many non-violent drug offenders are now serving longer prison sentences than murderers, rapists, and other violent criminals. It costs taxpayers $30,000 per year to imprison just one non-violent drug offender. Politicians are spending billions of tax dollars to build new prisons and jails so more and more non-violent drug offenders can be warehoused. Meanwhile, funding for education and other services are being strained."

    HE'S RIGHT!!!! AND THEIR TARGETING US!!!! Its time to put aside our political Squabbling and start to vote like a GROUP of pot smokers...It won't make a rat's ass if we ALL are in jail!!!! Its time to stop the Insanity!!!

    Sorry about the rant...jus a sore spot with me,Thanks for puttin up with me!
    Due to public safety concerns, your rights are now obsolete

  6.     
    #5
    Senior Member

    PROHIBITION(bad)MARIJUANA(good)

    If you want to know why mmj is still illegal look at the negativity and hate spewed, by people that smoke pot, since the 60's. Ever read these forums? Ever been to a "pot rally?" It's clear that prohibition is a failure but that's not going to convince the anti-pot people to change their mind if they see the way many "stoners" (often minors) represent themselves and therefore mj. They drive away the supporters, voters and politicians we need to convert, thus cementing their perceptions of people that smoke mj even for medical purposes.

    Looking in the mirror is often the hardest thing for some people to do. Personal responsibility is a bitch, isn't it?

  7.     
    #6
    Senior Member

    PROHIBITION(bad)MARIJUANA(good)

    Quote Originally Posted by Buggsy

    For all practical purposes, Marijuana Prohibition is a $15-billion-per-year government subsidy for drug traffickers, organized crime, and street dealers. Because the government prohibits well-regulated liquor stores from selling marijuana, the government ensures that organized crime and street dealers will flourish. Prohibition escalates violence and corruption as mobsters, street gangs, and thugs fight for control of the marijuana trade. Just as Alcohol Prohibition escalated violence and corruption during the 1920s, Marijuana Prohibition does the same today.

    Once all the facts are known, it becomes clear that America's marijuana laws need reform.
    The only way it's ever going to be legal is when there are virtually no more dealers, no more profits attracting organized crime. As long as there is serious money to be made it will continue to be outrageously expensive and illegal.

    The only way to defeat this nightmare is to Overgrow and share your surplus. Undercut the dealers. Make them useless. Remove the profit.

    Pipe dream?

    Probably.:sadcrying


  8.     
    #7
    Senior Member

    PROHIBITION(bad)MARIJUANA(good)

    Undercutting the dealer just makes you the dealer with a lower price. Growing your own, however cuts out the dealer in your personal case. The best way to get rid of the dealer, is to reschedule and decriminalize for responsible adults but, alas, there's the rub. It might just be a pipe dream.

  9.     
    #8
    Senior Member

    PROHIBITION(bad)MARIJUANA(good)

    Quote Originally Posted by iamapatient
    Undercutting the dealer just makes you the dealer with a lower price.
    you say that like it's a bad thing.
    have to start somewhere.
    sometimes have to start small and let it snowball.

  10.     
    #9
    Senior Member

    PROHIBITION(bad)MARIJUANA(good)

    Then your problem isn't "dealers" it's just the ones that are more successful than you. *You* were the one talking about getting rid of dealers by undercutting them. Do you have more than 2 faces? If getting rid of dealers is good then being a dealer is bad. You cant have it both ways. Pick a side. For example, I think they should severely increase the penalties for dealing to minors.

  11.     
    #10
    Senior Member

    PROHIBITION(bad)MARIJUANA(good)

    you have to start somewhere at sometime. the journey begins with the first step. right now we have dealers charging too much. so the next step is to have dealers charging less & less. ah, and it begins with the growers. now sure, growers could Overgrow and give away their surplus and those who recieve it could charge as high as they please, but if more and more growers Overgrow and give away their surplus then the high prices won't survive.

    example: in 1981, in San Jose, Cali, there was a glut of blonde lebanese. before the glut it was 10 bucks a gram, 25 for an 1/8th. during the glut the price went down to 3 bucks a gram and 10 bucks an 1/8th. the dealers were fronting the stuff left & right to get rid of the over-supply.

    similar situations have happened from time to time with an over abundance of mexican or thai weed---mass produced commercial grade weed.

    someday it will happen with the dank---but everything begins in the Now.

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