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	10-09-2004, 01:38 PM #1 OPSenior Member OPSenior Member
 The Financial Cost of Cannabis Laws[align=center]Cannabis Considerations[/align] 
 
 A person can make any number of logical and honest arguments for the
 lessening of restrictions concerning the current federally mandated cannabis tax,
 but until you make the average American; the ones without first hand information,
 understand the economic consequences there will never be a revaluation of the
 legislation.
 Concerns about personal freedom and individual liberty are not going to
 carry the day here. Neither is the issue of medical usage. There is only one real
 hope; to help the average American see the immense financial burden placed
 upon them and other taxpayers by a select group of Washington insiders. And to
 help them to understand the honest financial consequences of reexamining
 existing cannabis legislation.
 You can make the point that this plant, which grows well in poor soils,
 without expensive chemicals, can help lessen oil imports by producing Bio-Diesel.
 A locally produced alternative to imported oil, which happens to be less harmful
 on the environment (less nitrates). You may want to make the point that paper
 products produced from four acres of forest can be made with less pollution from
 one acre of hemp. You might want to talk about the tens of thousands of family
 farms that could benefit from supplying an earth friendly series of products. You
 could even point out that depriving smugglers of a market helps protect Americaâ??s
 borders.
 Although current administration policies refuse to allow any research into
 the products available from the family Canibciace this has not prevented research
 in other industrial countries. The list of uses for this persistent weed is a long one.
 Leaf- can be used for animal bedding, mushroom compost, or mulch
 Seed/hemp oil
 Food: Granola, protein rich flour, margarine, food supplements,
 salad oil, health products
 Soap: Shampoo, cosmetics, bath gels
 Other Uses: oil paints, solvents, varnish, birdseed, chain saw
 lubricants, putty, printing ink, fuel
 Hemp Stalk:
 Clothing; Handbags, fabrics, denim, diapers shoes, socks,
 cottonized fibers
 Other uses: Rope, twine, nets, canvas bags tarps and carpets
 Paper: Printing paper, fine and specialty papers, technical filter
 paper, newsprint, cardboard, and packaging products
 Building materials: Fiberboard, and insulation materials, fiberglass
 substitute, concrete blocks, stucco and mortar
 Industrial products: agro-fiber composites, compression molded
 parts, brake and clutch linings, caulking
 Source: Nova Institute, Courtesy of Hemp Horizons by John Roulac (Chelsea
 Green Publishing)
 While all those products sound pretty good the real benefits come from
 reallocating the huge amounts of money currently used to persecute 14.6 million
 American and incarcerate 735,000 of them per year (FBI 2000). Those 735,000
 persons are small business entrepreneurs and with a change in the law could in
 turn employ other Americans, turning a tax burden into a revenue stream. How
 many jobs? In Amsterdam each of the more than 250 licensed and regulated
 Cannabis coffeshops generates employment for 20 people. In tiny Amsterdam
 that means five thousand jobs and a river of tourists spending money on hotels,
 restaurants, museums, transport, concerts, other local activities. In America those
 same 735,000 small business entrepreneurs could be providing jobs for 14.7
 million (14,700,000) fellow Americans. At $6.50 an hour those jobs could
 generate $198.74 billion dollars in personal income alone. What nearsighted
 political decision deprives the American economy of this immediate sustainable
 stimulus?
 We can never win â??the war on drugsâ? any more than previous
 administrations could win the â??war on bootleggersâ?. Because there is no control
 without regulation. The 18th amendment proved that, banning something does
 not control that activity. You cannot control a car by releasing the steering wheel
 and legislating control. By allowing a distinction between â??softâ? and â??hardâ? drugs
 the Federal Government could convert an unpopular and derided politically
 motivated campaign into an economy building tax base that lowers governmental
 expenditures.
 Cannabis is not illegal in this country. It is illegal to produce, distribute or
 possess cannabis without a tax stamp, and the administration of those stamps is
 controlled by the Internal Revenue, under extremely narrow guidelines mandated
 by the United States Congress. The mechanisms to issue and administer the
 documentation required for such a system still exist and it would be the work of a
 day for Congress to reword the current Federal statutes and allow individual
 states to decide if they would allow a coffeshop style system in their state. If an
 individual state chose to allow the controlled consumption of cannabis in certain
 areas there is already a bureaucrat with a desk in Washington to issue those
 stamps and administer appropriate taxes.
 What political dogma keeps America from using itâ??s native assets to the
 benefit of its people? What cabal has conspired to deny an industrial society of an
 alternative to pollution and degradation of the environment? What twisted logic
 causes us to turn 735,000 small business men and women a year from taxpayers
 to tax burdens?
 We are talking about real money here, not just a few billion but as much as
 a Trillion dollars (1,000,000,000,000). Not stretched out over ten years but this
 year and every year; from now on. Wouldnâ??t your non smoking neighbor like
 healthcare for his year old daughter? Donâ??t you know some old farmer that would
 rather work outside than watch TV? Increased employment and increased
 revenue from their purchasing power, decreased government (Federal and State)
 expenses without a decrease in services. More money for school, healthcare,
 college education, honest drug education, prescription drug coverage, prison
 reform, child abuse prevention, domestic violence intervention, military pay
 increases, pay down the National Debt. Name your favorite cause, could they use
 in increase in funding?
 When ordinary people realize how much of their hard earned money goes
 to Federal taxes that support domestic terrorism and the actual costs of waging a
 war on 20 percent of our population, support for the â??War on Drugsâ? will dwindle
 rapidly. It just isnâ??t cost effective to turn employers and taxpayers into tax
 burdens. Not while you are cutting services and putting a huge financial burden
 on our children and their children. The question now becomes â??how much waste
 will a taxpayer accept?â?
 As more modern industrial nations and neighbors reevaluate their
 Cannabis laws in a more scientific light this administrations refusal to consider
 any dissenting views, scientific or social, stands in sharp contrast to the scientific
 realities and in open defiance of the will of the people in states that have voted to
 open debate or even (heavens forbid) reexamine penalties. Even the Supreme
 Court has cleared the way for state laws allowing ill patients to smoke marijuana if
 a doctor recommends it.
 By abandoning Ainslingerâ??s Folly and accepting the scientific evidence of
 the 21st century the Administration could give the entire economy serious,
 sustainable growth. After all itâ??s not the hemp that cause the violence, itâ??s the
 money. Letâ??s take the money away from the criminals and build ourselves a better
 country.
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 !!VOTE!![/align]doctor G Reviewed by doctor G on . The Financial Cost of Cannabis Laws Cannabis Considerations A person can make any number of logical and honest arguments for the lessening of restrictions concerning the current federally mandated cannabis tax, but until you make the average American; the ones without first hand information, understand the economic consequences there will never be a revaluation of the legislation. Concerns about personal freedom and individual liberty are not going to carry the day here. Neither is the issue of medical Rating: 5
 
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	10-11-2004, 03:26 AM #2 Senior Member Senior Member
 The Financial Cost of Cannabis Lawswaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaayyyyyyyyyy too long for a stoner to read 
 
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	10-14-2004, 03:51 AM #3 Senior Member Senior Member
 The Financial Cost of Cannabis Lawsthats crazy shit if its all true, $1 trillion in funds every year, that seems a bit high but what do i know. I don't think weed will ever be legalized just because of the propaganda they put in peoples brains for their gain 
 
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	10-20-2004, 06:56 AM #4 Senior Member Senior Member
 The Financial Cost of Cannabis LawsWell this stoner read it, I am registered & voting (absentee ballot) due to a mini trip to sunny/warm  Phoenix,AZ. Phoenix,AZ.
 
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	10-25-2004, 05:10 AM #5 Senior Member Senior Member
 The Financial Cost of Cannabis Lawsbut imported oil and midddle east violence gets big contracts with taxpayers money for rumsfeld etc's military interests.   
 
 very good point but americans have had their taxes squandered on rubbish for ever. its popular culture lol.
 
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	01-16-2005, 03:01 AM #6 OPSenior Member OPSenior Member
 The Financial Cost of Cannabis LawsLuck not required. Spread truth. Truth will set you free. 
 Register, Participate, VOTE.
 The Doctor
 
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	03-24-2005, 12:14 AM #7 Senior Member Senior Member
 The Financial Cost of Cannabis Lawsthat was possibly the best factual literature i've read that was writin by an american and with the price inflation in the central united states it is probually over a million i hope you dont mind but i forwarded this to some activists i know i put your name on it and the site \"stand up for yourself and what you belive in and no one can ever say you didn\'t\"smokey R.I.P.
 
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	03-24-2005, 12:14 AM #8 Senior Member Senior Member
 The Financial Cost of Cannabis Lawsover a trillion sorry to high lol \"stand up for yourself and what you belive in and no one can ever say you didn\'t\"smokey R.I.P.
 
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	03-24-2005, 01:56 AM #9 Senior Member Senior Member
 The Financial Cost of Cannabis LawsI suggest Drug War Crimes: The Consequences of Prohitibtion by Jeffrey Miron. 
 It shows how similar to the prohibition of alcohol, the more drug laws are enforced the higher the homicide rate.
 
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	03-24-2005, 02:02 PM #10 Senior Member Senior Member
 The Financial Cost of Cannabis Lawscool so do you think they will have a copy at the local library lol i think ill try to find it on the net \"stand up for yourself and what you belive in and no one can ever say you didn\'t\"smokey R.I.P.
 
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