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Am I Getting Old and Soft???

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James

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Well maybe the answer to that one is YES, if we’re talking about my attitude on the decriminalization or legalization of marijuana.  I’m now 64 years old and I have never used any kind of drugs in my entire lifetime, never even experimented. (Prescription medications taken for medical reasons and strictly according to a doctor’s instructions don’t count guys!)  There was I time when I believed that anyone who used the “evil weed” was just a hop-head and lowlife who should feel the full force of the law come down on him/her, but obviously that is not true and not compatible with our enlightened times.

That said, marijuana use is not without its risks. There are lots of people out there that will tell you that marijuana has never killed anyone. Well, even by their very narrow interpretation of this claim (that is a death caused directly by Cannabis overdose) even this statement is not exactly true. The US Center for Disease Control statistics show that there have been some 26 such deaths between 1999 and 2007. Their claim also disregards the fact that the US National Highway Traffic Administration records show that since the 90s around 20 percent of those killed in traffic accidents, autopsy results showed that they had drugs in their system and that the most common drug found was marijuana. Obviously impairment as a result of using marijuana was a factor in the accident in the vast majority of cases. Their claim also fails to consider the fact that the chance of falling asleep while smoking a joint or smoking a cigarette and causing a fatal house fire are exactly the same. This risk increases exponentially when marijuana or tobacco use is combined with alcoholic beverages. Proponents of marijuana use also completely gloss over the issue of drug related violence, deaths directly linked to the growing and trafficking of marijuana and these are extremely high.

So, are there arguments to be made in favor of decriminalizing or legalizing the use of marijuana? Of course there are, and they are very strong arguments indeed. They are arguments that any government should not ignore.

Medical benefits of marijuana are real. Presently in Canada and 20 states in the USA as well as several other countries there are programs which permit the medical use of marijuana to treat patients with incurable or terminal illnesses whose pain cannot be controlled by other medications. It would be cruel in the extreme to force such people to be criminals or brand them as such for using marijuana.

Reduction of gang related violence is also another real result. Once the powerful market for marijuana was taken out of the hands of criminals and traffickers, legalized and strictly controlled by government that eliminates completely any potential profit from marijuana for organized crime. It also eliminates the violent crimes that relate to the commercialization of marijuana. The only way for government to control something is to legalize it. We’ve seen this with other drugs probably far worse than marijuana – alcohol and tobacco are two prime examples of this. Both are legal, both are controlled by government regulation and even directly controlled by government distribution as in the case of alcohol in Canada. The system clearly isn’t fool-proof, but it works well to keep alcohol and tobacco products out of the hands of minors, reduce abuse and also provide funds for treatment of the ill effects. The tax revenues generated by alcohol and tobacco sales are substantial and can go a long way toward treating those injured in alcohol related accidents or suffering from tobacco related illnesses. Why should it be any different with marijuana then?

Once legalized and taxed by the government, local production of marijuana regulated and strictly monitored would stop almost all of the illegal marijuana trade as it has done with both alcohol and tobacco. Sure some clandestine production and smuggling still exists, but it’s nothing compared to what it would be if those were both illegal drugs. There is also the possibility to indirectly force reduced marijuana use, just like the Canadian government has done with tobacco for over a decade now. Simply raising the taxes paid on the purchase of tobacco in small and regular increments, every time this was done with tobacco more smokers decided to give up the habit. I see no reason that concept wouldn’t also work with marijuana. If it didn’t prompt users to stop outright, it would certainly give them cause to think about reducing the amount of their consumption in order to avoid paying more.

Another beneficial effect is that it could possibly lead to a reduction in the number of people taking up the use of much harder and more addictive drugs such as cocaine and crack. We’ve all known that drug pushers have loved marijuana because it was a means of getting young people to try something harder. Many even have been providing marijuana for free to young users, many school aged kids, just to later convince them to experiment with something that would even give them a better high. Something addictive, that they would eventually have to pay much more for than marijuana. This would be difficult to do if marijuana was legal and under government control.

Reduction of prison population for marijuana offenses and related costs would also be another tangible benefit. Keeping young people out of jail, where in most cases they receive graduate and post-graduate education in being better criminals would be a giant step to the overall reduction of crime. You can’t tell me that there’s never been some otherwise good kid sent to jail for smoking weed that didn’t end up being indoctrinated into a life of crime as a result. Would he or she have entered that life were it not for having been incarcerated? It’s hard to say definitively, but probably not.

Controlling the exposure of others, especially minors, to marijuana use is also a real possibility. Just like with tobacco products many countries and states now have strict laws on where one can and cannot smoke. There are laws in many places that govern where, when and how we can drink alcoholic beverages too. That would be just as easy to accomplish with marijuana and young kids would not see marijuana being smoked and would tend to not think of it as being “cool”, just as they don’t see tobacco as “cool” and many even harp on their parents to quit smoking.

So, am I getting old and soft? I don’t know, maybe I’m just getting a bit smarter or more objective and flexible on the subject of marijuana use. One thing I do know is that what most countries have been doing until now certainly hasn’t been working. Just like anything else, when something doesn’t work then maybe it’s time to think outside the box and come up with a whole new approach.

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  William James Woodward – Brazil Animator, Expat-blog Team

lawyer_rio

One can die due to a an overdose of water. An agonizing and painful death. So whether or not one can die from an overdose of pot should not be an issue, especially considering the amount one would have to smoke.

The use of Marijuana should never have been prohibited in the first place, but Tricky Dick thought it made people "subversive" and "communists" whic is why it's actually higher on the list then cocaine and Heroin.

I see lots of boozers against the use of pot, which IMHO is ridiculous, as alcohol actually causes more problems than pot. I've never heard of someone high on pot beat up someone for fun, beat up his wife, or even get into a traffic accident, yet booze is an allowed drug in most countries.

James

I'm inclined to agree with you on this. Looking at the situation here in Brazil I think the only way the government can go this issue is to legalize, whether or not they actually do one day is anybody's guess.

http://yoursmiles.org/tsmile/flag/t67118.gif  Cheers,  http://yoursmiles.org/tsmile/flag/t67054.gif
  William James Woodward – Brazil Animator, Expat-blog Team

A.Clark

I think it should be legalized. Soon it will happen in the USA.. Colorado and Washington state already have legalized it for recreational use and the federal gov. said it is NOT going to step in and punish them. The gov. can make a TON of money from legalizing and regulating it, and I think Brazil's gov. could also really benefit from that. They can get a lot of tax money and maybe start to improve their deplorable education system, or transit system. If alcohol is legal, there is no reason, in my opinion, that weed should be illegal. Alcohol's effects are far worse and more extreme than weed.. creating violent tendencies and alcohol poisoning. As stated above, legalizing it would make the streets safer from the black market and there would be less gang related crime. It would be easier to keep young kids from getting a hold of it and jails would have more room for real, hard criminals. I can only see benefits from legalizing.

James

I agree and I think that the Brazilian government is going to be forced into taking a very long hard look at its policies surrounding marijuana use since it is now legalized and the growth controled by the government in neighboring Uruguay. This is going to put a lot of pressure on the government since a nation that produces marijuana legally right on Brazil's doorstep will be fertile ground for smuggling if the government doesn't act.

http://yoursmiles.org/tsmile/flag/t67118.gif  Cheers,  http://yoursmiles.org/tsmile/flag/t67054.gif
  William James Woodward – Brazil Animator, Expat-blog Team

lawyer_rio

There are several benefits to legalizing pot. Legalizing means control, you know what is sold, by whom it is sold and it becomes a lot more complicated to sell to children.

The second benefit, obviously is that you separate the sale of really harmful substances, like coke, heroin and crack from the sale of pot, making it impossible for dealers to push the more profitable white and brown powders, creating a barrier between the use of pot and coke or crack.

The third benefit is that you liberate hundreds of police officers that try to inhibit the use of something that probably causes less harm than booze, you don't hear much about accidents of stoned drivers. These officers can now fully "crack down" on crack, which clearly is a lot worse for society.

When liberating the use and sale of pot, especially in the US, you also liberate a large part of your prison population, lowering cost for the taxpayer, and, liberating space for real criminals.

And last but not least, the government would earn taxes on a multi billion dollar market, even though the price of the product on the market remains the same or maybe even lower than the actual price.

In my humble, Dutch, opinion, it's a situation where everybody wins.

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