News (Media Awareness Project) - US TX: Edu: OPED: Marijuana Prohibition Two-Faced |
Title: | US TX: Edu: OPED: Marijuana Prohibition Two-Faced |
Published On: | 2009-03-31 |
Source: | TCU Daily Skiff (Texas Christian University, TX Edu) |
Fetched On: | 2009-04-01 00:56:36 |
MARIJUANA PROHIBITION TWO-FACED
The March 8 death of University of Kansas student Jason Wren from
alcohol poisoning raised a question in my mind: Why is it legal to
drink yourself to death while marijuana and hemp are still illegal
substances?
The prohibition of marijuana seems so hypocritical when you consider
the fact that alcohol and prescription drugs can be just as
disastrous and sometimes even more lethal than most illegal drugs.
These two completely legal substances destroy families, friendships
and end lives every day. Even smoking cigarettes, which poses a
health hazard to the smoker and everyone around him or her, is not
against the law.
Every year 440,000 Americans die from tobacco use, according to the
National Institutes of Health. There are also 100,000 alcohol related
deaths, according to the NIH, but zero marijuana related deaths. So
why are we spending $44 billion a year prosecuting simple marijuana
possession cases?
Some argue that legalization would lead to a higher crime rate, but
history doesn't support that. The Netherlands, which voted to
legalize soft drugs, has a lower crime rate per capita than the U.S.
I am not an advocate of making alcohol and cigarettes illegal, nor am
I promoting the use of marijuana. But we need to consider who
benefits from keeping marijuana and hemp illegal.
Growing hemp is illegal in most states, yet according to a recent CNN
report, the plant is the most economically and environmentally sound
paper source in the world. Hemp has the most usable protein of any
plant in the world, and it requires little to no fertilizer to grow.
The February 1938 issue of Popular Mechanics magazine named hemp the
"new billion-dollar crop," citing some of its 25,000 applications,
which range from making rope to canvas to cattle feed. It is from
this amazing plant that medical marijuana is produced for a variety
of diseases, including glaucoma, AIDS and cancer.
Marijuana was outlawed as a result of a massive public relations and
lobbying campaign sponsored by chemical, logging and cotton companies
that were becoming obsolete when it was discovered that hemp could
produce the very same things they did, only better.
Natural health researcher Karen Railey reported that if hemp
cultivation were legal, it would greatly reduce our imports of
petroleum, textiles and clothes. It would save entire forests from
logging and would be incredibly beneficial to the U.S. economy.
By enforcing the ineffective prohibition on marijuana, we lose $33
billion in untaxed revenue, according to Harvard economist Jeffrey
Miron. That is in addition to the $44 billion the government
currently spends on prohibition. Until the government realizes that
the money should be put to better use, drug cartels will continue to
generate billions of untaxed income from this simple plant.
Prohibition did not work with alcohol. Instead it created the most
notorious underground crime era in American history. Now we have
managed to do the same thing with marijuana.
Alex S. Turner is a freshman political science major from Dallas.
The March 8 death of University of Kansas student Jason Wren from
alcohol poisoning raised a question in my mind: Why is it legal to
drink yourself to death while marijuana and hemp are still illegal
substances?
The prohibition of marijuana seems so hypocritical when you consider
the fact that alcohol and prescription drugs can be just as
disastrous and sometimes even more lethal than most illegal drugs.
These two completely legal substances destroy families, friendships
and end lives every day. Even smoking cigarettes, which poses a
health hazard to the smoker and everyone around him or her, is not
against the law.
Every year 440,000 Americans die from tobacco use, according to the
National Institutes of Health. There are also 100,000 alcohol related
deaths, according to the NIH, but zero marijuana related deaths. So
why are we spending $44 billion a year prosecuting simple marijuana
possession cases?
Some argue that legalization would lead to a higher crime rate, but
history doesn't support that. The Netherlands, which voted to
legalize soft drugs, has a lower crime rate per capita than the U.S.
I am not an advocate of making alcohol and cigarettes illegal, nor am
I promoting the use of marijuana. But we need to consider who
benefits from keeping marijuana and hemp illegal.
Growing hemp is illegal in most states, yet according to a recent CNN
report, the plant is the most economically and environmentally sound
paper source in the world. Hemp has the most usable protein of any
plant in the world, and it requires little to no fertilizer to grow.
The February 1938 issue of Popular Mechanics magazine named hemp the
"new billion-dollar crop," citing some of its 25,000 applications,
which range from making rope to canvas to cattle feed. It is from
this amazing plant that medical marijuana is produced for a variety
of diseases, including glaucoma, AIDS and cancer.
Marijuana was outlawed as a result of a massive public relations and
lobbying campaign sponsored by chemical, logging and cotton companies
that were becoming obsolete when it was discovered that hemp could
produce the very same things they did, only better.
Natural health researcher Karen Railey reported that if hemp
cultivation were legal, it would greatly reduce our imports of
petroleum, textiles and clothes. It would save entire forests from
logging and would be incredibly beneficial to the U.S. economy.
By enforcing the ineffective prohibition on marijuana, we lose $33
billion in untaxed revenue, according to Harvard economist Jeffrey
Miron. That is in addition to the $44 billion the government
currently spends on prohibition. Until the government realizes that
the money should be put to better use, drug cartels will continue to
generate billions of untaxed income from this simple plant.
Prohibition did not work with alcohol. Instead it created the most
notorious underground crime era in American history. Now we have
managed to do the same thing with marijuana.
Alex S. Turner is a freshman political science major from Dallas.
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