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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Web: Love Thy Neighbor: The Immorality of Marijuana Prohibition
Title:US: Web: Love Thy Neighbor: The Immorality of Marijuana Prohibition
Published On:2009-07-16
Source:AlterNet (US Web)
Fetched On:2009-07-17 17:28:35
LOVE THY NEIGHBOR: THE IMMORALITY OF MARIJUANA PROHIBITION

While our current economic climate has prompted many Californians to
look toward legalized marijuana as a solution to our near-legendary
budget woes, there are those for whom the potential revenue from
marijuana is no compensation for the further erosion of our morals.
In their eyes, the prohibition of marijuana must continue, lest our
society drown in a tidal wave of vice. But what about the morality of
prohibition?

While a conceivably inexhaustible stream of revenue could be
generated through the regulation of all currently illicit goods and
services, few, if any, of these prohibitions has caused our society
more harm in return for less good than the marijuana ban.

In 2007, California law enforcement made over 74,000 marijuana
arrests, 78 percent of which were for simple possession. Of those
arrested, more than 16,000 were minors.

Despite the powerful deterrent of arrest and prosecution, this
expenditure of state resources has had little effect. In 2008, 23
percent of teenagers still report that it is easier to procure
marijuana than either beer or prescription drugs.

Approximately 100 million Americans, nearly one-third of the entire
population and a greater proportion of adults, have consumed
marijuana. Marijuana remains the No. 1 cash crop in California,
surpassing all fruits and vegetables combined.

Before you accuse me of cowardly surrendering a noble fight, consider
what all of these arrests have succeeded in doing:

* Precious law enforcement resources are diverted from investigating
and preventing violent crime.

* Adults who are arrested face the threat of losing their jobs,
thereby depriving their families of income and security.

* Our youth face the threat of expulsion from school and
ineligibility for student loans.

* Families are torn apart as children are removed from their homes
and placed into foster care.

Can a policy that perpetuates such tragedy truly be considered
morally right? In light of the toll that marijuana prohibition takes
on the lives of our neighbors, can we justly say "that's the price you pay?"

An analysis of the goals of marijuana prohibition further erodes its
tenuous moral foundation. For many, the goal of marijuana prohibition
is simple: to keep people from consuming the plant.

Although prohibition seems to be the clearest way to achieve this
goal, this simple plan is fatally flawed. In practice, total
prohibition is the total abandonment of control. Prohibition has
given rise to a clandestine marketplace completely out of the
government's reach, thereby increasing youth access. Drug dealers
don't ask young buyers for ID.

By banning distribution of marijuana anywhere, we have given up
control of distribution everywhere. By limiting our responses to
marijuana distribution to criminal punishment, we have failed to
protect the consumer's safety through regulating the product's
quality and encouraging responsible use.

Most important of all, by failing to maintain a legitimate, regulated
market we have given incentive to violent criminal enterprises
motivated by the lucrative, unfettered profits, thereby jeopardizing
the safety of all.

Can such an overly simplistic policy that so frustrates important law
enforcement and public concerns be morally just?

The regulated legalization of marijuana should not be viewed as
acquiescence to a depraved subculture, but the reclamation of
control. Through regulated legalization we can control distribution.
We can control its quality and potency. We can address the harms
caused by its abuse through constructive treatment, rather than
destructive punishment. We can usurp the power of the black market by
eliminating their profits. And for those who consider marijuana
consumption an immoral personal choice, we can ensure that society's
response is a moral one.
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