News (Media Awareness Project) - Web: Letter Of The Week |
Title: | Web: Letter Of The Week |
Published On: | 2009-11-06 |
Source: | DrugSense Weekly (DSW) |
Fetched On: | 2009-11-07 15:25:14 |
LETTER OF THE WEEK
MARIJUANA PROHIBITION DOES NOT PASS THE 'LOGIC' TEST
By Justin Davis
Why isn't marijuana legal? People who don't smoke still pay for it.
How? You're paying taxes to keep it illegal for law enforcement
people who are in jail on marijuana charges for their housing and their food.
People are getting their kids taken away because of weed, and kids
are getting cancer from secondhand smoke from cigarettes. Innocent
people get killed all the time from drunk drivers, but it is legal to drink.
If marijuana was legalized, it would create thousands of new jobs
from plant stores, growers, coffee shops and transporting. Sure,
marijuana has some bad effects, but nowhere near what cigarettes have.
Thousands of people die from cigarettes a year; nobody died off of
marijuana alone.
Crime rates would go down as well. It would keep hardworking people
who do smoke out of bad neighborhoods and away from serious
criminals. It should be a personal decision whether you want to
smoke or not, not the government's.
Wouldn't it be better for the billions of dollars spent on marijuana
to go to the government instead of criminal's pockets?
Justin Davis, Ridgecrest
Pubdate: Tue, 27 Oct 2009
Source: Asheville Citizen-Times (NC)
MARIJUANA PROHIBITION DOES NOT PASS THE 'LOGIC' TEST
By Justin Davis
Why isn't marijuana legal? People who don't smoke still pay for it.
How? You're paying taxes to keep it illegal for law enforcement
people who are in jail on marijuana charges for their housing and their food.
People are getting their kids taken away because of weed, and kids
are getting cancer from secondhand smoke from cigarettes. Innocent
people get killed all the time from drunk drivers, but it is legal to drink.
If marijuana was legalized, it would create thousands of new jobs
from plant stores, growers, coffee shops and transporting. Sure,
marijuana has some bad effects, but nowhere near what cigarettes have.
Thousands of people die from cigarettes a year; nobody died off of
marijuana alone.
Crime rates would go down as well. It would keep hardworking people
who do smoke out of bad neighborhoods and away from serious
criminals. It should be a personal decision whether you want to
smoke or not, not the government's.
Wouldn't it be better for the billions of dollars spent on marijuana
to go to the government instead of criminal's pockets?
Justin Davis, Ridgecrest
Pubdate: Tue, 27 Oct 2009
Source: Asheville Citizen-Times (NC)
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