News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: OPED: Stop Creating Criminals |
Title: | US CA: OPED: Stop Creating Criminals |
Published On: | 2007-08-23 |
Source: | Sacramento News & Review (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-11 23:50:05 |
STOP CREATING CRIMINALS
While California tries to legalize medical marijuana, the war on pot
rages on. Helicopters comb the forests for illegal gardens, drug
squads raid suburban pot houses, and residents grapple with street
dealers. Meanwhile, the United States is paying Mexico to combat
violent marijuana-dealing gangs.
This war isn't over medical marijuana, which accounts for a small
fraction of marijuana demand. Rather, it concerns the broader use of
marijuana, which has been illegal since the last century. Like alcohol
prohibition, these laws have proven counterproductive and should be
repealed.
The laws against marijuana aren't based on scientific evidence.
Repeated expert studies have recommended that marijuana be
decriminalized. This was the conclusion of President Nixon's
Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse (1972), as well as California's
own Research Advisory Panel (1990), which observed, "An objective
consideration of marijuana shows that it is responsible for less
damage to society and the individual than are alcohol and
cigarettes."
The laws against marijuana have done nothing to dampen its use.
Marijuana was first outlawed in California in 1913, when its usage was
virtually unknown. Since then, the number of users has skyrocketed
into the millions, despite more than 1 million marijuana arrests. The
passage of Proposition 215 hasn't reduced arrests. The number of
marijuana prisoners in California is now 10 times greater than 25 years ago.
Like alcohol prohibition, the laws against marijuana are a
crime-creation program. On one hand, they criminalize millions of
otherwise law-abiding citizens for their own personal choice of
intoxicant. On the other, they create a lucrative black market for
criminal dealers, growers and smugglers, who are in turn pursued,
arrested and imprisoned at taxpayers' expense.
The major beneficiaries of this system are the drug cops and criminal
dealers, not the taxpayers who foot the bill.
The logical solution is to legalize, tax and regulate marijuana like
alcohol and tobacco. The feasibility of this approach is evident in
the Netherlands, where marijuana has been openly sold for years.
Legalization would net the state between $1.5 and $2.5 billion in tax
revenues and reduced enforcement costs.
A growing number of California cities and counties, including Oakland,
San Francisco, Santa Cruz and Mendocino County, have endorsed legal
taxation and regulation. In a country where Americans enjoy legal
alcohol, tobacco and firearms, there is no reason they should not also
have marijuana.
While California tries to legalize medical marijuana, the war on pot
rages on. Helicopters comb the forests for illegal gardens, drug
squads raid suburban pot houses, and residents grapple with street
dealers. Meanwhile, the United States is paying Mexico to combat
violent marijuana-dealing gangs.
This war isn't over medical marijuana, which accounts for a small
fraction of marijuana demand. Rather, it concerns the broader use of
marijuana, which has been illegal since the last century. Like alcohol
prohibition, these laws have proven counterproductive and should be
repealed.
The laws against marijuana aren't based on scientific evidence.
Repeated expert studies have recommended that marijuana be
decriminalized. This was the conclusion of President Nixon's
Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse (1972), as well as California's
own Research Advisory Panel (1990), which observed, "An objective
consideration of marijuana shows that it is responsible for less
damage to society and the individual than are alcohol and
cigarettes."
The laws against marijuana have done nothing to dampen its use.
Marijuana was first outlawed in California in 1913, when its usage was
virtually unknown. Since then, the number of users has skyrocketed
into the millions, despite more than 1 million marijuana arrests. The
passage of Proposition 215 hasn't reduced arrests. The number of
marijuana prisoners in California is now 10 times greater than 25 years ago.
Like alcohol prohibition, the laws against marijuana are a
crime-creation program. On one hand, they criminalize millions of
otherwise law-abiding citizens for their own personal choice of
intoxicant. On the other, they create a lucrative black market for
criminal dealers, growers and smugglers, who are in turn pursued,
arrested and imprisoned at taxpayers' expense.
The major beneficiaries of this system are the drug cops and criminal
dealers, not the taxpayers who foot the bill.
The logical solution is to legalize, tax and regulate marijuana like
alcohol and tobacco. The feasibility of this approach is evident in
the Netherlands, where marijuana has been openly sold for years.
Legalization would net the state between $1.5 and $2.5 billion in tax
revenues and reduced enforcement costs.
A growing number of California cities and counties, including Oakland,
San Francisco, Santa Cruz and Mendocino County, have endorsed legal
taxation and regulation. In a country where Americans enjoy legal
alcohol, tobacco and firearms, there is no reason they should not also
have marijuana.
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