News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: Edu: OPED: The Time Has Come To Legalize Marijuana Use |
Title: | US PA: Edu: OPED: The Time Has Come To Legalize Marijuana Use |
Published On: | 2007-04-16 |
Source: | Digital Collegian, The (PA Edu) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 08:13:33 |
My Opinion
THE TIME HAS COME TO LEGALIZE MARIJUANA USE
With all of the alcohol-related incidents that happen both in State
College and around the United States, one would think that making
alcohol illegal might be a good idea. Certainly, there would be fewer
traffic-related deaths if alcohol were illegal, as the National
Transportation Safety Board said that about 16,000 fatalities on the
road are caused by alcohol each year.
Why, then, if alcohol causes so many problems, is deterring pot
smoking the main focus of most drug education programs?
I'll say it right out. If alcohol is legal and smoking cigarettes is
legal, then smoking marijuana should be within the bounds of the law as well.
I might sound like another "stoner" just seeking some antiquated
notion of respect and equality, at least in the eyes of
anti-marijuana types, except for the fact that I have never once
smoked marijuana in my life. Not only that, I don't have the desire
to do so, either. I get plenty of fun out of going out and having
some drinks with friends.
I've never once felt pressured to smoke marijuana, whereas I've often
felt pressured to go out and drink. Smoking pot just isn't something
I feel an incredible urge to do -- it's a choice.
During years and years of Catholic school health classes, my teachers
accepted the fact that students already drank and focused their
efforts on encouraging responsible drinking. Mind you, everyone in
these classes was obviously underage, so the teachers were turning a
blind eye to illegal activity. Why, then, is there such a stigma on
marijuana usage?
My parents, in some form or another, both admitted to doing their
share of underage drinking during their college years.
They essentially told me to make sure I kept some semblance of wits
about me when I was out boozing it up. Again, a blind eye was turned
to alcohol consumption. Despite this, they were adamant that I not
try marijuana. "Chris, it's bad, we never did it, and you shouldn't
either. It's just wrong, period."
The refrain was the same, over and over again. I suspect that a great
many people heard the same thing from their parents at some point in
time. When I stop to think about it, I'm amazed that such a big deal
is made out of marijuana usage. This might be based on anecdotal
wisdom that flies in the face of big and scary statistics from
D.A.R.E. programs all over the country, but I doubt that marijuana is
the awful "gateway drug" that it's cracked up to be.
We're all told at some point in some government-mandated drug
awareness class that marijuana usage leads to cocaine usage, and
before you know it, little innocent Johnny from next door is found
facedown in a drainage ditch, track marks up and down his arms.
I doubt this is the case. I know a great many people who smoke pot
recreationally, and I've only known one of them to do any drugs
harder than pot.
Another stigma applied to people who smoke is that they're lazy,
useless blobs, content to sit on their couches all day watching Aqua
Teen Hunger Force and eating Cheetos. Once again, I doubt this is the
case. Most, if not all of my friends who smoke are very productive
individuals who are going places in life.
Ask any lawyer if most of his or her contemporaries smoke, and I
suspect the answer will be yes, more often than not.
It's simply another way to relax, instead of the conventional
six-pack after work.
The stereotypical stoner lifestyle isn't something that befalls
helpless people sucked in by the clutches of the vile cannabis plant;
it's a choice. It's a choice just the same as heavy drinking is a
choice, as heavy smoking is a choice, and so on. If anything,
marijuana is less addictive than things like Marlboros and Jack Daniels.
In countless television sitcoms, the TV dad is portrayed as having a
few beers in a chair to unwind after work. Why is that OK, but the
vision of dad taking a couple hits so wrong? Is it really that hard
to believe that maybe marijuana isn't so bad after all, and people
aren't going to end up raging crackheads, smack addicts and coke
fiends because of it?
In the 1920s, Prohibition took its hold, and moonshine runners were
forced to ply their trade under cover of darkness, constantly running
from the police. Nowadays, we look back on this era and think: "Wow,
that was pretty ridiculous that these guys had to run from the cops
because of booze. At least we got NASCAR out of the deal."
I'd like to think that the current illegality of marijuana will be
looked upon in the same way by generations to follow us. It's
ridiculous that a "drug" that poses no greater danger than alcohol or
nicotine is still looked upon with such disdain by the general
public, even though most famous people, including some ex-presidents,
have admitted to taking a little hit of the ganja once in a while.
Let's cut the stupidity and give a great many people what they want.
If marijuana can serve legitimate medical purposes and bring
happiness and relaxation to a great many people, in spite of its
illegality, I'd say it's high time we legalize.
THE TIME HAS COME TO LEGALIZE MARIJUANA USE
With all of the alcohol-related incidents that happen both in State
College and around the United States, one would think that making
alcohol illegal might be a good idea. Certainly, there would be fewer
traffic-related deaths if alcohol were illegal, as the National
Transportation Safety Board said that about 16,000 fatalities on the
road are caused by alcohol each year.
Why, then, if alcohol causes so many problems, is deterring pot
smoking the main focus of most drug education programs?
I'll say it right out. If alcohol is legal and smoking cigarettes is
legal, then smoking marijuana should be within the bounds of the law as well.
I might sound like another "stoner" just seeking some antiquated
notion of respect and equality, at least in the eyes of
anti-marijuana types, except for the fact that I have never once
smoked marijuana in my life. Not only that, I don't have the desire
to do so, either. I get plenty of fun out of going out and having
some drinks with friends.
I've never once felt pressured to smoke marijuana, whereas I've often
felt pressured to go out and drink. Smoking pot just isn't something
I feel an incredible urge to do -- it's a choice.
During years and years of Catholic school health classes, my teachers
accepted the fact that students already drank and focused their
efforts on encouraging responsible drinking. Mind you, everyone in
these classes was obviously underage, so the teachers were turning a
blind eye to illegal activity. Why, then, is there such a stigma on
marijuana usage?
My parents, in some form or another, both admitted to doing their
share of underage drinking during their college years.
They essentially told me to make sure I kept some semblance of wits
about me when I was out boozing it up. Again, a blind eye was turned
to alcohol consumption. Despite this, they were adamant that I not
try marijuana. "Chris, it's bad, we never did it, and you shouldn't
either. It's just wrong, period."
The refrain was the same, over and over again. I suspect that a great
many people heard the same thing from their parents at some point in
time. When I stop to think about it, I'm amazed that such a big deal
is made out of marijuana usage. This might be based on anecdotal
wisdom that flies in the face of big and scary statistics from
D.A.R.E. programs all over the country, but I doubt that marijuana is
the awful "gateway drug" that it's cracked up to be.
We're all told at some point in some government-mandated drug
awareness class that marijuana usage leads to cocaine usage, and
before you know it, little innocent Johnny from next door is found
facedown in a drainage ditch, track marks up and down his arms.
I doubt this is the case. I know a great many people who smoke pot
recreationally, and I've only known one of them to do any drugs
harder than pot.
Another stigma applied to people who smoke is that they're lazy,
useless blobs, content to sit on their couches all day watching Aqua
Teen Hunger Force and eating Cheetos. Once again, I doubt this is the
case. Most, if not all of my friends who smoke are very productive
individuals who are going places in life.
Ask any lawyer if most of his or her contemporaries smoke, and I
suspect the answer will be yes, more often than not.
It's simply another way to relax, instead of the conventional
six-pack after work.
The stereotypical stoner lifestyle isn't something that befalls
helpless people sucked in by the clutches of the vile cannabis plant;
it's a choice. It's a choice just the same as heavy drinking is a
choice, as heavy smoking is a choice, and so on. If anything,
marijuana is less addictive than things like Marlboros and Jack Daniels.
In countless television sitcoms, the TV dad is portrayed as having a
few beers in a chair to unwind after work. Why is that OK, but the
vision of dad taking a couple hits so wrong? Is it really that hard
to believe that maybe marijuana isn't so bad after all, and people
aren't going to end up raging crackheads, smack addicts and coke
fiends because of it?
In the 1920s, Prohibition took its hold, and moonshine runners were
forced to ply their trade under cover of darkness, constantly running
from the police. Nowadays, we look back on this era and think: "Wow,
that was pretty ridiculous that these guys had to run from the cops
because of booze. At least we got NASCAR out of the deal."
I'd like to think that the current illegality of marijuana will be
looked upon in the same way by generations to follow us. It's
ridiculous that a "drug" that poses no greater danger than alcohol or
nicotine is still looked upon with such disdain by the general
public, even though most famous people, including some ex-presidents,
have admitted to taking a little hit of the ganja once in a while.
Let's cut the stupidity and give a great many people what they want.
If marijuana can serve legitimate medical purposes and bring
happiness and relaxation to a great many people, in spite of its
illegality, I'd say it's high time we legalize.
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