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Why is Marijuana still Illegal?
Seriously why is it? At least some states are legalizing it finaly, probably because they know the government is wrong. Also, another question, why are there so many lies being told about weed? Ive been smoking if for a year (its legal in this state) and ive found out that there is literally nothing bad about it. Im not addicted, im not a failure, not lazy, i have a fully functional memory, and everything else that it "does" to people hasnt happend to me. So again, why is it still illegal, and why are there so many lies being told about it?
3 Answers
- JaredLv 77 years ago
You know, it's semi-illegal. No one gets arrested for smoking marijuana in their own home and putting their paraphernalia in an inconspicuous place. The police won't investigate it; they'll often flat-out ignore it. And if you smoke in a public place, usually the worst you get is a ticket.
You're wrong when you say there's "literally nothing bad about it." Some people do become addicted to marijuana, and some people do suffer from motivation, memory, and social problems. It can also cause serious health problems like cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome in a minority of people. It's less dangerous than alcohol, but it's still healthier not to do any psychoactive drugs at all.
It shouldn't be illegal, but let's not pretend it's 100% benign - that isn't true.
- 6 years ago
Marijuana is still illegal federally because of the way that the federal law is written. Under the Controlled Substances Act (which bans marijuana)- any substance that has "recreational value" can be banned and scheduled under the controlled substance act. Alcohol and tobacco have to be explicitly "protected" from inclusion under this act. Unfortunately, there is no such law protecting marijuana and the federal government is in no hurry to legalize it. The DEA just keeps repeating "it meets the criteria for Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act" .
The thing is- it is hard to remove a law from the books and I am willing to bet that marijuana will be legal in most states already before the federal government even considers it
- LTPLv 46 years ago
The reason for the drug war’s existence comes down to usurpation. We are under banker receivership in the United States under the "federal reserve". This allows a vast amount of monetary authority based on theoretical equations that have no basis in reality whatsoever. Read my answer at this address: /question/index?qid=20131... All of this monetary indiscretion allows for the excess for large amounts of drug money to be laundered and they launder drug money with impunity. Wachovia was caught laundering 378 billion dollars and only issued 160 million dollars in fines. Nobody went to prison.
"The prestige of government has undoubtedly been lowered considerably by the prohibition law for nothing is more destructive of respect for the government and the law of the land than passing laws which cannot be enforced. It is an open secret that the dangerous increase in crime in this country is closely connected with this."
-Albert Einstein
"Prohibition will work great injury to the cause of temperance. It is a species of intemperance within itself, for it goes beyond the bounds of reason in that it attempts to control a man's appetite by legislation, and makes a crime out of things that are not crimes. A Prohibition law strikes a blow at the very principles upon which our government was founded."
- Abraham Lincoln
Prohibition Statistics
• Prison Population (BBC 2006)
-United States: 2,193,798 (overall population 313,900,000)
-China: 1,548,498 (overall population 1,344,130,000)
-Russia: 874,161
-Brazil: 371,482
• Alcohol Prohibition (MSNBC)
A) Arrests for drunkenness and disorderly conduct up 41%
B) Homicides, Assaults, and batteries up 13%
C) Number of Federal convicts up 561%
D) Federal Prison Population up 366%
E) Total spending on penal institutions up 1,000%
Host "We have the same exact kind of enormous jumps in incarceration, crime, and prison expenditure under this current pot prohibition."
• Each year the United States spends 350 billion dollars on the war on drugs.
• Mexico declares war on drug cartels in December of 2006 (BBC)
A) 2006: 270 drug related deaths
B) 2009: 16,337 drug related deaths
This is when the Mexican Government stopped releasing these figures.
• "Between January 1 and April 30, violent crime and property crime in Denver — the most populated city in Colorado, in terms of both people and weed dispensaries — dropped 10.6 percent compared to that same span one year earlier, official statistics reveal. Homicides have dropped to less than half of last year’s levels, and motor vehicle theft has shrunk by over one-third." (RT) http://rt.com/usa/163644-colorado-marijuana-crime-...
• Despite claims that marijuana decriminalization in states such as Colorado will lead to a scourge of "drugged drivers" roadside fatalaties are actually down following legalization despite having risen the year before for the first time in several years. http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/20...
• Judge Jim Gray (Reason TV)
- Stated In 1990 we were only half as successful in prosecuting homicides as we were in 1980 due to the Reagan administration ratcheting up the drug war. This due to prosecutorial resources being devoted to drug related "offenses".
- In Holland marijuana use is legal for everyone 16 and older. Coffee shops include marijuana. The minister of health recently held a press conference in which he stated that marijuana use within his country was half that of the United States both for adults and teenagers. He claimed that they had succeeded in making pot "boring".
• Drug offenders in prisons and jails have increased 1,100% since 1980. Nearly 6 in 10 persons in prison for a drug offense have no history of violence or high-level drug selling activity (November Coalition)
�� According to the UN, drug prohibition has seen increases in the use of opiates, cocaine and marijuana to the effect of
-Opiates 34%
-Cocaine 27%
-Marijuana 8.5% (Worldwide presumably. CNN)
• According to DEA: (Google Tech Talks)
- 4 million drug users in 1965 (2% of overall population)
-112 million drug users in 2003 (46% of overall population)
• Wholesale cocaine costs 60% less / Heroin costs 70% less (Google Tech Talks)
• Heroin overdose rate: (Google Tech Talks)
- 1979 = 28 deaths per 100,000 users
- 2003 = 141 deaths per 100,000 users
• Approximately $30,000 per year per inmate
• On any given day in the United States 1 in 9 African American males between the ages of 20 and 34 is incarcerated.
• 39 Million drug arrests under drug prohibition
• 1914 = 1.3% addicted to drugs/ 2002 = 1.3% addicted to drugs (Google Tech Talks)
• % of crimes resolved by arrest or other means (Google tech talks)
- 1965: Murders 91%
- 2006: Murders 60.7%, Forcible rape 40.9%, Robbery 25.2%, Aggravated Assault 54.0%, Burglary 12.6%, Larceny-theft 17.4%, Motor vehicle theft 12.6%
• “Since 1965 marijuana arrests climbed from a mere 2 per hour to 100 per hour in 2008” (FBI/ Jim Marrs Trillion Dollar Conspiracy)
• Decriminalized Drugs
1. Netherlands 1976
2. Portugal 2001
3. Mexico 2009
4. Argentina 2009
• Marijuana use by tenth graders in Netherlands: 28% / Marijuana use by tenth graders in the United States 41% (Google Tech Talks)
• Marijuana use: U.S. lifetime prevalence = 37% / Netherlands = 17% (Google Tech Talks)
• Heroin Use: U.S. lifetime prevalence = 1.4% / Netherlands = 0.4% (Google Tech Talks)
• After decriminalization, Portugal drug use by ages 13-15 decreased by 25%/ 16-19 decreased by 22%
- Heroin overdose deaths decreased by 52%
- HIV infections reported by drug users decreased by 71% (Google Tech Talks)
• Netherlands homicide rate per 100,000 population: 1.5/ U.S. homicide rate per 100,00 population 5.6 (Google Tech Talks)
• United States imprisons more of its' own population than any country in the history of the world. (TV Show "QI")
BBC Prison Statistics: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/uk/06/prison...
Cited videos can be found in following playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL970FD94A01...
For information as to why drugs are illegal see my answer here: /question/index?qid=20140...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQit8wnYpiU (All videos combined into one)
"Despite four US drug wars fought at a cost of nearly $150 billion, world illicit opium supply grew fivefold from 1,200 tons in 1971 to 6,100 tons 1999. Similarly, during 15 years of US biateral eradication in the Andes, coca leaf production doubled to 600,000 tons in 1999. After holding steady at 100 prisoners per 100,000 population for over half a century, the US incarceration rate, driven by mandatory drug sentencing, soared from 138 in 1980 to 702 in 2002--creating, in effect a doomsday machine that continues to fill prisons without limit or logic. At the start of the twenty-first century, the United States was fighting a global drug war by creating the world's largest prison population and defoliating mountain farms in Asia and the Andes." - The Politics of Heroin pg. 20
Side note: The charts presented in "Drug War Failure" by Google Tech Talks indicate a consistent increase of 50k more people having been kidnapped under these auspices yearly. A frog will let you boil him alive if you increase the water temp slowly. The same principal may be at work here.