Join this community!
› Share page: Email Digg del.icio.us Reddit icon StumbleUpon Technorati
Go
Search posts:

Time to Legalize Drugs?

Posted Apr 25 2009 11:43pm 1 Comment

The drug-fueled murders and mayhem in Mexico bring to mind the Prohibition-era killings in Chicago.

Drugs Although the Mexican violence dwarfs the bloodshed of the old bootleggers, both share a common motivation: profits.  These are turf wars, fought between rival gangs trying to increase their share of the market for illegal drugs.

Seventy-five years ago, we sensibly quelled the bootleggers' violence by repealing the prohibition of alcohol.  The only long-term solution to the cartel-related murders in Mexico is to legalize the other illegal drugs we overlooked when we repealed Prohibition in 1933.

Many boomers believe that decriminalizing the possession and use of marijuana would raise billions in taxes and eliminate much of the profits that fuel bloodshed and violence in Mexico and those U.S. states close to Mexican border.  If we taxed the marijuana agribusiness at rates similar to that of tobacco and alcohol, we would raise about $10 billion in taxes per year.

We can try to deal with the Mexican murderers as we first dealt with Al Capone and his minions, or we can apply the lessons we learned from alcohol prohibition and finish dismantling the destructive prohibition experiment. 

Should we begin by decriminalizing marijuana now?  Let us know your thoughts by making a comment below.

Source: Steven B. Duke, professor of law at Yale Law School, as reported in The Wall Street Journal, April 25, 2009

 

Comments (1)
Sort by: Newest first | Oldest first
The reasons marijuana was made illegal were solely based on politics and greed; it was not over medical concerns, but over the competition of hemp. There's been quite a bit written about this over the decades, and here's a link to, I believe, the first book written about the true history, "The Emperor Wears No Clothes": http://www.jackherer.com/chapters.html

I tend to lean on legalizing pot. It does not come close to the dangers of alcohol and cigarette use, especially cigarette use. Also, similar to some alcoholic beverages, it has substantiated medical benefits, namely, ease of physical pain. Thankfully, the medical use of marijuana has been breaking ground, but it's still a social and political struggle.

Like most issues, we need to reserve judgment until we have all the facts, so I encourage people to read up on the subject.

Kathleen
Post a comment
Write a comment: