Saturday, November 30, 2019
Marijuana Legalization Essays (393 words) - , Term Papers
  Marijuana Legalization    Most Americans do not want to spend scarce  public funds incarcerating nonviolent marijuana  offenders, at a cost of $23,000 per year. Politicians  must reconsider our country's priorities and attach  more importance to combating violent crime than  targeting marijuana smokers.    Marijuana prohibition costs taxpayers at least  $7.5 billion annually. This is an enormous waste of  scarce federal dollars that should be used to target  violent crime.    Marijuana prohibition makes no exception for the  medical use of marijuana. The tens of thousands of  seriously ill Americans who presently use marijuana  as a therapeutic agent to alleviate symptoms of  cancer, AIDS, glaucoma, or multiple sclerosis risk  arrest and jail to obtain and use their medication.    Between 1978 and 1996, 34 states passed laws  recognizing marijuana's therapeutic value. Most  recently, voters in two states -- Arizona and    California -- passed laws allowing for the medical  use of marijuana under a physician's supervision.    Yet, states are severely limited in their ability to  implement their medical use laws because of the  federal prohibition of marijuana.    America tried alcohol prohibition between 1919  and 1931, but discovered that the crime and  violence associated with prohibition was more  damaging than the evil sought to be prohibited. With  tobacco, America has learned over the last decade  that education is the most effective way to  discourage use. Yet, America fails to apply these  lessons to marijuana policy.    By stubbornly defining all marijuana smoking as  criminal, including that which involves adults  smoking in the privacy of their own homes, we are  wasting police and prosecutorial resources, clogging  courts, filling costly and scarce jail and prison space,  and needlessly wrecking the lives and careers of  genuinely good citizens.    Marijuana legalization offers an important  advantage over decriminalization in that it allows for  legal distribution and taxation of cannabis. In the  absence of taxation, the free market price of legal  marijuana would be extremely low, on the order of  five to ten cents per joint. In terms of intoxicating  potential, a joint is equivalent to at least $1 or $2  worth of alcohol, the price at which cannabis is  currently sold in the Netherlands. The easiest way to  hold the price at this level under legalization would  be by an excise tax on commercial sales. An  examination of the external costs imposed by  cannabis users on the rest of society suggests that a"harmfulness tax" of $.50 - $1 per joint is  appropriate. It can be estimated that excise taxes in  this range would raise between $2.2 and $6.4 billion  per year. Altogether, legalization would save the  taxpayers around $8 - $16 billion, not counting the  economic benefits of hemp agriculture and other  spinoff industries.    
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