Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

US: Legalize Marijuana

Richard Smith

Student Operated Press

Sunday 19 Mar 2006

---
In 1937, the United States passed the Marihuana Tax Act and banned
recreational and medical use of cannabis. In the 69 years since, it has
become the most widely used illegal narcotic in the western world. I
guess the plan backfired.

Since that time, numerous studies have been conducted based on the idea
of this sort of plant prohibition. We will look at three.

In 1995, based on thirty years of scientific research, editors of the
British medical journal Lancet concluded, "the smoking of cannabis, even
long term, is not harmful to health."

The Americans found the same thing in 1972 when the National Commission
on Marihuana and Drug Abuse released a report titled "Marihuana: A
Signal of Misunderstanding," and concluded that marijuana prohibition is
"Philosophically Inappropriate", "Constitutionally Suspect", and
"Functionally Inappropriate."

Years before that, in 1944, the La Guardia Committee Report,
commissioned by New York City Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia to investigate
the effects of marijuana, found that the popular claims about the
negative effects of marijuana were wildly exaggerated.

These studies are important to know about when looking at the DEA’s
argument for the keeping Mary Jane illegal. The organization claims on
its website “Illegal drugs are illegal because they are harmful” and
“Most non violent drug users get treatment, not jail time”. We know from
the aforementioned British study that the first statement holds no
water, and to debunk the second statement let us look at the laws for
simple possession in one of our states. In Arizona possession of a small
amount, less than 2 lbs will land you six months to a year and a half in
jail. That does not sound like treatment.

President Bush has claimed that today’s marijuana is much more potent
than the stuff him and his Yale buddies smoked back in the sixties. Hmm,
a former coke addict making complaints about the strength of our pot
being too high. It seems the hypocrisy in this nation knows no bounds.

The cold fact for any anti-marijuana argument is simple. Marijuana kills
zero people every year. How can something be dangerous, much too
dangerous to allow into the hands of the public, yet has not once killed
anyone? We are, ironically, allowed guns.

An overdose of this supposedly dangerous drug is “generally no more than
that associated with mild to moderate exercise” according to Medical
Admissions Criteria. You would be worse off after running a mile than
after smoking too much marijuana.

There is still, however, a light amongst all this darkness. Alaska has
become the first state to decriminalize marijuana and Denver Colorado
has become the first city to allow a law to be passed that treats the
plant in the exact same respect as alcohol. Nevada will vote in 2006 on
the complete legalization as well.

It is only a matter of time before this situation of prohibition must be
addressed by those in power. Things are drastically changing and more
and more people are learning the truth. Were knocking on the door right
now and before the decade is out we will be smoking in the living room.

In the end, we will win. We will be free to smoke our joints and puff
our bongs without fear of retribution by the authorities. Truth will win
out over propaganda and the good people of this earth will finally be
free again.

 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!