
A Cautionary Note to the Drive to Legalize Pot
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12 responses to “A Cautionary Note to the Drive to Legalize Pot”
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Actually, I do NOT think that pot use is “safe”. I just point out that we allow a lot of behaviors that are not “safe” without criminalizing them.
Lets just take some easy ones like over the counter drugs, or cigarettes, alcohol or even a wide variety of homeopathic remedies and “foods”.
It’s not so much a question as to why the govt is involved in these issues but why the penalties are so disparate and tend to be most harsh on folks on the lower economic strata?
We’ve essentially demonized SOME kinds of drugs to justify horrific jail sentences – like years – for marjianna use while and virtually no enforcement of other types of drug use.
here’s what those drug imprisonments look like:
https://assets.change.org/photos/6/om/jn/CwOMJNDPwFJsXYd-400×225-noPad.jpg?1523734693
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I agree that not everything that is dangerous should be illegal. It can be dangerous just traveling to work each day.
Recognizing there are chemical differences between marijuana and tobacco, it seems both left and right are inconsistent with the treatment of the two. The right tends to support the continued sale of tobacco products but often is anti-legalization on Pot. And vice versa on the left. We should know more about the health effects of marijuana use and, to the extent, it is similar to those from using tobacco, some similar type of legal controls/regulation should be imposed. That might include using warnings, taxes and age restrictions. If there are significant differences, disparate regulation might be appropriate.
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The point missed so far? Whether for alcohol, tobacco, pot or guns (or whoppers and shakes!), try not to forget that the medical care and rehabilitation costs are paid by all of us. It would be easier to be libertarian if the consequences rested with the individual. But they don’t. Just finished listening to one discussion of Medicaid costs in a House Committee, the topic is on the JLARC agenda this afternoon, Senate Finance tomorrow and then a special subcommittee on health care issues. Four GA meetings in two days?
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You make my point. People smoke tons of pot every year in Virginia without generating a cent in taxes. Whatever medical issues are caused by pot are being caused while it’s illegal. There just isn’t any compensating tax revenue to help address those issues.
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Understood. You assume that legalization w/ taxation would reduce usage or not increase it? I don’t. My preference remains to de-criminalize simple possession, stop jailing or creating criminal records for personal use. Along with the discussions of Medicaid were discussions of the Lottery and ABC Authority. Just loving how VA funds government and depends on the steady growth of destructive behaviors! 🙂
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“You assume that legalization w/ taxation would reduce usage or not increase it?”
No. Never said that or anything close. Usage will go up if legalized. And taxes on pot will go from nothing to billions. The incremental increase in usage will be more than covered by the extreme increase in taxes.
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“He points out that we really don’t know how safe it is because relatively little research had been done in this field.”
In other words, not necessarily harmful unlike alcohol, tobacco, fatty foods, etc which are known to be harmful.
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Good points – and why don’t the taxes we collect on alcohol and cigarettes go to fund MedicAid? We could do that also with Pot.. tax it – put it in a fund to pay for health impacts – as well as programs to treat addiction, etc?
The basic problem with pot is generational. The older folks are “ok” with cigarettes and alcohol – even prescription drugs but not okay with things the government has made “illegal” even though some of those same people decry the folks who are ground up in the criminal justice system so they want some sort of bifurcation …. and imagine how that kind of solution would “work” for cigarettes and alchohol.
Where is the consistent logic ?

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