Like I said, we're going to have to agree to disagree. I don't know how I'm "out of touch with reality" or "way off base". Perhaps you could explain it to me.
I think the following things:
1. Legalization would result in lower prices and higher quantity, meaning more people would likely use marijuana. The fewer people using drugs, the better for society.
2. Drug use begets harder drug use. Marijuana has always been an intro drug to other more serious ones.
3. We have the ability to control the manufacture of marijuana we don't have with alcohol. The prohibition argument isn't the same.
4. Legalization of marijuana means it would be easier for kids to get their hands on.
5. Long term mental and physical effects are harmful to users.
6. More drug use has other impacts on society: less productivity, higher crime, increased accidents due to impairment, etc.
As for what I would do if cannibis were easy to manufacture from household ingredients, was legal and had controlled distributed in stores; and alcohol required special plants to manufacture, was illegal and whose distribution resulted in jail time? I'd probably smoke and be against the legalization of alcohol.
1.] More people wouldn't be using cannabis because it is cheaper and more abundant. More people would use cannabis simply because it is finally "legal" and the overall effects on ones body are much "healthier" than that of alcohol, cigarettes, and a lot of prescription meds that are being prescribed these days. If alcohol and cigarettes were "cheaper" and more abundant, then do you think more people would use them? You might have to define "drugs" for the society that will be better off by not using them ["It’s reasonable to expect a certain percentage of adults, respectful or fearful of the current prohibition, would give pot a first try if it were made legal. But, given that the U.S. is already the world’s leading per capita marijuana consumer (despite our relatively harsh penalties), it’s hard to imagine a large and lasting surge in consumption. Further, under a system of regulated legalization and taxation, the government would be in a position to offer both prevention programs and medical treatment and counseling for those currently abusing the drug. It’s even possible we’d see an actual reduction in use and abuse, just as we’ve halved tobacco consumption through public education–without a single arrest."
http://blog.norml.org/2009/07/20/new-york-times-blog-if-marijuana-is-legal-will-addiction-rise/]
2.] False. Urban Myth. [this is just one example of how out of touch and off-base you are; "5 Things the Corporate Media Don’t Want You to Know About Cannabis
via Alternet.org
1. Marijuana Use Is Not Associated With a Rise in Incidences of Schizophrenia
2. Marijuana Smoke Doesn’t Damage the Lungs Like Tobacco
3. Cannabis Use Potentially Protects, Rather Than Harms, the Brain
4. Marijuana Is a Terminus, Not a ‘Gateway,’ to Hard Drug Use
5. Government’s Anti-Pot Ads Encourage, Rather Than Discourage, Marijuana Use"
http://www.alternet.org/media/14281..._media_don't_want_you_to_know_about_cannabis/]
3.] We do?
4.] It is much easier for kids to get their hands on cannabis than it is for them to get their hands on alcohol and/or cigarettes. ["In their study, they found that 40 percent of teens could get marijuana within a day; another quarter said they could get it within an hour. In another portion of the survey, teens between the ages of 12 and 17 say it’s easier to get marijuana than buy cigarettes**, beer or prescription drugs. That number is up 37 percent from 2007."
http://blog.norml.org/2009/08/28/study-says-its-easier-for-teens-to-buy-marijuana-than-beer/]
5.] False. Another urban myth. [reefer madness propaganda has jaded your better judgement and common sense yet again...see above link(s)]
6. Obviously those claims are only based on your assumption that legalization would increase drug use...again, please see link(s) above
***that is your only argument that holds any weight...you are against it because our gov't made it illegal...the rest of your opinions all fall into the category of the severely misinformed***
