Pubdate: Sun, 19 Jun 2005 Source: High Point Enterprise (NC) Copyright: 2005 High Point Enterprise Contact: http://www.hpe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/576 Author: Doug Brackett MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION IDEA RAISES LOTS OF QUESTIONS This is about the logistics of marijuana legalization, not whether it is helpful to the sick and certainly not about whether its use is authorized by the Bible. Those issues are for other people in other places. Much has been said about legalization but very little about how it would be accomplished. Legalization is supposed to "close the gateway to other drugs" and "take the profit" out of the marijuana trade. How will it work? Start with the cost of legalization. Who will sell it? Persons already capable of selling controlled substances like drugs (pharmacies), alcohol (liquor stores) or cigarettes (just about everybody)? Will we create a Marijuana Control Board? Who will pay the sellers? How will the state get its share? Where will the state get its inventory? Who will be able to buy it? Anyone who wants it? Otherwise, how do you close the gate and take the profit out? How does selling marijuana legally close the gate to other illegal drugs? Who will price it? The market? Since marijuana is a high-profit item, will the illegals simply undercut the state's price and continue to sell to the persons with money to buy? What about the after-hours trade, how do you police it? If a legal age is set, will those underage circumvent the system by illegally buying legally purchased marijuana or continue to buy from their current illegal supplier? The list of questions could go on and on but legalization doesn't seem to be much of a solution to this problem. I don't wish to cast aspersions on people I don't know who advocate legalization, but is the whole process designed to make drug use socially acceptable? What's next? Doug Brackett Kernersville - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin