Pubdate: Thu, 17 Jan 2008 Source: Sidelines, The (TN Edu) Copyright: 2008 Middle Tennessee State University Contact: http://www.mtsusidelines.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2861 WAR ON DRUGS EXACTS COSTLY TOLL FOR TAXPAYERS Oh, pot. Mary Jane. Marijuana. It has so many names, so many fans and creates so many problems. On Jan. 8, three students and two others were busted and found with over 12 pounds of marijuana. Wonder what they were doing with all of that. Would America be better off if marijuana were legal? It would certainly cut down on a lot of crime. It did with alcohol. The most infamous gangsters and mafiasos rose to power during Prohibition. Once Prohibition was repealed, bootlegging and related crimes decreased. With the use of pot in an anti-pot country comes a hazard-drug dealers. Even if the drugs are only marijuana, drug dealers still tend to obtain weapons illegally, as a form of protection. In fact, in the Raiders Ridge case, it is interesting how more attention was devoted to the pot than to the firearms seized. Guns are much more dangerous than weed. If you leave 12 pounds of pot alone with an infant, nothing too terrible can take place. But if you leave a kid alone with a loaded firearm. Not to say that marijuana should be legal for all to use, but one thing's for certain: it should be used for medicinal purposes. People in pain should not have to suffer. People in pain should have the option to partake in a pain reliever that is less addictive than morphine or oxycontin, for instance. How often has it been reported that someone has overdosed solely on marijuana? Whether or not pot is legal, there will always be those stoners who braid hemp while watching South Park. Maybe they should go to prison, but it's safe to say we're losing the War on Drugs. Not only that, we're making it damned near impossible for people convicted, even on petty drug charges, to pick up the pieces of their lives. If they decide to go back to school in an attempt to make something of themselves, they are not allowed to receive financial aid. Why not allow financial aid on a probation contract, which allows the school/government to perform random drug tests on the parties involved? With a criminal record, even someone in narcotic recovery, clean and sober, has a difficult time finding a job. Why burn a Scarlet Letter onto someone for the rest of their days because they got busted at 18 with pot? - --- MAP posted-by: Derek