Pubdate: Tue, 7 Apr 2009 Source: Guardian (Wright State U, OH Edu) Copyright: 2009 Guardian Contact: http://www.theguardianonline.com/2.9150 Website: http://www.theguardianonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4586 FINANCE THE BAILOUT: LEGALIZE WEED Legalizing weed would be a better use of resources for all levels of government. Even though Marijuana is non-addictive, according to health experts, it is illegal to make, sell, produce or use. If legal, the drug could be a source of tax revenue, reduce law enforcement costs and provide a healthier alternative. A legal marijuana market would generate between 2.4 billion dollars and 6.2 billion dollars in tax revenues, depending on the tax rates, according to the article "Budgetary Implications of Marijuana Prohibition in the United States". These revenues could be distributed to the state and federal governments. It would also generate billions of dollars in government savings. The costs of law enforcement are estimated to be almost 8 billion dollars a year, according to the Spring 2007 "Journal of Drug Issues". Federal, state and local money is spent on drug control, police agencies, persecution, imprisonment, drug education, treatment and research. At the same time, there is no evidence enforcing marijuana laws is effective, according to the journal. Also, cigarettes have more proven negative health effects than marijuana. There were 117,752 deaths from smoking related cardiovascular diseases and 101,043 deaths from smoking related respiratory diseases in 2004, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Arguments against legalization say marijuana is a gateway drug. Weed can lead to other crimes. And marijuana is the most prevalent drug on campus, said campus police. In addition, users could turn to harder drugs such as heroin, cocaine or crack if they're not satisfied with marijuana. However, the benefits of legalizing marijuana outweigh the costs. In the April 2 issue of Rolling Stone, the Editor's Notes read, "We literally cannot afford not to legalize marijuana. Pot is a multibillion-dollar cash crop in much of the country, yet around the only revenue state governments-most of which are wrestling with unfillable budget deficits--can extract from it are the sales taxes on grow lights and Phish tickets." For these reasons, college students, future policy makers, should support legalization of weed. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake