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Originally posted by DeathShield
reply to post by zaiger
Then why hasn't this happened with tobacco?
Originally posted by zaiger
reply to post by tothetenthpower
Well that's not the problem with legalization, that is a problem with the government spending when they should be using money towards lowering the deficit.
Right but that kind of goes against the argument that legalization will help the budget problem.
Nobody needs to kill each other over weed if it's readily available in a store.
But money is available to all that want to work and people kill eachother over that. But this is another double standard of the pro-legalization arguments. So people who use pot are killing eachother for it?
[edit on 20-4-2010 by zaiger]
Roughly speaking, therefore, there have been two periods with high homicide rates in U.S. history, the 1920-1934 period and the 1970-1990 period (Friedman 1991). Both before the first episode and between these two episodes, homicide rates were relatively low or clearly declining. Prima facie, this pattern is consistent with the hypothesis that alcohol prohibition increased violent crime: homicide rates are high in the 1920-1933 period, when constitutional prohibition of alcohol was in effect; the homicide rate drops quickly after 1933, when Prohibition was repealed; and the homicide rate remains low for a substantial period thereafter. Further, the homicide rate is low during the 1950s and early 1960s, when drug prohibition was in existence but not vigorously enforced, but high in the 1970-1990 period, when drug prohibition was enforced to a relatively stringent degree (Miron 1999).
Prohibitions raise supply costs because black market suppliers face legal punishments for manufacturing, distributing, and selling.
In addition to affecting price and quantity, prohibitions potentially increase violent and non-violent crime. Participants in an illegal trade cannot use the legal and judicial system to resolve disputes, so they seek other methods such as violence. Enforcement of prohibitions means reduced resources for enforcement of non-prohibition laws, which implies reduced deterrence of crime generally
Given the evidence that cirrhosis is a reasonable proxy for alcohol consumption, this implies Prohibition had little impact on the path of alcohol consumption.
The question raised by this result is why consumption did not fall more significantly, since conventional accounts suggest that alcohol prices rose by several hundred percent on average (Warburton (1932), Fisher (1928))
ZAIGER ... READ THIS SINCE YOU DO NOT BELIEVE IT WHEN OTHER PEOPLE TELL YOU.... PROHIBITION CREATES CRIME.... (not only that, a prohibition will inflate prices also... )
What he does not get is there are millions of people in jail right now for nothing more than a cannabis charge of some sort.
A plant that is less harmful than aspirin, caffeine, alcohol, and tobacco.
There's not one thing criminal about these people other than a decision greedy white dudes made in the 1930s.
The dispensaries that operate now charge about 10% below black market value. I
This isn't the first time zaiger's tried to make a case for "criminals are criminals."
Originally posted by zaiger
Pot was illegal durring that whole time to, so the whole argument does not really work. There were pretty much no drug laws in america in the 1700s but there was still crime.
Okay well you have jail and prison, short terms are carried out in jails there are people in there for speeding tickets too. People who go to prison for pot charges have a legal history, were distributing and had guns involved and the case was pled down for a max term of a lesser charge.
There are people in jails for DUIs where nobody was hurt, there are people in jail for stealing where nobody was hurt. You can make less of a law in your head all you want but it is still a law and people how do not follow it get treated like criminals.
Yeah i know it is harmless now but keep 2 things in mind. Well first would you let children and pregnant mothers use it? i mean nothing is wrong with it right? Tobacco was "harmless" for a long time (and they had "science" to back up their claims of it doing no harm to people and not being addictive), trust me as soon as the first big marijuana growers turn into financial giants people will be dragging them to court and suing over lung cancer and every other type of cancer there is. This would force regulation and prices would go up.
1930s? Try 1906-1930. The major anti-pot laws were started because mexicans used it and people were using cheap mexican labor. Now keep in mind this was durring the great depression so people were trying to make the plant used illegal so they could free up jobs for americans. Sounds greedy i know but that is the way it was.
Yeah but you are leaving a very importiant part out. Those dispensaries have to operate on a not for proffit basis. So that 10% will go right back to black market valueif it becomes legalized.
I know it is so much better than the criminals are not criminals argument.