Marijuana is illegal because cotton manufactures back in the 1800s (or was it early 1900s?) wanted to get rid of the hemp industry so they'd have a monopoly on rope.alik44 said:its illegal yet cigarettes and alcohol kill alot more than marijuana does.
Yes, I think you're right - early 1900s. But it ALSO had a lot to do with the cotton industry.viranimus said:Because it was a knee jerk reaction in the US during the prohibition of alcohol era. It was made illegal around the same time. However it was much less popular than alcohol so it was never relegalized.
First of all, "alot" is not a word.alik44 said:its illegal yet cigarettes and alcohol kill alot more than marijuana does.
Source [http://www.cracked.com/blog/5-pro-marijuana-arguments-that-arent-helping_p2/]Yep, booze and cigarettes are pretty fucking bad for you. Deadly, even, if they're abused. Hell, I had a doctor tell me straight up that if I didn't quit drinking entirely, I'd be dead within the next five years. I've never heard a doctor tell someone that about their weed smoking. Drunk driving and smoking-related lung cancer have literally killed millions.
In fact, here's a not-at-all-retarded rebuttal from a legalization advocate in response to a "Foundation for a Drug-Free World" pamphlet that claims pot is more dangerous than alcohol. In case you didn't read that, it's exactly what you'd expect from a site that runs its articles over a background of marijuana leaf gifs, versus a highly generalized and exaggerated claim from an organization that is obviously anti-pot. The argument being, "Pot is worse than booze!" "Nuh-uh, alcohol is worse!"
But here's the thing about that entire debate: It doesn't fucking matter.
Throwing out death tolls from tobacco smoke, drunk driving and liver disease makes perfect sense as an argument for making those things illegal. It makes zero sense when trying to convince somebody to make pot legal. Don't you understand that "It will kill fewer people than cigarettes!" could apply to fucking anything? You could pass a law that lets 12 year olds carry concealed guns to school and it'd kill fewer people than drunk driving.
If the argument is that pot is the safer choice, then by that rationale, it's also safer than deep-throating a cactus or mouth-fucking a rattlesnake. Is someone obligating you to choose between the two? There's not a third option of just not doing either of them? That has baffled me for years, and I still don't understand it. But I've heard it. A lot. As if the legalization of one unhealthy activity obligates us to legalize every single thing that's less lethal than that.
You have to remember that the people who have the power to change these laws are old, rich, stuffy white guys who for the most part don't smoke weed. When they hear rebuttals like this, they're picturing a six year old kid stomping his foot and screaming at his mother, "Why can't I play that game? Jimmy's mom lets him play GTA, and that's way worse!" The end result is still that you're arguing for the right to make things worse than they were before.
That's exactly my stance. Whenever I tell someone that marijuana is still harmful, even if it's less harmful than tobacco or alcohol, they always go into the "well junk food is more harmful than marijuana too". Yeah, but I think you're missing the "food" part.CM156 said:le snip
The first thing you cite is a falsehood based on a fatally flawed study in which primates were starved of oxygen and allowed ONLY to breathe marijuana, thus killing their brain cells. Smoking marijuana does not kill your brain cells. Nor does it cause you to hallucinate. Although I do agree that one should not drive while high.nklshaz said:The fact that it directly kills brain cells is the main reason. And legalizing it would increase the risk of people driving while hallucinating.
Then why not ban alcohol and cigarettes, too? They're far more dangerous to the people that live around the smoker/drinker (i.e. drunk driving, physical abuse, secondhand smoke, etc.); the worse marijuana ever does to adults is make them lazy and unmotivated. The worst it could do to a child (secondhand) is perhaps impede brain development...but then I would question that parent's abilities to even be responsible for another human life. Marijuana is a drug that really only affects the consumer; laws against habits that don't hurt anyone outside of the "habit-doer" are stupid and unnecessary.nklshaz said:The fact that it directly kills brain cells is the main reason. And legalizing it would increase the risk of people driving while hallucinating. While the effects may not be perceived as being "as bad" as cigarettes or alcohol, it still is bad for you, and we're probably better off without it.
This is what I like about the Escapist's community; most of them (including you, Wolf) are smart enough to know how to use their common sense and objectivity.WolffgangVW said:If it's bad for me, shouldn't it simply be my choice not to take it? For me, that's where the argument of its health risks end; it's my body, it should be my choice.
Yeah but marijuana is still dangerous. It damages your lungs more than cigarettes because you have to hold in the smoke longer than with cigarettes. As well as it stops your brain from making connections when its still developing, so it causes you're neurons to miss each other. It still has many damaging effects many of which don't outright kill you, but they can still cause some pretty good damage.alik44 said:its illegal yet cigarettes and alcohol kill alot more than marijuana does.
We tried that. The prohibition led to massively increased crime rates, where as legalizing Mary Jane would lead to, in theory mind you, an increased influx of Mexican crime violence, which is a primary source of marijuana.evilartist said:Then why not ban alcohol and cigarettes, too?nklshaz said:The fact that it directly kills brain cells is the main reason. And legalizing it would increase the risk of people driving while hallucinating. While the effects may not be perceived as being "as bad" as cigarettes or alcohol, it still is bad for you, and we're probably better off without it.