In the immortal words of Brother Dave Gardner (remember his comedy albums from the '60's?), "Let's make everything legal. That way, there wouldn't be any crime."
I smoked pot for years and don't have anything against it. I just kinda grew out of it. Everybody's story is different. Mine's probably about average. I never toked until I was out of high school and, in my case, that's probably a good thing. But, shortly after I was introduced to Mary Jane, and really enjoyed it. $10 to $15 and oz. back then. And, yeah, it lead to harder drugs in a round about way. I enjoyed partying so much that I tried a lot of things that my friends turned me onto. In that light, you could say that friendship leads to harder drugs. They weren't getting me hooked so that they could make money on me like real drug dealers, we just all enjoyed partying together and were in the mood to try different things. Never put a needle in my arm, never got addicted to anything. Partied for years, but, like I said, just grew out of it. Every once in a while, I'll still take a toke or two (that's all it takes anymore), maybe twice a year, and I have to be in the right mood to do it. I turn down probably 100 times as much as I actually do. This pertains to all drugs, alcohol included. I don't do them "just because it's there" as is the case with lots of people. Legalizing it wouldn't affect me one way or another. But, I do think it should be made legal, just because that would save us the tax money being spent on keeping casual users in prison. And the good Rev has a point about foreign drug cartels making all the money to support terrorism, instead of American farmers having a new cash crop to help their families and the American economy. And I don't mean just growing it for the pot heads, but the fact that so many useful items can be produced from hemp. George Washington Carver's new peanut. As far as legalizing it making it such a common item that people would take it for granted and actually use it less, we wouldn't know that until 20 or so years down the road after it has been legalized. At first pot smokers would go wild with their newly found freedom to toke, but that would wear off someday. Like kids driving cars right after achieving their license, they usually push it to the limits early on, but after the new wears off, they settle back a bit. I'm not saying stop the war on drugs, just make it a war on truly dangerous drugs. Of course that would, in reality, include a lot of "legal" drugs that are on the market today. They have warnings of all the bad things they can do, including death. Can anyone honestly say that pot is more dangerous than those?
Just look at Italy and France and other countries where children are allowed to drink a little wine with their meals. There moms send them with an empty jug to the winery or liquor store (or the equivalent) to pick up wine for the homes. Most of those kids don't even think about stopping and having a drink on the way home, because they don't have to. They don't have to hide it, therefore, the exciting danger factor doesn't come into play. Here in America, kids get someone older to buy for them, then they drink the whole bottle because they can't take it home and certainly don't waste it.
I think someday pot would be like this if it gets legalized, but that's just my opinion.
I smoked pot for years and don't have anything against it. I just kinda grew out of it. Everybody's story is different. Mine's probably about average. I never toked until I was out of high school and, in my case, that's probably a good thing. But, shortly after I was introduced to Mary Jane, and really enjoyed it. $10 to $15 and oz. back then. And, yeah, it lead to harder drugs in a round about way. I enjoyed partying so much that I tried a lot of things that my friends turned me onto. In that light, you could say that friendship leads to harder drugs. They weren't getting me hooked so that they could make money on me like real drug dealers, we just all enjoyed partying together and were in the mood to try different things. Never put a needle in my arm, never got addicted to anything. Partied for years, but, like I said, just grew out of it. Every once in a while, I'll still take a toke or two (that's all it takes anymore), maybe twice a year, and I have to be in the right mood to do it. I turn down probably 100 times as much as I actually do. This pertains to all drugs, alcohol included. I don't do them "just because it's there" as is the case with lots of people. Legalizing it wouldn't affect me one way or another. But, I do think it should be made legal, just because that would save us the tax money being spent on keeping casual users in prison. And the good Rev has a point about foreign drug cartels making all the money to support terrorism, instead of American farmers having a new cash crop to help their families and the American economy. And I don't mean just growing it for the pot heads, but the fact that so many useful items can be produced from hemp. George Washington Carver's new peanut. As far as legalizing it making it such a common item that people would take it for granted and actually use it less, we wouldn't know that until 20 or so years down the road after it has been legalized. At first pot smokers would go wild with their newly found freedom to toke, but that would wear off someday. Like kids driving cars right after achieving their license, they usually push it to the limits early on, but after the new wears off, they settle back a bit. I'm not saying stop the war on drugs, just make it a war on truly dangerous drugs. Of course that would, in reality, include a lot of "legal" drugs that are on the market today. They have warnings of all the bad things they can do, including death. Can anyone honestly say that pot is more dangerous than those?
Just look at Italy and France and other countries where children are allowed to drink a little wine with their meals. There moms send them with an empty jug to the winery or liquor store (or the equivalent) to pick up wine for the homes. Most of those kids don't even think about stopping and having a drink on the way home, because they don't have to. They don't have to hide it, therefore, the exciting danger factor doesn't come into play. Here in America, kids get someone older to buy for them, then they drink the whole bottle because they can't take it home and certainly don't waste it.
I think someday pot would be like this if it gets legalized, but that's just my opinion.