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Thursday, April 24, 2008

Over 130 years of being wrong

You may have thought the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) was merely a sadly delusional chapter in our nation's history. And yet, every now and then I see a letter to the editor in the local paper signed by someone who calls herself head of the local WCTU chapter.

What I didn't realize (until I read Allen St. Pierre's post today) was that they also take a position on marijuana.

At their marijuana 'facts' page you can learn a number of interesting things, including:

long-term marijuana users experience withdrawal symptoms such as stomach pain, irritability, and aggression. [...] Sudden heart attacks have been linked to pot smoking [...] Loss of fertility in both males and females may occur. Marijuana can disrupt testes and uterine function. In males testosterone levels and sperm counts can decrease and abnormal sperm form. Menstrual periods have ceased in females who use pot regularly. [...] fathers who smoked pot might increase the chances of their babies dying from SIDS. [...] Marijuana use is a major risk factor in the development of full-blown AIDS in HIV-positive persons. HIV marijuana smokers progress to full-blown AIDS twice as fast as non-smokers. [...] Chronic use results in adults being four times more likely to be depressed later in life and to have suicidal thoughts. [...] In a 1999 report of 664 drug-related deaths, 187 of them resulted from marijuana use alone. [...] A scientific study of airplane pilots showed their inability to properly land a plane using a flight simulator even 24 hours after smoking one joint. [...] As of January, 2001, the Mississippi Research Center for the National Institute on Drug Abuse had on record more than 15,000 studies on cannabis. None of them show the raw material marijuana to be safe or effective for medical use. [...] Many of the state-based referendums on medical marijuana have been supported and funded by individuals and organizations who favor decriminalization and legalization and who would profit from producing and selling marijuana.

If I didn't know the damage that this organization has done to the country historically, I would merely consider this nothing more than a group of deluded oddballs who are completely and hilariously wrong.

11:23:20 PM |   | Links | permalink | comment []



Dust up - Day 4

It's delightful entertainment over at the LA Times, because we so seldom get to see prohibitionists in any kind of debating forum, and Stimson is a textbook case as to why that is. It's no contest at all -- Jacob Sullum hardly has to try.

Today's question is about violence.

While Stimson admits that legalization could bring about a reduction in prohibition-related violence, he say that won't help us at all.

Here's the rub, though: If you impose high taxes, a gray market will inevitably be created, and along with it will come violence. If you impose no taxes, and thus the price remains low, there will be rampant consumption and the predictable, attendant violence and social dislocation that go hand in hand with consumption.

Did you catch that? Apparently the only options are excessively high taxes or no taxes. You see, I would have thought that maybe the idea was to come up with a method of taxation that would fall short of encouraging a gray market.

But let's assume that we are politically unable to do anything else. Are we really to believe that grey-market violence is anything like black-market fueled violence? Sure, there are criminals that get involved when one state taxes cigarettes too high, but does anyone actually worry about Los Zetas putting severed heads on stakes in order to protect their tax-free Virginia Slims territory?

And as far as the "violence and social dislocation" that will occur with the increased drug use that comes from untaxed legalized drugs, what exactly is Stimson saying? And how does he support it? What's going to happen? Are the newly added casual marijuana users going to be mixing it up? Or will it be the harder drug users who no longer have to steal to support their dependence?

There's no evidence that drug-related (as opposed to prohibition-related) violence would increase with legalization, even if there was significantly increased use. In fact, there are many reasons that even drug-related violence would be reduced (law enforcement focused on violence rather than drugs, greater emphasis on getting help for those who need it, etc.

The dishonesty of Stimson's argument is staggering. According to him, there is no point in getting rid of prohibition-related violence, because even if we do, we'll have grey-market violence or drug-related violence. The quantity or nature of the violence seems to be irrelevant to him.

Now here's the way I see it. Let's call the level of drug-related violence that exists today a "3." And let's say that the grey-market violence that we'd see if taxation was too high might be a "4." On that scale, I would place prohibition-related violence at around "27." (In Mexico, "63")

Let's say that untaxed legalization caused drug-related violence to double (something I think highly unlikely). Let's compare our options:

  1. Today: Prohibition violence (27) plus drug violence (3) = total violence (30)
  2. Grey-market: Grey-market violence (4) plus drug violence (3)=total violence (7)
  3. Legalization with no taxes: Drug violence (6)=total violence (6)

So why shouldn't we legalize?

Of course, these are rather arbitrary numbers, but they're a lot more accurate than Stimson's nonsense.

10:40:44 PM |   | Links | permalink | comment []



Fun stuff

bullet image Sean Mullins' "The Ballad of Kathryn Johnson" is available for 99¢ on iTunes or at Amazon. As Radley says:
And it's good! Well, the music is good. The lyrics wander around a bit, and don't really tell what actually happened. But hey, it's a good pop song about a botched drug raid. I'm not going to complain.

bullet image Scott Morgan has discovered a handy guide for teens to obtain prescription drugs. It's put together by the Drug Czar. And it's a nifty site.

bullet image California Brewery faces federal fines for putting the name of its town on its bottle caps. The Mount Shasta Brewing Company is located in Weed, California.

9:06:20 AM |   | Links | permalink | comment []






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There's a war going on. It destroys lives and families, spawns violence, suspends civil liberties, tramples on the infirm, locks up millions of peaceful citizens, costs billions, and subjugates reason with fear. This blog looks at the front lines of the drug war, with news, analysis, and the occasional rant.

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