Marijuana: The Gateway to Nothingness

Started by rmacphie, December 17, 2012, 08:30:24 AM

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rmacphie

See Solar!!!!

GC

The topic of Marijuana has more dimension than meets the eye. There is a personal argument vs. a political one. There's also of course a health argument. There's even a strong violence argument since it involves the cartels.

I think it has become such an important topic because it also involves the federal government undermining the states' decisions of legalization (mostly when it has been strictly for medicinal use in those states that allowed it).

mdgiles

Quote from: GC on December 17, 2012, 08:39:55 AM
The topic of Marijuana has more dimension than meets the eye. There is a personal argument vs. a political one. There's also of course a health argument. There's even a strong violence argument since it involves the cartels.

I think it has become such an important topic because it also involves the federal government undermining the states' decisions of legalization (mostly when it has been strictly for medicinal use in those states that allowed it).
The base of the cartels money and power is marijuana's illegality. Just as it was during Prohibition, the base of the gangster's power was the profit in alcohol due to it's illegality. Arguments against marijuana always seemed to be based on the moral view of the arguer, or on effects that are the result of it being illegal (murder in Mexico).
"LIBERALS: their willful ignorance is rivaled only by their catastrophic stupidity"!

Darth Fife

#3
Quote from: mdgiles on December 18, 2012, 06:49:29 AM
The base of the cartels money and power is marijuana's illegality. Just as it was during Prohibition, the base of the gangster's power was the profit in alcohol due to it's illegality. Arguments against marijuana always seemed to be based on the moral view of the arguer, or on effects that are the result of it being illegal (murder in Mexico).

Prohibition led to the the rise of many of the U.S's most powerful crime families!

The Gambino family... The Genovese family... The Lucheese family... The Bonanno family...

The Kennedys... :rolleyes:


mdgiles

Quote from: Darth Fife on December 18, 2012, 05:56:12 PM
Prohibition led to the the rise of many of the U.S's most powerful crime families!

The Gambino family... The Genovese family... The Lucheese family... The Bonanno family...

The Kennedys... :rolleyes:
And they became so powerful that the end of Prohibition allowed them to branch out into other fields - union corruption, extortion, gambling, prostitution and politics. Oh wait, am I repeating myself?
"LIBERALS: their willful ignorance is rivaled only by their catastrophic stupidity"!


BILLY Defiant

Quote from: Darth Fife on December 18, 2012, 05:56:12 PM
Prohibition led to the the rise of many of the U.S's most powerful crime families!

The Gambino family... The Genovese family... The Lucheese family... The Bonanno family...

The Kennedys... :rolleyes:

Interesting to note...those crime syndicates were well in place long before there was Prohibition and some long before there was an America.

When Prohibition ended they didn't all go away either.

Evil operates best when it is disguised for what it truly is.

TowardLiberty

Quote from: BILLY Defiant on December 19, 2012, 07:01:52 PM
Interesting to note...those crime syndicates were well in place long before there was Prohibition and some long before there was an America.

When Prohibition ended they didn't all go away either.

But we can all agree that prohibition greatly increased their power, wealth, size and scope.


njdudeabides

There is absolutely no justification for pot being illegal; it's bad for your short term memory, but cigarettes cause cancer and alcohol causes liver failure. It's a personal choice, and it should be legal.

The reason it is not legal is because;
1) the government at one time believed making it illegal would stop foreigners from coming to America
2) Religious zealots dislike it