In this committee-reviewed case study, researcher Margaret K. argues that marijuana should be legal. She claims that marijuana is a criminalized drug and that the punishments are often too harsh. She believes that with the legalization of marijuana it will help to lower the underground activity and make the society safer. And to stop spending all the resources that have to do with marijuana prevention.…
If the government were to legalize certain drugs such as marijuana that the crime and violence would decrease. The author’s ethics, priorities, and values on the subject are that if marijuana were legalized then that would take away from the revenue that drug dealers are bringing in. In turn, would stop the sale of guns, research into other heavier drugs, and would stop the dealers from making too high a price on the…
At the time that William J. Bennett, former Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, gave his speech at Harvard University, former Vice President George H. W. Bush was beginning to involve himself in the media coined term “War on Drugs”. This evidently led to several academics to heavily criticize the effectiveness of making several drugs illegal, who Bennett called the “Intellectuals.” Bennett, in response to the criticism of these intellectuals, passionately claims that these individuals do not provide any practical reasons for drugs to be legalized. Instead, he believes that these intellectuals do not take the issue seriously. Bennett relies on plenty of emotional arguments to enhance his argument that drugs should remain…
War on Drugs Many people believe that legalizing drugs will make it easier to decrease the usage, but others believe otherwise. James Wilson wrote an argumentative essay titled “Against Legalization of Drugs” to prove why drugs like heroin and cocaine should stay illegal. He gives evidence explaining why these illegal drugs should become legal. Though Wilson believes both and many others drugs staying illegal he gives the opposition’s point of view. Throughout this essay Wilson compares drugs and the statistics to prove his point.…
Despite the fact that I’ve made it clear that I lose a great deal of respect for someone if they abuse drugs, I still vehemently believe that drug use should be decriminalized in the United States. Nixon and Reagan’s War on Drugs was a well-meaning but miscalculated and ultimately destructive policy that created the modern situation where the United States has the world’s highest prison population by far. Statistics indicate that the number of those incarcerated for non-capital crimes shot up exponentially during the 1980s and 1990s as a direct result of the War on Drugs. Most of the people in the US prison system are serving up to 5 year sentences for drug possession, including marijuana which most medical professionals don’t consider a harmful or addictive drug and is the mostly widely used illegal drug. Drug abusers shouldn’t be roaming the streets or driving where they pose a real hazardous threat to other pedestrians but they definitely shouldn’t be locked up in jail just for experimenting with drugs recreationally either.…
Over the past several decades while crime rates have gone down, imprison rates have continued to increase. Chapter 2 looks into some of the reason why taking note that a majority of those incarcerate are of African American decent. While they only make up 13% of American society yet by 1991 imprisonment increased by 54% Tonry, correlates this as a result of the war on drugs that began in the seventies (Cole, & Gertz, 2013). According to a survey done in 1991 by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, it found that drug use was not an unequivocal balance between ethnicities, leaving the question as to what is the missing part of the equation and is what Tonry further discuses in this chapter. Identifying that there is no real distinction between…
In his article, “Decriminalizing Drugs Would Not Prevent Prescription Drug Abuse,” William J. Bennett argues that the legalization of drugs would not prevent people from misusing or abusing a drug. He brings up the death of Whitney Houston, including other celebrities, and how “legalizing drugs and making them more readily available would not have saved her life.” He believes that legalization will actually accelerate the misuse and abuse of drugs. Bennett uses Portugal as an example of what would happen if we did decriminalized drugs and ultimately concludes that it would be a failure, just like in Portugal. Although Bennett makes a strong argument here, and I do agree with some of his points, there is still hope that education will go…
The war on drugs is a government agenda to ban illicit substances used for recreation. While the current situation in the nation is the fight to legalize the use of marijuana, the contrived fight against other illegal substances is well under way. The nation has been fighting against the use of illegal substances for years. Unfortunately the fight has not seemed to have accomplished much in the way of ridding the nation of prohibited drugs. While a small number of cities have created successful techniques for reducing the amount of drugs that are on the streets, the majority of areas in the nation has straightforward methods that are not as effective drug crime reduction as the nation would like them to be.…
Huemer’s essay presents not just a series of arguments for ending the war on drugs, but goes as far as arguing for full legalization of recreational drugs. His strongest moral argument for drug legalization is that individuals have a natural right to use drugs stemming from the right to exercise control over their own bodies. Although he doesn’t cite other philosophers, Huemer’s argument builds on John Locke’s basic assumption in “Of Property.” Locke wrote, “…every man has a property in his own person: this no body has any right to but himself.”…
Marijuana comes from the dried leaves, stems, and seeds from the hemp plant Cannabis sativa. Marijuana is a common street drug and is often used for recreational purposes. People can smoke marijuana or they can add the drug to food or tea. People uses marijuana for recreational purposes but people also use marijuana for medical purposes. Marijuana should be legalized because of its medical purposes, for beneficial effects, economical purposes, and crime.…
Legalize Marijuana One of the greatest debates across this country right now is the topic of whether or not marijuana should be legalized. Marijuana is currently legal in some forms in 23 different states. The majority of those states have legalized marijuana strictly for medicinal reasons, while in only four of those states is recreational use of marijuana legal. Marijuana, also known as cannabis, is commonly perceived as unattractive and useless to most Americans. They see it as addictive and a gate-way drug.…
The argument on whether drugs should be legalized has been going on for so long now. Some people say as an Americans we have the right to choose whether we want to do drugs or not. It is really hard to control the consumption of drugs, because people are going to do them whether they are legal or illegal. Other people say that the laws that are being enforced now are good to control drugs. “There will also be more unpublicized fatal and maiming crashes, more job accidents, more child neglect, more of everything associated with substance abuse”(M. Kendrecke).…
Over the years, the idea about legalizing drugs has always been a discussion. Although we use the general term, there was no specific type of “drug” mentioned in these arguments. It is obvious that some are more harmful than others, but overall, each drug could be as addicting than any other. There are many different drugs that have different effects. In my opinion, man-made stimulant drugs seem to cause more harm to their users more than “natural” drugs such as cannabis.…
The Legalization of Marijuana as a Cure An argumentative essay Submitted to: Ms .Monica Tugade Faculty, CEAS, De La Salle Lipa Partially fulfilment in the requirement of the subject in Comski1 Submitted by: Clyde Jewel C. Solis September 25 2014 1…
The drug market is stronger than ever, yet the drug war has been in full force for several decades. The effects here in the United States, are quite similar to the effects internationally, but there are many solutions other than a drug war, to stop the use of drugs. Nobel laureate and economist Milton Friedman remarked on the issue, “However much harm drugs do to those who use them…seeking to prohibit their use does even more harm both to users of drugs and to the rest of us…Legalizing drugs would simultaneously reduce the amount of crime and improve law enforcement. It is hard to conceive of any other single measure that would accomplish so much to promote law and order” (Donohue 146). Friedman is right.…