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To: fr_freak

I happen to be in the Baby Boomer Generation, not quite adult in the 60s but close. I still maintain that marijuana usage is not accepted nearly as much as many want to believe. While a lot have undoubtedly tried it, I suspect there are not that many regular recreational users. But, even if it were, I would still oppose legalization. It is a step way too far and is likely to severely cripple the rising generation, a generation that is crippled enough already with the self-esteem movement, the lack of real challenges in life, the helicopter parents and more.

The example of the Army is interesting but I don’t consider that a measure of public acceptance. The Army has its own problems with recruiting and have had to lower its standards in a lot of ways besides past drug use. I don’t know how the Army handles drug use by current soldiers but I suspect it is not much tolerated.

I know money is power but I disagree that the criminals will simply fold their tents and steal away if the money is no longer there for marijuana. Their human nature will not change with the law; they will merely move on to some other lucrative criminal enterprise, most likely much worse than pushing marijuana. As I pointed out in another post, in Amsterdam, the pushers now sell marijuana much more potent than the law allows. Criminals are criminals and they will commit crime, by marijuana pushing or some other means.

I know the arguments for legalization and I sympathize to some extent, but the desire of recreational marijuana smokers to get their “weekend buzz” as one poster termed it without hassle comes with a tremendous amount of risk for society as a whole, especially our children. Again, look at what happened to the attitude toward abortion when it went from illegal to legal. Most people were horrified by the act and today the incidents of abortions have increased exponentially and the majority of people now accept it as a right, not an unfortunate necessity.


28 posted on 09/19/2010 6:44:48 PM PDT by caseinpoint (Don't get thickly involved in thin things.)
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To: caseinpoint
...but the desire of recreational marijuana smokers to get their “weekend buzz” as one poster termed it without hassle comes with a tremendous amount of risk for society as a whole, especially our children. Again, look at what happened to the attitude toward abortion when it went from illegal to legal.

Exactly how would this put our whole society at risk, "especially our children"? I'm guessing that you don't have a concrete answer for that. There is no answer you can give that doesn't already exist within a country where marijuana is illegal throughout. So, before we toss all of our ideas about limited government and self-reliance out the window out of fear of the downsides of recreational marijuana usage, how about if you explain exactly what you mean.

Also, the abortion analogy is false. Look at how society viewed pre-marital sex and divorce in the years before abortion became legal vs. how nonchalantly they viewed now. Making abortion legal did not increase its acceptance - the degradation of moral standards in general increased its acceptance. In the case of marijuana, the cultural acceptance has already occurred, and I honestly think that you really don't understand the level of acceptance it now has even among otherwise straight-laced, productive members of society. I've said this before, but old-timers don't believe me: I would bet money that the first thing that close to half of our guys in uniform will do, once they ETS, is get high, especially if they go to college.
30 posted on 09/19/2010 6:56:59 PM PDT by fr_freak
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