Man, finally, a thread that's right up my alley.
I will admit that I'm a pretty heavy marijuana user. Usually about 3 times a week. Sometimes more.
Sure, marijuana is less harmful than cigarettes. And while some may think this is a stupid argument, the fact remains - cigarettes, while more lethal, are legal. And yes, they're both harmful, they both leave tar your lungs, yadda yadda, but the fact of the matter is it is my body and my decision. I'm not harming anyone else, so it is not anyone else's place to judge my behavior.
Marijuana is mentally addictive, I know this for a fact. There aren't physical symptoms of withdrawl, but you crave it like you crave any other enjoyable feeling - sex, chocolate cake, raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens, etc...It boils down to personal responsibility, and I don't believe the government has the right to set that for you.
Why should marijuana be legalized? Let's start with the most basic argument, the medicinal reasons. You cannot argue with this, it has been used medicinally for centuries in hundreds of different cultures. Treats pain, eases side-effects of chemotherapy, treats glaucoma, just to name the most commonly known.
My real question is why marijuana is viewed any differently than alcohol. A person can be a social drinker and not face any reprocussions, yet if someone is a social marijuana smoker they can be put in prison? Alcohol is involved in thousands of deaths each year between diseases caused by alcohol, accidents caused by alcohol, or violent behavior caused by alcohol. Alcohol is much more physically harmful to your body and is physically addicting, yet it is legal. There are never reported violent crimes by marijuana users, there are no major diseases linked to marijuana use. As far as societal impacts, why would they be any greater than that of alcohol? The average person doesn't get liquored up and skip work, neglect his family and doesn't pay his bills. That's what we call an alcoholic. So why would the average person, if pot were legal, act like an addict?
In addition, by legalizing, regulating, and taxing it, we can generate millions in revenue. In addition, we could stop trying to inhibit the trafficking of a relatively harmless drug and focus our efforts on drugs that do have a serious negative impact on our society, such as meth, cocaine, and heroine.
As far as links to schizophrenia, I've been studying marijuana for years, because every time I have to write a persuasive essay or research paper, I choose marijuana as my topic, and I've never come across anything that links the two. Schizophrenia is genetic and inherent, and can be triggered by traumatic events in one's life.
The whole \"gateway drug\" theory is crap. That has aboslutely nothing to do with the drug and everything to do with the personality type.
People really need to learn to separate the drug from the person. If a person has an addictive personality and cannot set his priorities, drugs aren't for him. The same is true of alcohol. If you can't handle it responsibly, you shouldn't do it. It's true of anything that can become addictive - video games, jerkin off...whatever. If you do it too much and it starts to interfere with your responsibilities, you shouldn't do it.
I love the pot, but it hasn't interfered with my intelligence or my priorities. I had a 4.0 gpa all through high school and as a sophomore in college I'm still maintaining a 3.6 while working 20 hours a week.
That's my take on it. I feel America's greatest value is personal freedom, and if my habit doesn't harm anyone else, what I choose to do is my own business.
Ps- I'm high right now.