Monday, February 13, 2012

Will Marijuana Legalization Belittle Our Law Enforcement?


This issue has to be addressed since it is often an argument politicians use to gain sympathy for our law enforcement agencies by means of victimization. Subsequently many people have accepted this argument as a legitimate reason to keep marijuana prohibition alive. It’s not unheard of for a person to argue that “legalizing marijuana will undo everything our federal and local police entities have sacrificed and worked so hard to achieve. How can you possibly want to make it legal?” This argument can be hard to combat since the individual making the comment has been convinced that ending marijuana prohibition is not a political idea, but another deviant strategy that criminals are utilizing to target our law enforcement members. How does an individual come to believe this fallacious argument? It comes with decades of conditioning. The government has demonized marijuana to the point that anyone who has a favorable opinion of it is labeled a criminal. If you buy weed you are breaking the law therefore you are a criminal! Since you bought it you are now in possession of a controlled substance which is illegal therefore you are a criminal! If you sell some to your friend you are a drug dealer therefore you are a criminal! If you smoke it you are breaking the law therefore you are a criminal! If you support it becoming legal you are either selling it, buying it, possessing it, smoking it, or all of the above therefore you are a criminal! As funny as this may seem it is true that many people have acquired this thought process. How can we change this perception and how can we make people realize that ending marijuana prohibition is not intended to harm our law enforcement officials?
                It all starts with debunking commonly held myths, something that I always try to accomplish through this blog. In this case prohibition supporters are victimizing law enforcement officials instead of the usual targets like the helpless addict or the child killed in the middle of a drug deal gone wrong. This victimization causes guilt and an otherwise intelligent individual is overcome by emotion instead of utilizing reason. “How could I possibly support legalization? Our poor police officer puts his life on the line to keep these drugs off the streets. I’m such a fool!” Thus the argument becomes “marijuana needs to be kept illegal because it’s illegal!” But wait, are these people really saying that? Yes they most defiantly are! Yet the individual does not notice that he or she is making this erroneous argument because it is cleverly disguised as a sympathetic appeal towards the poor cop walking his beat.
                Does marijuana legalization really belittle our law enforcement officials? The answer is a resounding NO! If it does anything it helps them by removing them from a failed drug policy that has lasted decades. If marijuana was legalized 10 years ago we would have fewer dead cops and failed operations like “Fast and Furious” would never have taken place. Violence in Mexico would have declined and our prisons would not be overflowing with petty drug offenders. To say that legalizing cannabis hurts our officers more than to continuingly throw them into dangerous drug busting operations is insensitive and offensive. Our law enforcement has done the best they can but the drug war failure does not fall on their shoulders, it falls on the shoulders of our lawmakers. And to create the illusion that our law enforcement agencies haven’t “quite done enough” is sickening.          

2 comments:

  1. Not to mention legalization of marijuana would remove it from any sort of black market(except for usa government)which would destroy the gateway theory on marijuana. Which is smoke weed then you will eventually smoke heroin and meth and murder some nice christian family. This would also eliminate any kind of dangerous environment associated with marijuana(except theft I suppose).
    And the horrifying thing is that the war on legalization(you&me)is most likely not the worst thing that's going on behind the scenes.
    I mean, if what our government does for our nation is for our good and is "law abiding" or has understandable circumstances for what ever. They should at least be proud enough of their operations and intentions and means to accomplish that they show us their hard work. Line the streets and raining confetti for heroism and victory for the BETTER(which they must have a different definition for). I want to appreciate the body that governs over me, more importantly I want to be able to trust and have some sort of faith in the mind that guides said government.

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    1. Excellent point on the gateway theory I make mention on it in a few of my other posts, the gateway is not the drug itself but the illegal activity it is associated with. Get rid of the illegal contact and solve the problem. People like you and me need to overturn he commonly held myths of cannabis and start to look at these things empirically instead of relying on anecdotal beliefs. I appreciate the comment and your input keep up with the fight!

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