Pubdate: Tue, 28 Jan 2003 Source: Oklahoma Daily, The (OK Edu) Copyright: 2003 Oklahoma Daily Contact: http://www.oudaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1371 Note: This paper is published by the University of Oklahoma Author: Christiaan Mitchell LEGALIZING POT COULD BRING IN TREMENDOUS REVENUE During the Super Bowl there were a couple of great examples of the recent wave of anti-marijuana ads that have been flooding television, magazines and movie previews. Most of the arguments given against marijuana use were dubious at best, quoting such statistics as "one-third of all reckless drivers tested for drugs test positive for marijuana" making no reference to the small number of reckless drivers actually tested for drugs, nor to the numbers of those that were also heavily under the influence of alcohol (singularly the most destructive legal substance known to man). However, the most absurd of the arguments presented are those that play on our post September 11th awareness of and increasing paranoia about terrorism. I am in no position to challenge the assertion that much of the money funneled into the drug market goes to support terrorism. The fact of the matter is that the vast majority goes to people who are involved in dangerous crimes that potentially harm/kill innocent bystanders. There is one fact that is constantly overlooked and intentionally not mentioned. If marijuana were legal it would not be funding terrorism or criminals. A pack of 20 class-A marijuana cigarettes (the marijuana analog to tobacco cigarettes now readily available) could not really cost more than about fifty cents to manufacture. A producer could then sell them for as much as five dollars a pack. That's a 900 percent profit, something I know no businessman in his right mind could say was paltry. The government could then charge fifteen dollars in taxes on each pack! Thus bringing the grand total to twenty dollars for a pack of marijuana cigarettes, which I am told is something on the order of one-fifth of the going price on the street. With that sort of tax revenue the government could very easily fund any number of ludicrous wars on Iraq, any number of wars against terrorism, and/or probably wipe every other single drug off the face of the United States, if not the globe. That is, of course, unless the number of people using marijuana is also some other grossly distorted statistic. CHRISTIAAN MITCHELL Philosophy Senior - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)