Pubdate: Tue, 18 Nov 2008 Source: Collegiate Times (VA Tech, Edu) Copyright: 2008 Collegiate Times Contact: http://www.collegiatetimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/699 Author: Kristophler Reinertson LEGALIZE MARIJUANA TO HELP THE ECONOMY Underneath the "hips" and "hoorays" being shouted across the world as America elects our first president who happens to be black, a ball of tumbleweed rolls down from the silent, dusty Wall Street to Main Street in Blacksburg. Economists say we face the greatest economic challenge since the Great Depression. We cannot simply throw our money at the problem and expect the CEOs to bail us out. What we need is a variety of effective, future-oriented investments aimed toward our infrastructure and energy technology sectors, as well as a variety of money-generating solutions to help our economy recover from its drunken stumble toward a devastating depression. President Roosevelt ended alcohol prohibition in 1933 as part of his economic stimulus package, bringing more jobs and tax revenue into the economy. This was only possible because of the reduction of moral panic during the turn of the century that blamed Irish immigrants' failure to gain wealth and status on alcohol. In similar light today, we are subsiding the moral panic of the 1980s that blamed youth marijuana use on adult marijuana use. After 30 years of draconian prison sentences, abstinence-only education, and over $40 billion per year spent on waging the War on Drugs, we see that youth marijuana rates have increased since the 1980s. As taxpayers in the midst of economic turmoil, we should be pragmatic in realizing the lack of return on our marijuana prohibition investment, as well as the opportunity cost of not legalizing the marijuana market. The extra inch an adult may lean back in their chair should not thwart us from adding the expected $2.4 billion to $6.2 billion annually in regulated marijuana tax revenue. If history has taught us anything, it is that America has the strength to overcome hard economic times and the determination to lead as the superpower among nations. But we cannot take this for granted. The 2008 elections are proof that it will be the pragmatist who wins elections in the 21st century. As President-elect Barack Obama has called for the decriminalization of marijuana, the paradigm shift from a criminal approach to a public health approach to the War on Drugs, and has honestly admitted inhaling marijuana, we should be pragmatic as well in calling for legalizing and regulating marijuana as a part of his economic stimulus package. Kristopher Reinertson senior, political science and sociology Students for Sensible Drug Policy, Virginia Tech Chapter President - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake