That is true, more people probably would abuse it. However, it is not a reason to keep it illegal. Otherwise we would be making nearly everything illegal. That is my point. People abuse fast food. People abuse beer. If abuse is a factor in whether something is legal or not, then those two items alone should be illegal as well.
The revenues that have been generated in some cities by dispensaries has earned the cities *profit*. Profit is anything above overhead costs, including taxes taken for rehab programs.
Agree that people abusing it isn't a good reason to keep it illegal, but stating that other legal things are more harmful isn't a good reason to make it legal either.
Actually, profit for the city governments would be the tax revenue less any expenditures for the economic costs associated with the use of marijuana. Even if a local government is generating profit off of it, it really isn't much.
That simply isn't true. Some cities in California have generated a great deal of revenue.
Not to mention that we would still spend far more annually on weight loss treatments, diabetes, alcoholism, and other diseases caused by substances that are legal. Your argument is moot.
Actually it is true. Generating more revenue doesn't mean much when you start generating more costs at a rate the same or greater than then the revenues generated. Besides that, California has approved it for medicinal purposes, not the same as approving it for recreational purposes as far as costs are concerned.
Yes, we spend more money on other legal things and we are losing money on those as well. Following that same model for trying to raise tax revenues simply isn't very smart. The argument for legalizing it to raise tax revenues simply isn't a good argument.
We will have to disagree on this, then. I spent a great deal of time researching this for medical research papers. The information I found is not what the government regularly tells us.
There is no real valid reason to keep it illegal. None. Your biggest argument is that it will result in money being spent on rehab - that is a weak argument. The money it would *save* millions of people on health care, pharmaceuticals, and other health care costs is phenomenal. The amount of money that would be raised from the uses of the cannabis plant are incredible - this includes hemp, oils, paper, and medical marijuana - far outstrip any "cons".
The government's propaganda campaign against marijuana is harsh.
Marijuana is safer than most pharmaceuticals, and treats many conditions. Keeping it illegal causes more crime than there would be if it was legal. We know this from countries who have changed their regulations to allow for legal marijuana. There is also far less abuse of marijuana in countries with legal pot.
I still do not see a single valid reason for it being illegal. None of your arguments are strong enough to support such regulations.