Xequat said:
If it is not illegal, then we won't have to spend money on police trying to catch dealers,
The current proposal in Canada would INCREASE penalties for dealers and growers (ie: longer sentences), so we wouldn't see any savings on those fronts. But we would save the $$ from ending the prosecution of possession offences - according to one estimation, $150 million per year.
plus we can tax it, thus turning a large expense into an income.
We can only tax it if we legalize it. Decriminalization does NOT stop things from being illegal. Speeding, for example, is illegal but is not a criminal offence. Name one illegal product that is taxed.
I don't think I'd favor smoking pot in public because of the effects of second-hand marijuana smoke on children,
Cigarette smoking is being prohibited in an ever-increasing number of venues, and I believe this is the correct choice. Smoking marijuana should be subject to the same rules.
if you get drunk and drive, you're quite likely to damage or kill someone or something; but, if you get high and go drive, you'll probably just get lost. OK, I'm kidding - oversimplifying.
just get lost... heeheehee
Seriously, though, the proposed Canadian law would impose harsher penalties on people caught high behind the wheel or with marijuana near a school. The government announced it would dedicate several million dollars towards educating police officers to identify driving under the influence and roadside tests. But it is not clear what they are going to teach the officers as there is currently no standard symptoms or roadside screening tests as there are in case of alcohol.
The cons I see are the gateway drug theory, but I'm not completely sold on it
This is a confusing topic, because there are studies that have come to conflicting conclusions on this theory. The Senate Committee on Illegal Drugs examined the research on the subject and concluded that marijuana is not a 'gateway drug', but I don't know if this government body will be considered the final word on the matter.
and the message that it might send which would be that drugs are OK.
It might have that effect. But so might the fact that the current laws are barely enforced. Better, I think, to make laws that there is a will to follow through on. Example: in my high school there was a dress code that was outdated and not enforced. As a result, there was zero control over what kids wore to school because there was, in effect, no guidelines at all. If they had created a more reasonable dress code, it may have been enforced and ultimately resulted in more tasteful dress amongst students.