The Drug War Is A Logical Fallacy Essay

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California Proposition 64, the California Marijuana Legalization Initiative, would legalize marijuana/cannabis for adults over the age of 21. The legalization measure only applies to the state of California, as federal law continues on its war on drugs/prohibition path. Proposition 64 was on the ballot in the November 8, 2016 federal election. Prior to passing this Proposition, cannabis was illegal, and possession of cannabis was punishable by law. This proposition would not only decriminalize but fully legalize, which means that individuals 21 years of age or older can and should grow their own or purchase from a local and licensed distributor rather than using the black market. In addition to legalization, which impacts the criminal justice system and the powers of law enforcement, the California Proposition 64 created a tax and regulate method of controlling cannabis. There are two new taxes created with the new law. Those two taxes include a tax on the cultivated crops, which can be considered a wholesale agricultural tax, and a retail or sales tax for when the prepared cannabis products are sold. California Proposition 64 also purportedly specifies exactly where the tax monies will be diverted to in terms of state programs and services: "Revenue from the taxes will be spent on drug research, treatment, and enforcement, health and safety grants addressing marijuana, youth programs, and preventing environmental damage resulting from illegal marijuana production," ("California Proposition 64 Marijuana Legalization (2016)"). Therefore, California Proposition 64 has two main components: the legal component which impacts the criminal justice system in the state, and also a financial component, which affects the state budget. Additionally, the law has several long-term implications. One is to increase the civil liberties of residents of the state of California. The other is a potential conflict between the state of California and federal laws that continue to criminalize cannabis. I. b) Position/Thesis/Conclusion

It is my position that California voters did the right thing by passing this law, which should have been passed a long time ago. Suprisingly, California was the first state to prohibit marijuana, and the state has had a long history of infringing on personal liberties regarding drug use (Roy). Proposition 64 is California's chance to redeem itself after a century of poorly developed policy grounded in a manipulation of the media and its messages rather than on evidence. The main reason why I support Proposition 64 is because evidence proves that prohibition does not work, and in fact causes a tremendous amount of harm -- far more harm than cannabis itself causes. The harms of prohibition can be measured in lives lost to the prison-industrial complex; the lives lost to people who smoke too much cannabis are almost negligible. Furthemore, I support California Proposition 64 on the basis of human rights...

...

Drug use is a universal and natural human behavior and should not be criminalized.
I. c) Fallacies in the candidate/issue viewpoint

There are no fallacies in my position's viewpoint, that of the "Yes" on California Proposition 64.

I. d) Premise 1: Prohibition of cannabis has been a failed and harmful policy because it helps black markets thrive. From this premise, I conclude that legalization is the only logical response. Decriminalization is too vague, and actually perpetuates one of the main problems with prohibition, which is the driving of cannabis production and distribution into the black market. Legalization takes cannabis out of the hands of international drug cartels and places it back in the hands of small, medium, and large business owners in the United States. This conclusion is deductive and has a high level of confidence because cannabis remains highly popular in California in spite of prohibition, which has enabled the black market to thrive, which is in turn why it is now absolutely essential to disempower that black market. The black market is the problem -- not cannabis.

Premise 2: Prohibition of cannabis has been a failed and harmful policy because it contributes to prison overcrowding for no reason whatsoever, destroying the lives of millions who have done no harm to the community. From this premise I conclude that legalization would end the harmful, evil practice of incarcerating people for non-violent drug offences. Tearing apart families and communities and destroying lives of not a sensible, effective, rational, humane, or in any way reasonable way of punishing a person for the possession or selling of a plant. This conclusion is deductive and has a high level of confidence because prison overcrowding is a major problem throughout the nation but especially in California, where it has reached a level of harm that is "appalling," "inhumane" and "unacceptable," and unconstitutional given the "cruel and unusual" clause of the Constitution (Mayeaux 1). Prison overcrowding is due in part to the unnecessary criminalization of cannabis and other drugs, and therefore logically, legalization of cannabis would reduce the numbers of persons in prison. Drug use is not inherently deviance; its deviance is socially constructed.

Premise 3: Prohibition of cannabis has been a failed and harmful policy because it costs a lot more than it gives back to the community, and from this premise it is easy to conclude that legalization takes all the money that already does go into cannabis and places it sqaurely into the hands of California growers and California consumers. This conclusion is deductive because a substantial amount of money is spent on the prohibition of drugs statewide as well as nationwide, but that drug war is unnecessary because cannabis is not a harmful drug. The war on drugs is a "trillion dollar failure," (Branson,…

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

Branson, R. War on drugs a trillion-dollar failure. CNN. 7 Dec, 2012. Retrieved online: http://www.cnn.com/2012/12/06/opinion/branson-end-war-on-drugs/

"California Proposition 64, Marijuana Legalization (2016)" Ballotpedia. Retrieved online: https://ballotpedia.org/California_Proposition_64,_Marijuana_Legalization_(2016)

CAMH. Cannabis policy framework. Retrieved online: https://moodle.yorku.ca/moodle/pluginfile.php/2205714/mod_resource/content/1/CAMH%20Cannabis%20Policy%20Framework.pdf

Ingraham, C. (2015). Marijuana may be even safer than previously thought, researchers say. The Washington Post, 23 Feb, 2015. Retrieved online: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2015/02/23/marijuana-may-be-even-safer-than-previously-thought-researchers-say/?utm_term=.a66100be88db
Mayeaux, Sara. "The Unconstitutional Horrors of Prison Overcrowding." Newsweek, March 22, 2015. Retrieved online: http://www.newsweek.com/unconstitutional-horrors-prison-overcrowding-315640
McGreevy, Patrick. "Californians vote to legalize recreational use of marijuana in the state." Los Angeles Times, Nov 8, 2016. Retrieved online: http://www.latimes.com/nation/politics/trailguide/la-na-election-day-2016-proposition-64-marijuana-1478281845-htmlstory.html
McGreevy, Patrick. "Weed's legal in California, but activists fear a battle ahead with Jeff Sessions, Trump's pick for attorney general." Los Angeles Times, Dec 1, 2016. Retrieved online: http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-pol-ca-marijuana-legalization-jeff-sessions-snap-20161201-story.html
Roy, Jessica. "California's been rejecting legalized marijuana for more than a century. Here's why this time is different." Los Angeles Times. Sept 13, 2016. Retrieved online: http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-pol-ca-timeline-california-recreational-marijuana-history-20160708-snap-story.html


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