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The Rational vs The Emotional

State House in Trenton, NJ

State House in Trenton, NJ

11/12/2009

By Evan Nison
Ballot Initiative Coordinator

My first time at the New Jersey State House, I was in the cafeteria having a conversation about the medical marijuana testimony I had just listened to when an Assemblywoman overheard what we were talking about. She asked me about the state of the medical marijuana bill and then seemed pleased when I told her it had passed committee. We started talking about the testimony and she mentioned something crucial; one of the most important jobs for legislators during committee hearings is to distinguish between rational, fact-based statements and emotional, fear-based ones.

This is most apparent in the medical marijuana hearings going on in Trenton. Regardless of whether we look at a medical hearing in New Jersey or a legalization hearing in California, the opposition’s main argument remains the same. They talk about “the children”; it is one of the few arguments they have left. The reason it is still effective is because so many people let the fear of the unknown frighten them into assuming the worst. It is the easy way out for people to feel good about “protecting the children” without checking the facts and forming a rational opinion.

People who would like to keep marijuana illegal often talk about the negative repercussions of legalization that medical and social usage would have on children. Little of this is backed up by fact or experience. Here are a few emotional arguments that I’ve heard used to keep marijuana illegal…

Emotional: “What if my kid takes legalization as an OK to try it?”

Rational: Alcohol, tobacco, and coffee are all things that we teach our children to avoid using until they are grown up. Marijuana should be no exception. History has shown us that decriminalization and legalization do not cause use rates to rise. In fact, according to this article in Amsterdam, “The number of adolescent cannabis users peaked when the cannabis was distributed through an underground market during the late 1960s and early 1970s.”

Emotional: “Marijuana is a gateway drug and will only be a stepping stone to harder drugs”

Rational: This has been consistently proven false. Cigarettes, alcohol and even 2% milk and roast beef have been used or eaten by many hard drug users. This does not mean it caused them to move on to harder drugs.

In fact, the illegality of marijuana may be making this problem worse. Because it can only be purchased on the black market, all those who want or need to use marijuana must become involved in the black market. Once that connection is made, it is easier for dealers to advance the use of hard drugs. Amsterdam is a perfect illustration here.  Their drug laws were made to distinguish between hard and soft drugs for this reason, and it worked. They have lower hard drug use rates then we do in America. Heroin use rates are 1.4% in the United States compared to .4% in Amsterdam.

Emotional: “Marijuana decriminalization and regulation would make it easier for children to obtain the marijuana.”

Rational: This one always blew my mind. How could something that’s sold on the black market (which doesn’t check IDs) possibly be harder to get in a regulated market where the stores have an incentive to check IDs? How could causing our children to buy something that is grown, transported, and sold secretively be a better choice than letting the growers and sellers be regulated and inspected?

I am under twenty-one years old and I guarantee you it is much easier for people my age and younger to purchase marijuana than alcohol. Almost any high school student in America can have pot delivered to their house any time of the day or night. Alcohol, on the other hand, requires knowing someone who is of age. This was backed up by a study done by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University (CASA). This study shows teens have an easier time buying marijuana than beer.

Furthermore, the Netherlands Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport released a report stating, “Cannabis use among young people has also increased in most Western European countries and in the US. The rate of (cannabis) use among young people in the US is much higher than in the Netherlands, and Great Britain and Ireland also have relatively larger numbers of school students who use cannabis.”

It is clear that those who claim legalization will harm our youth are victims of scare tactics, and that they work to perpetuate these ideas which have been embedded in them. In fact, it is possible they are hurting the same children they intend to protect by distorting the facts and keeping this widely-used substance on the black market.

The Assemblywoman’s observation she expressed to me that day is important to remember. It is easy to get caught up in emotional arguments, especially about kids. It can scare us into thinking it is best to not to take a “risk” which stops us from moving on to doing further research. Anyone who does adequate research on this subject will see that loosening up on our painfully strict marijuana laws will only be an asset to the future of young people.

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1 comment to The Rational vs The Emotional

  • Marina

    It is ridicules to think that way, parenting starts at home and it is responsibility of a parent to teach a child what is appropriate and what is not, everything else is just a excuse,what about underage drinking laws? its not difficult to write underage marijuana law. People should stop being selfish,what about smoking? or drinking? it is much more damaging to your health, how many people died from smoking and alcohol usage!Let people make their choice,its not a place of government to tell us what we should do. There are a lot of people that find marijuana being very effective and they should have that choice.

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