Posted on 10.19.2015

Drugs, Money and Government: A Scenario

There was a time when the sale and use of illegal drugs were, for the most part, confined to big cities and the penalties for getting caught with even a small amount of a controlled substance were severe, too severe considering the crime.

There was a time in Texas and some other states when there was a zero tolerance policy and the possession of a minimal amount of marijuana could mean years behind bars in a state prison.

The drug laws in most states had not been changed in decades and dealt with totally different societal attitudes, were draconian in nature and actually carried a heavier sentence than laws dealing with crimes many times more destructive to society than being caught with a joint of your pocket. 

Now marijuana has been legalized in a couple of states, with several others toying with the idea, and as the tax revenues continue to mount in Colorado, the temptation in cash strapped states is becoming overwhelming, and I predict that marijuana will soon be legally obtainable at a retail level, at least for "medical purposes" in most states in the coming decade.

In my estimation, about half the people in the country think that the legalization of pot across the nation is a good thing and that the taxes collected and one less law for our harried police forces to have to enforce, makes it a worthwhile endeavor.

After all, they say alcoholic beverages are legal and what�s the difference in getting buzzed on alcohol and getting stoned on marijuana.

Well before we all get on that train, there are several pertinent facts that should be examined and carefully considered before the drug is made available to one and all.

1. Let's deal with the tax issue. First of all, any windfall profits that would come from the sales would, in most cases, knowing government, be absorbed in the new bureaucracies created to oversee the sales and audit and collect the new taxes.

Being in the same category as tobacco and alcohol, marijuana would fall into the "sin tax" bracket and every time the powers that be needed more tax dollars they'd up the ante.

It�s the same mentality that makes a pack of cigarettes cost eleven dollars in New York City.

Pretty soon the convenience of buying it over the counter would be outweighed by the inconvenience of the ever rising price and users would go back to growing their own or obtaining it on the black market, which again, knowing government, would probably be declared illegal and another bureaucracy would have to be established to to deal with the illegal growers. 

Then we're back to jammed courtrooms and overworked police forces.

2. From what I understand the THC content, the ingredient in the pot plant which makes you high, is many times more potent than in days gone by and has the potential of turning unsuspecting users into either dreamers who sit around and are firmly convinced they have solved all the worlds� problems or conversely in a state of paranoia, imagining all sorts of world ending catastrophes.

3. As we all know, the underage should not be able to get their hands on alcohol, pills or any other kind of inebriate, but we know that due to older kids who are willing to buy alcohol for them, they do get their hands on it and many times the result is tragic.

However, experimenting with alcohol at an early age, as detrimental as it is, usually ends up with headaches, throwing up and all the other aggravation of a hangover and it's over.

The effects of marijuana deal with the brain, have a residual effect and regular use by young people whose thought processes have not fully formed can seriously effect their mental awareness and personality.

They seem preoccupied and their capacity to reason is altered and they go through life grinning at something only they can see.

4. No matter what you may hear to the contrary, marijuana is a gateway drug. You'd be hard pressed to run into a junkie who didn't start their drug journey with marijuana and keep on experimenting with harder drugs until they find themselves tying off and shooting up.

And no, I don�t think that everybody who smokes marijuana will turn into a heroin addict, but the potential is there and should be considered, and the fact is that almost everybody, once they begin using drugs are always pushing for a higher high and unfortunately, for some people that means serious trouble.

Most people think that marijuana does not effect their driving abilities the way alcohol does because it doesn't inhibit their motor skills, but it does effect their mental capacities and ability to make the split second decisions required to operate a motor vehicle safely. 

We tend to rush headlong into situations without seriously considering the detrimental potential and the long term effects.

All sides should be looked at and carefully examined before any drug is made legal and readily available.

What do you think?

Pray for our troops and the peace of Jerusalem

God Bless America

� Charlie Daniels

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Comments

Willie Nelson and Hank Williams Jr. Don't Agree With You
I guess the likes of Willie Nelson and Hank Williams Jr are on your hit list for the drug war. How many billions or trillions are we going to spend? And, BIg Pharma is killing more people with their legal opiods than legal marijuana is killing. Oh wait, legal marijuana hasn't killed a single person yet, unlike your beloved whiskey that so many country singers love reveling so deeply about. I love country music , but if you are going to sing about freedom and liberty than why are you trying to implement fascism? GUess what, in Nazi Germany and many other fascist countries, drug addiction was minimal. We need to stop being a nanny state and let adults make their own decision and reap the rewards for their behavior. You can keep trying to fight the drug war. It is just like how so many of these liberals want to keep fighting the war against guns. Yes, if we ban this or that gun, then people will suddenly be against violence and gun crime will cease. How's that been working? Heroin is illegal and yet it is cheaper to buy heroin than cigarettes and it is readily available to anyone . The heroin and opioid crisis is beyond imagination despite it being regulated by our multi-trillion dollar drug industry and the FDA and the billions we spend on fighting this war on drugs. Sorry Charlie Daniels, but your support for the war on drugs is going to be a big failure. Big governments and bureaucracies which you support are bound to fail in the end. Nazi Germany couldn't survive, Stalin's Russia couldn't survive and a more Fascist Like AMerica with a strong Police state that hangs every drug pusher you can find will also sdaly not survive. We need to bring back God to the people and teach our children morals and discipline. There are a lot of problems of living in a free society and a Constitutional Republic as we do. But, having a militarized police force and trying to regulate everything, including soft drinks (I mean where does it end?), is going to come back to haunt us later.
Posted by Yonatan
Uh?? I'm confused...
#1 I disagree with your opinion of what the gateway drug is (as I do most) but that's because I view alcohol for what it really is too a drug....but it is what it is....That is a foreign substance that you injest that 100% of the time when consumed in any amount by any human being, but its socially accepted and readily available to the public (to the point where it kills 88,000 of our american brothers and sisters we love so much....just not as much as alcohol, you can deny it all you want but it's still for sale and killing Americans as we speak. #2 Aren't you the same Charlie Daniel's that said...."cuz I get stoned in the morning and get drunk in the afternoon" as well as "me I dont want much of nothin at all but I will take another toke!"??? What changed? As a bluetick owning, combat veteran Marine who has probably smoked weed in the same exact spot you did as a kid somewhere kicking around Leland/Brunswick County demand an answer buddy because I still "Damn sure got it made". Cory Bryant. -Sgt USMC-and daily user of medical marijuana for PTSD, it literally saved my life...
Posted by Cory
A number
What kind of "number" were you tokin on in Uneasy Rider? LOL
Posted by Joseph