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The Drug War: Marijuana and Money

 

The criteria to be placed in this group are; "A. The drug or other substance has a high potential for abuse. B. The drug or other substance has no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States. C. There is a lack of accepted safety for use of the drug or other substance under medical supervision"( Title 21, US Code). This flawed ranking system established by the DEA has 5 categories and placing substances such as PCP and cocaine are in lesser schedules then marijuana, despite the common opinion that these drugs are much worse for you. .
             Drugs have negative effects and these are compounded when abused. This is not limited to illegal substances such as cocaine and heroin but also include legal substances such as nicotine and alcohol. These and all drugs have adverse effects that can destroy people, rip apart families, and even result in death. Marijuana is no exception and when abused it can cause problems, although these don't compare to any other Schedule I and many other lower scheduled substances and even alcohol in most cases. This classification system for illicit substances wrongly classifies marijuana. The DEA falsely states that it is very harmful no matter how it is administered. Unlike alcohol, nicotine, and many controlled substances all studies on toxicity and deadly levels of Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the active chemical in marijuana, have concluded results similar to these, "Tetrahydrocannabinol is a very safe drug. Laboratory animals (rats, mice, dogs, monkeys) can tolerate doses of up to 1,000 mg/kg (milligrams per kilogram). This would be equivalent to a 70 kg person swallowing 70 grams of the drug -- about 5,000 times more than is required to produce a high" (Iversen). Seventy grams of marijuana is close to three pounds and by the time anyone could ingest or smoke that much their THC levels would already be dropping making it practically impossible.


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