As with any drug, with wide spread acceptance and use will come the enlarged numbers of related fatalities. hard to add up the numbers if no one is really counting them.... It would be sufficient to say if any other drug were allowed on the market for recreational use the numbers would climb dramatically. More people dieing at the hands of the irresponsible, IMO is not a good idea.. call me crazy.
Fact: There is no compelling evidence that marijuana contributes substantially to traffic accidents and fatalities. At some doses, marijuana affects perception and psychomotor performances- changes which could impair driving ability. However, in driving studies, marijuana produces little or no car-handling impairment- consistently less than produced by low moderate doses of alcohol and many legal medications. In contrast to alcohol, which tends to increase risky driving practices, marijuana tends to make subjects more cautious. Surveys of fatally injured drivers show that when THC is detected in the blood, alcohol is almost always detected as well. For some individuals, marijuana may play a role in bad driving. The overall rate of highway accidents appears not to be significantly affected by marijuana's widespread use in society.
* Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse. “Legalization: Panacea or Pandora’s Box”. New York. (1995):36.
* Swan, Neil. “A Look at Marijuana’s Harmful Effects.”
NIDA Notes. 9.2 (1994): 14.
* Moskowitz, Herbert and Robert Petersen.
Marijuana and Driving: A Review. Rockville: American Council for Drug Education, 1982. 7.
* Mann, Peggy.
Marijuana Alert. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1985. 265.
(from Myths and Facts About Marijuana -
http://74.125.113.132/search?q=cache:6S9-cyum5tQJ:www.marijuanafacts.org/+marijuana-related+fatalities&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us
The issue at large is the problem of we are having a problem with society and Alcohol abuse, if other drugs are allowed to fall in to accepted domain, will this increase the already huge burden we as a society already have to deal with? Alcohol related fatalities aside, look at the goverment $$ spent on treatment, be it medical problems related, or treatment of addiction or what have you.
Look at the government $$ spent on the investigation, prosecution, sentencing and imprisoning/jailing of pot offenders?
"Prisons cost taxpayers more than $32 billion a year. Every year that an inmate spends in prison costs $22,000. An individual sentenced to five years for a $300 theft costs the public more than $100,000. The cost of a life term averages $1.5 million." - From "Prison Facts"
http://www.heartsandminds.org/prisons/facts.htm...But society at large is generally of the exessive nature with little self control, thus all the Drunk drivers we have running over folks. We can hardly go a week at work without atleast one nut bag wasted out on somthing including alcohol, crashing in to our equipment or driving thru the job site narrowly missing folks. I have buried more than one friend and family member due to the negligence of others who were indulging in some form of mind altering substance.
See above cited text from Myths and Facts.
In a perfect world where people knew thier limits, abided by them and acted responsibly.., I could see it. But with society thriving on excess and instant gratification and irresponsibility as it is today.. I cant.
Again, please see http://www.mcwilliams.com/books/aint/101.htm
The United States government , regardless of which direction it tends to be leaning of its own accord, was never invented to be a substitute parent, a nanny, a babysitter or a life coach. To quote the late Peter McWilliams, "United States Constitution and its Bill of Rights clearly give us the right to pursue our lives without the forced intervention of moralists, do-gooders, and busybodies." Only when I am judged incompetent, is the government allowed to intervene in my own rule over my life. Obviously, the more power we allow the government to have, the more it will take. The founding fathers warned us about it. We should take heed.