Question

Alice: "I cannot believe some states have made marijuana legal. If you make it legal, then you are telling teenagers that there is nothing wrong with getting high. This will create a generation of potheads who drop out of high school, get fired from their jobs, and eventually mug people to feed their addiction. Furthermore, everybody knows that weed is gateway drug. Kids who start smoking weed end up overdosing on crack and heroine. We need to keep weed illegal and keep our children safe." Bob: "I think you need to chill out. The vast majority of people who smoke weed do not become addicted either to it or to more dangerous drugs. Also, studies show that employees who get high are more likely to get promoted than employees who do not, and there is very little correlation between marijuana use and other crimes. If weed were really as dangerous as you say, then I would agree with you about banning it, but weed is actually less harmful physically and mentally than alcohol." Clearly, Alice and Bob disagree about whether we should make marijuana legal, but is their disagreement a moral one or a causal one?

          Alice: "I cannot believe some states have made marijuana legal. If you make it legal, then you are telling teenagers that there is nothing wrong with getting high. This will create a generation of potheads who drop out of high school, get fired from their jobs, and eventually mug people to feed their addiction. Furthermore, everybody knows that weed is gateway drug. Kids who start smoking weed end up overdosing on crack and heroine. We need to keep weed illegal and keep our children safe."
Bob: "I think you need to chill out. The vast majority of people who smoke weed do not become addicted either to it or to more dangerous drugs. Also, studies show that employees who get high are more likely to get promoted than employees who do not, and there is very little correlation between marijuana use and other crimes. If weed were really as dangerous as you say, then I would agree with you about banning it, but weed is actually less harmful physically and mentally than alcohol."
Clearly, Alice and Bob disagree about whether we should make marijuana legal, but is their disagreement a moral one or a causal one?
        
Show more…

Added by Timothy A.

Psychology Openstax
Psychology Openstax
Rosie M. Spielman 1st Edition
AceChat toggle button
Close icon
Ace pointing down

Please give Ace some feedback

Your feedback will help us improve your experience

Thumb up icon Thumb down icon
Thanks for your feedback!
Profile picture
Alice: "I cannot believe some states have made marijuana legal. If you make it legal, then you are telling teenagers that there is nothing wrong with getting high. This will create a generation of potheads who drop out of high school, get fired from their jobs, and eventually mug people to feed their addiction. Furthermore, everybody knows that weed is gateway drug. Kids who start smoking weed end up overdosing on crack and heroine. We need to keep weed illegal and keep our children safe." Bob: "I think you need to chill out. The vast majority of people who smoke weed do not become addicted either to it or to more dangerous drugs. Also, studies show that employees who get high are more likely to get promoted than employees who do not, and there is very little correlation between marijuana use and other crimes. If weed were really as dangerous as you say, then I would agree with you about banning it, but weed is actually less harmful physically and mentally than alcohol." Clearly, Alice and Bob disagree about whether we should make marijuana legal, but is their disagreement a moral one or a causal one?
Close icon
Play audio
Feedback
Powered by NumerAI
Ivan Kochetkov Kathleen Carty
Danielle Fairburn verified

William F and 66 other subject Psychology educators are ready to help you.

Ask a new question

*

Labs

-

Want to see this concept in action?

NEW

Explore this concept interactively to see how it behaves as you change inputs.

View Labs

*

Key Concepts

-
Key Concept
Premium Feature
Explore the core concept behind this problem.
Play button
Key Concept
Premium Feature
Explore the core concept behind this problem.
Your browser does not support the video tag.

*

Recommended Videos

-
in-2012-colorado-and-washington-became-the-first-states-to-legalize-marijuana-for-recreational-use-and-have-since-been-joined-by-oregon-alaska-and-washington-dc-in-2014-colorado-is-reported-75338

In 2012, Colorado and Washington became the first states to legalize marijuana for recreational use, and have since been joined by Oregon, Alaska, and Washington, D.C. In 2014, Colorado is reported to have received more than $50 million in tax revenue from the sale of recreational marijuana, much of which was slated to be used for school construction. The potential for increased tax revenues and the benefits these revenues can provide has a number of other states contemplating the possible legalization of recreational-use marijuana. a. Recall that efficiency means producing what people want at the least cost. Can you make an efficiency argument in favor of states allowing the recreational use of marijuana? b. What non-monetary costs might be associated with legalizing marijuana use? Would these costs have an impact on the efficiency argument you presented in part a? c. Using the concept of equity, argue for or against the legalization of recreational-use marijuana. d. What do you think would happen to the flow of tax revenue to state governments if all 50 states legalized marijuana?

William F.

in-recent-years-a-number-of-states-have-legalized-the-medicinal-and-recreational-use-of-cannabis-although-it-remains-illegal-at-the-federal-level-the-federal-government-allows-exemptions-on-the-basi-2

In recent years, a number of states have legalized the medicinal and recreational use of cannabis, although it remains illegal at the federal level. The federal government allows exemptions on the basis of mandated regulation. Thirty-one states and the District of Columbia have legalized the use of cannabis in some form for medical reasons (see Pacula & Smart, 2017). As of 2021, recreational cannabis is fully legal in Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington State and in several smaller jurisdictions. According to a Pew Research Center survey, 61% of Americans are in favor of complete or partial legalization of cannabis (Pew Research Center, 2018). As marijuana has been perceived to have lower risks over the last decade, the rate and frequency of use has increased (Compton, Han, Jones, Blanco, & Hughes, 2016). Consider the different possibilities for decriminalization, complete legalization, reassignment from the criminal realm to the medical, etc. Discuss the pros and cons of decriminalization. What reasons can you give for why some drugs are legal while others are not? Is this an arbitrary distinction? Who gets to decide and based on what rationale?

Caroline M.

although-marijuana-has-approved-medical-uses-and-less-significant-negative-effects-than-some-other-drugs-of-abuse-it-remains-classified-as-a-schedule-i-drug-by-the-federal-government-meaning-55904

Although marijuana has approved medical uses and fewer significant negative effects than some other drugs of abuse, it remains classified as a Schedule I drug by the federal government, meaning it is considered among the most dangerous drugs in terms of addictive potential and other toxic effects, and not seen by the government as having legitimate medical uses. Why do you think the federal government continues to maintain this official stance when so many states have opted to legalize the medical use of marijuana to varying degrees? Do you see this changing in the near future? Compose a 100-to-200-word post responding to this question.

Akash M.


*

Recommended Textbooks

-
Psychology Openstax

Psychology Openstax

Rosie M. Spielman 1st Edition
achievement 1,246 solutions
Myers' Psychology for AP

Myers' Psychology for AP

David G. Myers 2nd Edition
achievement 1,872 solutions
Psychology

Psychology

Saundra K. Ciccarelli, J. Noland White 5th Edition
achievement 1,533 solutions

*

Transcript

-
00:01 All right, hi.
00:01 So you have a lot of questions about marijuana and legalization of it.
00:07 So i wrote some answers and you can kind of just go over a little bit.
00:12 Okay, so can i make an efficiency argument about allowing marijuana? having marijuana's legal product is not efficient.
00:18 Black market, legal growers, and criminals run the market and corrupt and unsafe means.
00:22 If it is legal and regulated like alcohol, marijuana should become safer to buy, more accessible, and the price should go down.
00:29 So these are my reasons.
00:30 For efficiency, for legalization.
00:33 What non -monetary costs are there? well, i mean, it takes up water, a lot of water...
Need help? Use Ace
Ace is your personal tutor. It breaks down any question with clear steps so you can learn.
Start Using Ace
Ace is your personal tutor for learning
Step-by-step explanations
Instant summaries
Summarize YouTube videos
Understand textbook images or PDFs
Study tools like quizzes and flashcards
Listen to your notes as a podcast
Continue solving this problem
Create a free account to:
  • View full step-by-step solution
  • Ask follow-up questions with Ace AI
  • Save progress and study later
Continue Free
Join the community

18,000,000+

Students on Numerade


Trusted by students at 8,000+ universities

Numerade

Get step-by-step video solution
from top educators

Continue with Clever
or



By creating an account, you agree to the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy
Already have an account? Log In

A free answer
just for you

Watch the video solution with this free unlock.

Numerade

Log in to watch this video
...and 100,000,000 more!


EMAIL

PASSWORD

OR
Continue with Clever