Monday, January 20, 2020
Decriminalization Vs. Prohibition :: essays research papers
 Decriminalization vs. Prohibition           The idea of Drug Prohibition made sense: lower the availability of drugs  by the use of law enforcement. Unfortunately, Drug Prohibition means heavy  costs while proving to be ineffective and counterproductive.       I was thirteen when I saw drugs for the first time. I was with some of  my friends that live down the road from me. They asked me if I wanted to get  high with them. At the time, I didn't know what getting high meant, so I asked  them. One of them pulled ut a long slender object, similar to a cigarette, but  twisted on either end. They told me it was something special. I was still  bewildered. They said "It's pot, you know, marijuana?" Immediately I said no.  I had seen several anti-dug commercials, all with the same motto, "Just Say No".  I felt so good about myself. I had done the right thing. I said no to my  friends, which is a very hard decision to make at that age. I was not going to  be one of those sad cases, where my life is wasted away. I was not going to be  a crazed addict, who would stop at nothing to get a hit. I was not going to be  dodging the law my whole life. I was going to be everything I wanted to be, and  drugs were definitely not going to get in the way. I promised myself I would  not end up like Jimi Hendrix, or Janis Joplin, both found dead after overdoses,  because I had the power to say no. I had read stories and seen news flashes  about the side effects of some drugs. I had read newspaper articles about  people in Rome, which is just a few minutes away, dying of heroin overdoses. I  had seen people on TV that were alive, but were not conscious of their  surroundings, because of drug use. Their lives were basically over. I had  listened to speakers preach that drugs were one of the Devil's tools. There was  no way I would even consider ever trying them, because once a person starts,  they can't stop.       It was a few years later that I heard the other side of the story. I  learned that not only were we losing the war on drugs, but that the war had been  corrupted. The government was wasting money on something without a cause, or  hope. It wasn't long after that when I tried marijuana for the first time. I  remember it well. I was with my sister, who was the only person that I couldn't    					    
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