As an addendum to what GVC said - which I agree with 100% - a regulated system would provide a bedrock for proper education. And I believe people will generally be more responsible if they are allowed to use within a structure, rather than being prohibited entirely.
You really think pot is more available to teenagers than alcohol,...
...and that suddenly with legalization people will respect the regulations on it where they didn't before?
Legalizing it would actually make it more difficult for minors to get, and offer greater incentive to adults to use it properly.
As available or more. Pot is ridiculously easy to score.
That's not really what I said. For the most part, the regulations now are; YOU CAN'T HAVE IT. If it's legal, and you can use it w/o fear of being incarcerated for it, why not respect the regulations? The folks in Amsterdam don't seem to have a problem with it.
Okay, so why would the regulations on age limit( like those imposed on alcohol) suddenly make it more difficult for minors to get if the dealers and teenagers are already willing to break the the laws against its use?
Because the regulations would be age limit, and who could grow and sell it. Why would teenagers suddenly decide to obey the laws restricting their use of it based on their age, and why would dealers suddenly respect the laws restricting who can sell it and to whom?
Because who the "dealers" are would change dramatically with legalization. Instead of marginalized people selling on the street, you'd get everyday squares at 7/11 selling weed at lower prices and margins. Do you really think that person is as likely to break the law, especially since he/she isn't going to make any extra money doing so, than current drug dealers/organized criminals? Legalizing cannabis would significantly reduce the supply of cannabis available to minors. At least, that's the argument.Because the regulations would be age limit, and who could grow and sell it. Why would teenagers suddenly decide to obey the laws restricting their use of it based on their age, and why would dealers suddenly respect the laws restricting who can sell it and to whom?
I'm not sure I follow. Cannabis is not terribly expensive to cultivate. With legalization, the price of cannabis is almost certain to fall (for fairly obvious reasons...). If the price were to rise due to exorbitant taxes on the product, the incentive to produce and sell it illegally would still be present, and it would be just as hard to keep cannabis out of the hands of minors. With the fall in price, however, there'd be far less incentive to produce illegally on a small scale basis, and except for some hobby growers (as in the case with alcohol in the United States), most people will obtain their cannabis from legal, regulated establishments (like a liquor store). Kids would require a consenting adult to help them acquire cannabis, as they do with alcohol, at that point. That's what makes sense to me, anyway.But the product will be more expensive and harder to get.
Yes, and? If their parents have weed, they can no doubt take that too. And if legalization doesn't lead to an increase in number of users (like in Portugal, for example), there wouldn't be an increase in teen-accessible marijuana in households (presumably). What you would see, however, is a reduction in black market dealers, which would cut off a second source of marijuana for teens.Most kids I knew/know got their alcohol from their parent's liquor cabinet or refrigerator. Alcohol is ridiculously easy for kids to get. I saw far far more kids with beer in a thermos than with marijuana when I was in high school. If marijuana were legal and more parents (or uncles, cousins, friends' parents, etc.) used it then it would be far more accessible for kids than it is now when they have to find someone to buy it from. Almost every kid I knew who drank or smoked in high school got the cigs or booze from mom and dad (or uncle, et al.). Almost none of them had to find someone to help them buy it, they just took it.