Marijuana Legalization vs Prohibition
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 3 votes and with 6 points ahead, the winner is...




- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 5
- Time for argument
- Three days
- Max argument characters
- 10,000
- Voting period
- One week
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Judges
BOP is shared.
Pro argues marijuana should be legalized in all 50 states of the US, Con argues that it should be illegal.
Rules:
1. Winner is determined by whoever does the better job arguing and supporting their side.
2. BOP is shared.
3. Evidence can be used citing research from other countries.
4. One forfeit is the loss of a conduct point. Two are a concession.
- Violence & Aggression.
- Car Crashes & Fatalities.
- Addiction.
- Teens & Drug Use.
- Racism.
- Insanity Plea.
- Too expensive.
- “Marijuana use causes violent behavior through increased aggressiveness, paranoia, and personality changes (more suspicious, aggressive, and anger).”
- “According to research studies, marijuana use causes aggressive behavior, causes or exacerbates psychosis, and produces paranoia. These effects have been illustrated through case studies of highly publicized incidents and heightened political profiles.”
- The irrational optimism surrounding medical marijuana purports it to be an outlier and a breakthrough in the medical community.
- There are a lot intrigued by it, concerning its benefits. And it is earning a huge supporterbase, despite its mysterious.
- “Recent illicit and “medical marijuana” (especially grown by care givers for medical marijuana) is of much high potency and more likely to cause violent behavior.
- Marijuana use and its adverse effects should be considered in cases of acts of violence as its role is properly assigned to its high association.
- Recognize that high potency marijuana is a predictable and preventable cause of tragic violent consequences.”
- “It can impair coordination, distort perception, and lead to memory loss and difficulty in problem-solving. Specific to driving, THC can slow reaction times and reduce the ability to make decisions. Studies have shown that the risk of being involved in a crash increases after marijuana use.”
- “Marijuana is the illicit drug most frequently found in the blood of drivers who have been involved in vehicle crashes, including fatal ones.”
- “One study estimated that approximately 3 in 10 people who use marijuana have marijuana use disorder.1”
- “Another study estimated that people who use cannabis have about a 10% likelihood of becoming addicted.2”
- “12-month prevalence of an addiction among U.S. adults varies from 15% to 61%.”
- Addiction creates a dysfunctional society.
- Cultural views in the US along with the stigmatization of addiction makes it more difficult for addicts to get treatment.
- Legalizing marijuana both causes and amplifies addiction.
- “People who begin using marijuana before the age of 18 are four to seven times more likely to develop a marijuana use disorder than adults.19”
- “By 1977, sales of pipes, bongs, rolling papers and drug-oriented magazines and toys were generating $250 million a year (equivalent to $1 billion today). There was little to no regulation or oversight on this booming new industry, however. Products that seemed directly targeted to kids — including Frisbees with pipes on them and bongs shaped like spaceships — were sold openly, often in corner shops and music stores.”
- “Before long, a counterrevolution unfolded, as an army of concerned parents tied paraphernalia’s availability to rising rates of adolescent marijuana use. By 1978, nine percent of high school seniors reported smoking pot every day, and children as young as 13 reported that the drug was easy to get. The “parent movement” sought to close “head shops” and rescind decriminalization laws, while organizing local groups to prevent adolescent drug use in their communities.”
- Marijuana’s history has a reputation of being associated with Mexicans and African Americans.
- Legalizing marijuana reinforces racial stereotypes that lead to more stigmatization against immigrants.
- A killer could decide to get high on marijuana as part of his plan and strangle his intended victim, then get a free pass in the eyes of the law because he was high on marijuana.
- “Dr. Munch also supported the testimony of one murder defendant who claimed insanity because he had been in the same room with a bag of marijuana. The defendant was acquitted by reason of marijuana-induced insanity.(2,3)”
- “June 1, 2018 to June 1, 2019, or $100,000, whichever is less, to the Cannabis Business Development Fund.”
- Illinois’ half-baked marijuana legalization costs state $600M (illinoispolicy.org)
- The Marijuana-Violence study has 14 cases. Correlation is not causation.
- Marijuana can’t increase racism because most Cannabis users are white.
- Marijuana was criminalized because white people lied about marijuana causing Hispanic and Black men to be violent to women.
- Study shows low doses of THC cause aggression, but high doses lower it.
- The Right to Freedom overrides safety risks of marijuana because of dangerous substances like nicotine, alcohol, caffeine.
- There are Cannabis laws that protect people from harm. Cannabis is how I stay happy. Assault is assault, regardless of drugs.
- Cannabis exacerbates psychosis, but nobody understands it in depth. Cannabis affects everyone differently.
- Car statistics are true, but irresponsible people will always be irresponsible which shouldn’t jeopardize others’ freedom.
- Addiction is not unique to Cannabis. Cannabis addiction isn’t as bad as heroin addiction.
- Cannabis use amongst high school seniors dropped 10%.
- Illinois was more than compensated for lost money.
“Because cannabis use can result in irritability, disinhibition, and altered cognition, it is plausible that its use increases the risk of violence and aggression and that this association is exacerbated in psychiatric illness.”
- Medical professionals can observe the neurological changes brought on by THC and marijuana use, the results are conclusive.
- Pro concedes that low doses of THC cause aggression, it is impossible to expect everyone to have access to this information.
- The effects caused by withdrawal include, “Anger, irritability, and aggression.”
“These results demonstrate a moderate association between cannabis use and physical violence, which remained significant regardless of study design and adjustment for confounding factors (i.e., socioeconomic factors, other substance use). Cannabis use in this population is a risk factor for violence.”
- Nicotine has only shown to be self-destructive, not to cause harm to anyone else.
- Caffeine has overall positive impacts on alertness and nowhere near as dangerous as marijuana.
- There has been alcohol prohibition in the 20th century. I currently do not drink alcohol and can see how alcohol has harmed people. I don’t object to outlawing it.
- Banning automobiles is not feasible. People need them for transportation. They also save lives because of ambulances and police vehicles. Marijuana also contributes to automobile accidents, as Pro also concedes.
- Since Pro yields this point, that means banning cannabis would lower deaths caused by automobile crashes. Therefore, saving lives.
“People with psychosis may behave in confusing and unpredictable ways and may become threatening or violent.”
this is simply false. This is you projecting your racism onto everyone else. I have not talked to a single person who associates cannabis only with that type of person. I know doctors, lawyers, professors, scientists, etc who all smoke cannabis. Legalizing it will make these stereotypes go away (which I’m not even sure exist to be honest) because everyone will see people they admire and look up to, smoking cannabis. This argument makes no sense to me. Keeping it illegal causes these stereotypes to stay around because everyone who smokes it is technically a criminal and they are treated as such.
I am not denying that we can observe these changes, what I’m asking is what makes those changes cause aggressive behavior. Also there are many variables that cause aggression, how are we able to rule all of those variables out, and blame it solely on weed for these cases you are speaking of? You’re source also said “it’s plausible…” not “we know this is the case” there’s a difference.
- “It is proposed that alterations in the endocannabinoid system may be the cause of these symptoms."
- “Researchers from Yale University School of Medicine and the Pennsylvania State University found a correlation between marijuana use and feelings of anger based on a sample of 43 recreational users. The 2015 study asked participants to journal angry feelings and outbursts, showing a 20% increase in hostility on days when subjects used cannabis.“
are you really saying that watching someone in your family or friend group wither away and die from lung cancer isn’t harmful to them? Also second hand smoke isn’t harmful either?
This cleverly worded, however, people die from texting and driving, and kill other people all the time. By your logic texting should no longer be legal because it poses too much of a risk to innocent lives that ultimately outweigh peoples right to text. It’s also very important to consider that it is hard to prove cannabis caused the car crash. How many of these crashes were the fault of the person with cannabis in their system? How would you even prove cannabis was active at the time of the crash. It stays in your blood for over a week, in your hair for months, in your urine for weeks. Can you prove cannabis is the cause?
ok fair enough, what about motorcycles and mopeds then? Should they be legal, they’re much more risky to use than a car or truck, why should people have the right to do that? And guess what? Drugs also save many lives per year, cannabis included.
You are now nit-picking what I’m saying. I also pointed out the many other things that exacerbate psychosis and cause if, you didn’t address any of that. Should it be illegal to lose sleep? Should it be illegal to work long hours? Should it be illegal to smoke? All of those things cause and exacerbate psychosis as well.
” this is simply false, because I showed you that teenage use of cannabis was higher when it was illegal everywhere, so how do you figure that makes sense? We’ve already conducted that experiment and got the results. They don’t support this claim.
the irresponsible users are already the vast, vast minority. You never addressed my point about guns, outlawing guns completely would’ve saved hundreds of lives, many of them children, just in past decade. Is it not selfish for people who want guns to not drop them and agree to ban them all because of this?
Freedom Carries inherent risks, and in my opinion, freedom is more important than safety. If we were only concerned about safety, cars wouldn’t be able to go cover 60 mph, no one would be able to camp in the back country, no one could ski or snowboard, no one could race cars, no one could do anything that is dangerous. So yes I think freedom is generally more important than safety.
I’m not saying they’re the only two options, alcohol addiction rates dropped as well. There will always be addicts, no matter what the legal landscape is. Which is why people being addicted to cannabis over alcohol or opioids is beneficial to their health and the society they live in, in comparison.
one thing I don’t think you’re considering is that you don’t lose anything if cannabis is legalized. You still have the option to not use it. Cannabis users on the other hand, risk losing their freedom, children, jobs, etc. who are you, or anyone else, to tell me I deserve to go to prison and get separated from my children because I enjoy cannabis. Why do you think you’re in a position to argue for people losing freedoms and arguably rights, because you think it’s too risky?
Drugs are inanimate objects. Cannabis has never hurt anyone, ever. People have hurt themselves with cannabis, people have also helped themselves with cannabis. Cannabis isn’t grinding itself up, jumping into a pipe, and lighting itself on fire and forcing its way into our lungs. Just like guns aren’t forcing people to pick them up, load them, and shoot children in a class room. Like sugar Should we ban sugar because it causes obesity? Which is the leading cause of death in the US. Why does that get a pass? It’s much riskier and deadly.Things like addiction don’t exist simply because the existence of a particular molecule. They exist because of a plethora of issues going on in a persons life. Besides the fact they’re inanimate objects that have never hurt anyone. The pursuit of happiness clause should legally allow me to pursue what I consider happiness as long as I am not preventing others from doing so. Even if that means using cannabis.
“Scientific progress surrounding drugs is greatly inhibited by prohibition. As one of the judges know, I am not a fan of pounding the drum cannabis benefits, although they do exist, that isn’t the point. The point is the freedom to do what you please as long as you arent affecting other people. However that’s not the point right now. The first point is we aren’t able to fully understand the benefits. The reason this is the case is because scientists are usually not willing to jump through the endless bureaucratic red tape they would have to, to study a schedule 1 substance. Studies have been conducted but theyre not as common as one would think. We know more about methamphetamine (because it is in schedule 2) than we do cannabis. More importantly, I think my opponent can agree with me here, is that we are also not able to adequately study and understand the risks of using a schedule 1 drug because not many studies have been conducted on humans. I don’t believe the risks of any drug that isn’t directly toxic to the user, should cause the drugs to be illegal. Before you go on a rant about the toxicity issues of cannabis, which I am well aware of, I’m talking about the type of toxicity that is seen with a drug like MPTP which causes the permanent onset of Parkinson’s symptoms after one dose. That type of drug should be illegal.”
- Marijuana and the Workplace (Robert P. O’Brien)
- Marijuana and Violence (James Munch)
- The Effects of Marijuana on Consciousness and Behavior (Harris Isbell)
“When I don’t see any evidence that most people associate cannabis with that, you are projecting. I do not care at all what your race is, it is you who is pushing these racist stereotypes, and also pushing the myths that caused them to form, you are projecting.”
- “Despite Marijuana Legalization Black People Still Almost Four Times More Likely to Get Arrested”
“I am not back pedaling, the stats show that there has been an increase in accidents involving cannabis. I’m asking how you know cannabis is causing these accidents. More adults are smoking cannabis now than ever, so of course you’re going to see an increase in car accidents that had cannabis involved. That doesn’t mean cannabis is causing the accidents. Which is why I asked you to provide the number of accidents caused by the person who had cannabis in their system. You failed to do so.”
“again you are completely missing the point. It isn’t irrelevant in the slightest. The philosophical approach to both of these topics is identical. They are both risky to allow people to posses and use freely, that doesn’t mean that should be illegal. I’m not understanding how you’re having a hard time grasping that. Just because guns and cannabis aren’t the same thing, does not mean they can’t be approached in the same way when it comes to the freedom to own, use, and posses them.”
“The freedom of the American people should be stopped at drug use. Whether that’s cannabis or heroin. We can point out risks of things endlessly and find a million reasons to ban them, however banning these drugs also comes with a lot risks that you are not considering that I have tried to point out to you. I accept the risks of cannabis use, but it is my place to tell someone not to do something if it isn’t affecting other people, nor is it yours. Just because you can find certain levels of risks, like you can with literally anything, does not mean we need make things illegal, and throw people in cages for possessing, using, or distributing the substances or engaging in the activities. What matters is the freedom to make decisions regarding one’s own consciousness, if we are not free to change our state of mind, we are not free in a meaningful sense. Something as intimate and personal as changing one’s consciousness should be be frowned upon or looked down on. I have never claimed cannabis is risk free, I even had a debate with one of the judges where that was the central aspect of the debate. I believe cannabis advocates are guilty of never talking about the risks. I don’t blame them though, because people like you will use that as ammunition to keep it illegal, when that isn’t the point. It also changes the nature of the cannabis experience if you believe there are little risks and large medical benefits. That’s another discussion though. I agree there are risks, I simply disagree risks are a reason to keep it illegal, because as I have said many times, we are perfectly free to engage in many, many dangerous activities that carry risks."
- Pro has conceded my 2nd contention about car crashes.
- He has challenged me on my first argument about Violence & Aggression, but I have maintained it with evidence. This also includes the part about Racism.
- The insanity plea and addiction remain unchallenged, so before it is too late I want to give Pro a chance to contest these. Extend.
- “In 2019, 37% of US high school students reported lifetime use of marijuana and 22% reported use in the past 30 days.1 Past-year vaping of marijuana also remained steady in 2020 following large increases in 2018 and 2019. However, large percentages of middle and high school students reported past-year marijuana vaping—8% of eighth graders, 19% of 10th graders, and 22% of 12th graders.2”
- “Illinois’ consumer-facing taxes on marijuana are even higher than California’s.”
- “For every dollar gained in tax revenue, Coloradans spent approximately $4.50 to mitigate the effects of legalization.
- Costs related to the healthcare system and from high school drop-outs are the largest cost contributors.
- Research shows a connection between marijuana use and the use of alcohol and other substances.
- Calls to Poison Control related to marijuana increased dramatically since legalization of medical marijuana and legalization of recreational marijuana.
- 69% of marijuana users say they have driven under the influence of marijuana at least once, and 27% admit to driving under the influence on a daily basis.
- The estimated costs of DUIs for people who tested positive for marijuana only in 2016 approaches $25 million.”
- Violence and Brutality- Maintained. Extend.
- Car Crashes & Fatalities- Pro keeps challenging the data and evidence I've put forth after conceding once.
- Addiction- Uncontested. Extend.
- Teens & Drug Use- Conceded. Extend.
- Racism- Pro tries multiple times to refute this, but my peer-reviewed evidence is too overwhelming to counter. Maintained. Extend.
- Insanity Plea- Refuted.
- Expenses & Regulations- Dropped. Extend.
- "Marijuana use affects reaction time, road tracking, lane keeping and attention, all of which can make a crash more likely."
- "Car crashes and deaths are on the rise in U.S. states that have legalized recreational marijuana, a new study finds."
Notes in comments
i apologize, it has been a very busy week for me and i havent looked over the debate as i have promised.
i looked in depth to one of the links mps1213 and i determined it to be of higher scientific quality than the rest, it had a pround affect on my judgement of this debate, not so much the arguements, but on the topic of legalization. https://jaapl.org/content/early/2021/12/10/JAAPL.210034-21
its my opinion that neither sides read this article in depth by HBSc rafiei and doctor kolla. I advise both parties to read it all the way.
however, this one source as indepth as it is, doesnt determine the debate.
here are my general thoughts and weighing of the arguements.
there is enough evidence that weed needs to be moderated in at least 5 of the 7 applications lancelot mentioned.
the insanity plea is intresting, and as a prescedent in court i am very concerned about the future rulings until the supreme court can make its judgement... but there seems to be no scientific backing that weed causes people to be insane. insanity in a legal setting simply means "unable to determine right from wrong" and the links provided give no clear evidence that weed in high or low dosage directly affects that.
and expenses.
im sorry i just cant justify if a substances legality can be determined by cost and production. meth and cocaine were mentioned by mps1213 and i feel he missed and opportunity to "capitalize" on this (yes, i laughed at that, dont judge me!)
racism is independent of the drugs affects, now it is true that racism is involved WITH the usage of drugs and society's response to media and reports on this are... not very encouraging.
as you may have noticed, im not weighing arguements as well as i should. i simply didnt invest in the debate as i should have. for that, i beg your pardon. if either of you feel my vote is wrong, by all means i give you and mods free reign to remove it.
i know it is irrelevant to this debate, but i feel that legalization is slowed by 2 things. 1: money acquired from getting it from outside the country. 2: ignorance and fear by many people due to broad brushes and stereotypes by the media.
it is likely that within 5 years cannabis will become completely legal.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1mCu0_bi1kemyqjwZ-GNKKimzKlxnUHvsBuZdLvodzik/edit?usp=sharing
Good debate, guys. Close one.
Thanks for the vote!
Overall, this was a great debate. I apologize for voting late – it wouldn’t have changed anything, but still, it’s on me for not planning it into my after-school schedule.
Arguments:
This debate was definitely tricky to judge, since there were a lot of arguments, but the majority of them had little to no impact. I assumed roughly equal burdens for both sides, as they were arguing for the merits of opposing plans.
For CON, I wasn’t convinced by most of the arguments by the end of the debate. In particular, the racism and insanity plea arguments seemed to be particularly weak, as if they were just tacked on at the end for some extra fluff. His arguments about cost got turned around by the cost of current enforcement, while he failed to demonstrate any substantial, or concrete harms, for LEGALIZATION in particular – it's important to note that legalization won’t magically cause linearly increased harms, while prohibition won’t cause marijuana to disappear.
His first and second contentions were good, and I definitely weighed them substantially, as I buy that they go up linearly as marijuana use increases. The third and fourth go together, but were less convincing – people who are already addicted don’t care about whether marijuana is legal or not.
Meanwhile, PRO had some good sources and contentions, but he suffered from a lack of a focused structure. His contention about reducing overdoses from opioids was poorly supported and went nowhere. I did like some nice reversals and source contesting, it definitely mitigated CON’s case. On the other hand, the substantial whataboutism about other drugs, as well as some less relevant points, had little impact. However, there was an excellent contention about imprisonment, which was successful in mitigating CON’s societal harms.
In terms of rebuttals, CON did better in addressing all points, but did so in less depth. PRO dropped a few points, but he had strong rebuttals to many of CON’s main points. So both sides did decent here.
If both sides had fully proven their case was directly linked to the legalization (or prohibition) of marijuana, their impacts would be equal and I would probably leave it tied. However, there’s a crucial distinction here: PRO managed to use concrete data from the real world to demonstrate the effects of prohibition, while CON didn’t - all he did was cite harms of marijuana, and try to directly link them to legalization. However, without some sort of concrete number, or a case that the harms would be direct, and proportionate to the harms of not legalization marijuana, I don’t give it as much weight.
So all in all, arguments go to PRO, but it was a close one.
Sources:
Both sides did their due diligence with sources, and I saw no glaring gaps or inaccuracies in terms of what the sources said, and what it was claimed to say.
S/G:
Good by both sides.
Conduct:
Good by both sides – glad to see a minimum of ad hominems. Great sportsmanship by CON, offering to waive the “no forfeitures” rule, BTW.
Oh fuq, I had the Rfd written, but I forgot to post it. Very sorry and will post ASAP. It's good to see it didn't affect the result of the debate tho.
You seemed to reread it, but so it's more understandable, the tldr version is that if legalization makes people smoke less, then all the reasons marijuana is bad is reasons we should legalize it, that way less people actually smoke it.
In regard to the aggression thing, you should be playing terminal defense. In the wise words of Ray Liotta's character from Marriage Story, "If we start from a place of reasonable and they start from a place of crazy, when we settle we'll be somewhere between reasonable and crazy!"
Edit: Good example of this is me saying that gun control is good because all governments are good and citizens should never resist them.
You only have 12 hours left for your vote are you gonna be able to do it?
This was a very good debate, prolly the most interesting one I’ve had so far. As you can prolly tell cannabis is the one I’m used to debating the least, I’m usually discussing the “hard drugs” and their legalization and their pharmacology. Mainly because cannabis doesn’t interest me much, and it’s a pretty simple drug. I think it should be legalized but I also think the cannabis crowd is as annoying as the hippie psychedelic crowd so I try to engage in many discussions about because people only want to talk about how “healthy” it is. I still had a fun debate regardless.
You didn’t lol I’m joking
My bad, I didn’t mean it to come off that way.
I never had a problem with necessarily claiming that cannabis causes some people to be more aggressive. The claim I was trying to make is that the majority of cannabis users do not experience that. That is evident by the 20% statistic you cited.
Don’t patronize me lmao
Good job!
Nvm I read your vote more carefully.
Also post mortem blood tests are almost never useful which is why they’re usually pushed by people trying to push a certain rhetoric about drugs.
Hey, I may be misreading your vote, or misunderstanding, it seems you disagree with me. Is that is the case I just wanted to make sure you know I am Pro and Lancelot is Con. I disagree with some of what your vote said, however if you think Lancelot deserved your vote, which is what im getting from your reasoning, I wanted you to know that he is Con and I am pro so you can make sure you voted for the right person.
If you meant to give me the nod, maybe I misunderstood your vote or didn’t read it carefully enough.
Will be voting by end of today
Thanks for the vote!
Notes for Pro,
1. All the freedom stuff I said above.
2. Make sure to check your sources. The violence and aggression one sold you out, so read through an entire thing before you put it in.
3. Make sure you're answering the warrant Con says. If Con says that drivers self report, you need to talk about the unreliability of self-reporting, not post mortem analysis.
Notes for Con,
1. You get lost in the weeds of all the little points and missed the big picture. The legalization decreases use debate should have been a major place, not just you half-hearted questioning a source. There are certain arguments that are lynchpins and you have to check for that.
2. On the driving arguments, answer their post-mortem stuff, either by calling out the self-reporting for the judge or get in the mud about why post-mortem analysis good.
3. I don't really understand the racism argument. I think you need to flesh it way out for me to understand what exactly is going on here.
Really good job, if either side has any questions, feel free to reach out.
Very good debate, I vote Pro and here's why
1. I buy that mariujuana makes people more violent. The argument about endocannabinoid systems and a 20% increase in hostility through a study of 300k people won me over. The counter study that shows high doses suppress aggression even admit low doses increase aggression.
2. I buy that marijuana is a cause of psychosis. Even if there are other causes, this doesn't contest that marijuana is a cause.
3. I buy that marijuana causes higher accidents. Even if I whole heartedly buy Pro's argument about post-mortem being impossible to fully tell, Con sites 69% self-reporting to driving high.
4. In regard to the idea about motorcycles, nicotine, alcohol, etc. and other risky activities, I see this as a warrant for Pro's freedom claims. With that, I don't weigh this argument for three reasons.
A. I think Con makes the right argument when he says that freedom in a way that harms others is bad. Since they're winning aggression and driving, I think that they win freedom in this instance is bad.
B. Pro is not making freedom win anything. For example, should I have the freedom to murder people? We would say no because freedom in a vacuum isn't worth anything. Pro needs to be saying freedom, especially in this instance, is crucial to personal autonomy or quality of life and say that the negligible amount of deaths don't stack up to that. Freedom in a vacuum is less of a concern for me than deaths.
C. The other way Pro could have used this is ditch all the freedom stuff and say "alcohol, nicotine, and motorcycles make deaths on the road and through health issues and through aggression inevitable, even without marijuana. Since these are inevitable, it is only a question of the benefits from tax revenue" This means that, the idea of marijuana illegalization in a vacuum can't solve for the impacts of Con, but legalization lets you get your benefits. You didn't do any of this work, so I don't evaluate it.
5. I buy that cannabis is better than heroin and that heroin rates of addiction go down when cannabis rates go up. Con says that we shouldn't have addiction, but this doesn't seem responsive to Pro's argument.
6. I believe adolescent drug use and drug use goes down writ large with legalization. Con never answers when Pro says this. Simply restating statistics that show kids in the status quo use drugs doesn't prove anything if it is still less than 50 years ago. While the question of how "legal" drugs are due to state bans would have been a good answer, this is not brought up.
7. For the racism argument, Con falls into the trap of posting links but not doing the work in round. Outside of that, however, I buy that regulations make it hard for POC to get into the industry. Pro does bring up in the fourth round, that policing and jailing negatively affects them worse, as was jailing brought up earlier in the debate, so I feel ok evaluating this for Pro. If systemic racism impacts POC either way, it is better for them to be unable to own a business than go to jail.
8. I take the drug crime stuff as a wash. Both of yall gave one example of drugs getting someone off and drugs getting someone charged. Seems equal.
9. On the costs, I buy that legalization is expensive because of all the supporting costs.
10. People go to jail for simple possession.
11. Children of people in jail are more likely to go to jail.
In conclusion, either side could win the debate from the facts that have been set out before me. The issue is that neither side is saying "car accident deaths are worse than jail time" or vice versa in a way that can give me an easy out. However, my go to is to first way safety versus freedom, and I think I did that evaluation above with a notes. I prioritize safety because those are lives and I'm not given a reason to prefer freedom. With that, I then ask, does legalization decrease drug use, which I find it does. With that, not only does legalization stop jail time, but in a roundabout way, solves all of the violence of drugs.
Thx, whiteflame!
i will respond once ive looked over the sources and weighed the arguements. Got a week to vote.
ill probably respond tomorrow or friday
What are your personal thoughts on marijuana?
will be praying for you and the company and yalls families.
Wow… you have my condolences, that sounds awful. Generally, when the reason is good, I tend not to factor forfeits, even when it comes to conduct.
I’ll waive the forfeit rule. This will not count against you, given the circumstances.
You have my condolences.
Hey guys, i don’t want any sympathy votes or anything, so please stil vote objectively. I don’t know if I’ll be able to do the argument today, I’ll try not to forfeit. My company’s private plane went down and killed everyone on board today and I lost a buddy, and some other people I knew. So if I end up forfeiting that’s why, but I will try not to.
Thanks mate, I look forward to the final round.
Good response.
AleutianTexan, AustinL, and whiteflame will read through everything. I know that from previous votes.
I will be thoroughly impressed if the judges read all of this. I wouldn’t blame you if you guys closed your eyes and pressed random buttons lol
Well that’s good, your arguments are philosophically sound and coherent I just simply disagree with your stance. I also think your evidence leaves a lot to be desired most of it is assumptions based off of other assumptions
Hey guys, I’ll be at work until about 8:00 tonight. I may have time to respond during work but most likely not.
You have good arguments. I feel like the biggest issue here is simple philosophical disagreements. And that’s fine, I respect you for at least being educated and using evidence to support your beliefs. This next round will solely be dedicated to combatting your points, the final round will be solely dedicated to putting my points forward regardless of yours.
Good debate. I know we talk shit but I respect you more than most anti-drug advocates.
Ran out of characters again, 10,000 isn’t enough to discuss a topic this intricate. I have some sources for you guys
MPTP toxicity: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK27974/
Cannabis use among high schooler trends: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4629476/
Thanks for doing this debate honestly. I think you’re taking the wrong approach to it as a whole, but you seem to be well versed enough to st least give some reasons for your beliefs. I just think your beliefs on this topic are constructed by looking at these risks you put forward in the wrong way. You’re not uneducated on this topic. I just think you’re maybe using a little bit of confirmation bias at the least. I also think you’re seeing these issues as something solely brought on by cannabis, and not the social aspects of being a cannabis user, bad science surrounding cannabis use, and the lack of education surrounding the use of drugs in general. There is such thing as bad science, studies can be poorly conducted, data can be misinterpreted, etc. which is what I think you seem to be doing or at less the sources you are citing seem to be doing. Which is why the study i published presented an actual mechanism for aggression responses in cannabis users, where yours was based off of cases that could have many more variables integrated into the situation besides just cannabis use. That is where the issues of most social studies interpreting drug risks start to fail. They aren’t establishing a mechanism for their claim, for example, what exactly is happening in the brain to make people more aggressive? Or was cannabis the only factor in these cases of violence where cannabis was in the system? If not how did we rule out these other factors as possible causes for these 14 cases your study mentioned? It’s much more complicated than just looking at violent offenders who use cannabis and saying cannabis caused it.
I had a lot more to say, but I ran out of characters, my next argument will be less focused on your points and trying to convince the judges of my points.
You said a lot of good stuff, however I just think you approaching this issue and these statistics in the wrong way. I will show the judges and you, the way I approach the issues and risks of drug use, cannabis specifically in this debate, and see if I can convince people.
Good debate.
This seems like a good debate along with good judges.
I'm glad to be spectating.
That was just a practice debate for me. 😂
I spent too many debates defending socialism, so I needed to switch it up.
I have a strong opinion on this one, however, I seem to vote against my opinions all the time, so no bias. As a socialist, I just voted free market capitalism good, lol.
It's all good. Looking forward to a good debate. I do have an opinion on this one, but it's not a strong one and I think there are good cases to be made for both sides.
Glad to hear that.
As long as you get your response in before the 3-day round deadline, it doesn't affect things.
Just wanna let the judges know, I’m working 15 hours a day at an oil spill. I’m usually very good about responding quickly but I may be responding late at night for this entire debate.
Although I do have some personal bias, I promise that my vote will be fair and objective to the debate.
AleutianTexan and Whiteflame are the most objective voters I know.
Zero risk of bias corruption.
I accepted at the very least.
Gotcha, never done a debate like this.
What happens if the judges don’t accept here.
Bet, if I have time while I’m at work, which is doubtful I’ll try to get an argument done early. If not it’ll be a in about 8-10 hours from now.