Left-winged folk rejoiced when it was
announced that Justin Trudeau, leader of the Liberal Party, is the new
Prime Minister of Canada. Supporters are celebrating the optimistic
campaign promises, including lower taxes, more infrastructure
investments and a promise to launch an inquiry into the thousands of
missing and murdered indigenous women.
But a promise that has many
hippies and stoners especially stoked is the promise of legal marijuana
sometime in the near future. So how long until there’s a dispensary in
every McDonald’s?
Unfortunately, probably not anytime soon.
The decriminalization while we wait for legalization should lighten the
“War on Drugs’” economic strain via the prison system. But in the
interim there is a lot that needs to be discussed before weed can and
should be easily accessible, from how much to tax it, to personal
plants, to approving more large-scale producers.
Something that is absolutely necessary to
the legalization process is more thorough studying of how varying
amounts of THC and other psychoactive components in the bloodstream
affect the brain’s functioning. There are numerous neurological changes
that happen when you get high and a few major ones are reduced
multitasking ability, reduced attention span, and reduced fine motor
skills.
These impaired mental functions make a lot of simple tasks
difficult. So if simple tasks become hard, complex tasks like driving
become significantly less safe.
With the ability to drive (among other
tasks) becoming unsafe when high, the most important issue regarding
legalization is making sure people don’t drive impaired. Mothers Against
Drunk Driving (MADD) estimates that between 1200 and 1500 drunk driving
fatalities occur each year — this number must not go up if the number
of people driving high goes up due to easy accessibility and lack of
education about marijuana.
I
can’t count the amount of times I’ve heard “I drive better high.” The
same was said about alcohol before the huge backlash against drunk
driving. We don’t need a string of impaired driving-related deaths to
spawn the necessity of a reaction like that of the MADD. Marijuana is
already looked down upon as a negative substance by many, so don’t give
those people another reason to want it pushed back into prohibition.
Driving drunk is becoming increasingly socially unacceptable as the years pass. Driving high needs the same taboo.
Unfortunately, awareness and public
opinion is not the be-all-end-all solution to keeping people from
driving high. There also needs to be a way to detect THC in the
bloodstream when people are stopped and suspected of driving high. The
threat of injuring another person (or yourself) isn’t enough to keep
everyone from getting behind the wheel when intoxicated.
Breathalyzers
and penalties aren’t the perfect solution, but the threat of losing a
license is what keeps many from driving home after too many drinks at
the bar. THC breathalyzers are being researched, but more funding is
needed to decide if they are really the most effective method of
detection.
If we’re going to legalize, a system like
the one established to determine safe levels of blood alcohol content
needs to be implemented, and fast. Impaired driving is a problem. Put
the money saved from the strain prohibition put on the prison system
into finding a quick and reliable way to detect THC in the bloodstream,
along with awareness about the dangers of high driving.
No comments:
Post a Comment