Legalizing Marijuana

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Legalizing marijuana is a double-edged sword that is more likely to produce more negative outcomes than positive outcomes in society. Despite the fact that marijuana has found some applications in the medical field recently, it is questionable if legalizing marijuana would encourage people to use it as a herbal alternative to analgesic medication. In fact, it would encourage the growth and development of substance abuse disorders, create risk factors for abusing more dangerous substances, and implicate both community health and community stability. Human psychological factors that are risk factors for substance abuse disorders, such as low self-esteem, would not allow people to consume marijuana in moderation or with health-oriented goals, so it would cause negative health outcomes in the community. Marijuana should not be legalized because excessive consumption of marijuana can implicate physical health, psychological well-being, social interactions, social functions, and individual behavioral intentions.

Although marijuana is often used as a painkiller in medicine, legalizing marijuana will most likely result in more health problems than positive health outcomes for the community. Marijuana often displays positive aspects when it comes to applications in medicine. It is a well-established drug for assisting people who suffer from chronic illnesses, such as cancer or fibromyalgia, and require a strong analgesic to ease their pain. However, it is the doctor's responsibility to recognize such cases and prescribe it to the patient. Furthermore, people who resort to therapy with marijuana use diffusers to inhale pure substances while smoking marijuana would produce several hazardous substances, such as tar, that would damage the lu...

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...e, and drugs should not be classified and categorized by their intensity. Drugs have the same negative effects on the human body and mind regardless of their level of intensity or severity of their addiction properties. Marijuana is already the most prevalent substance among 9th and 10th grade students with 33 percent lifetime prevalence (Rahdert and Czechowicz 9). Legalizing marijuana would support the peer culture's concept of marijuana as an acceptable experimentation drug, and implicate the development of physically and psychologically healthy individuals who will become unable to effectively contribute to society later in life. Because the society is consisted of and defined by individuals, a higher rate of marijuana users would implicate the functioning of the entire society, so marijuana must stay illegal for the sake of individual health and social stability.

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