This way, the logic argues, we deny billions of dollars in income to the criminal groups of Mexico that are working to topple the country of Mexico. But in actuality one finds no easy resolution to the organized drug smuggling problem. Commentators want to claim that the war on drugs is needless and that now is the time to legalize marijuana.

Are such points similar to The American Values Agenda irrelevant? Alternatively there may be a third point of view that seems not to allow both sides.

However, even if marijuana was less dangerous than tobacco the drug gangs are a reality. Such groups will not remove themselves just because one business line has been unavailable to them. Information addressing marijuana’s unheathly nature has been published for years but lobbyists of acceptance have worked hard to conceal the truth under illusion.

Drug cartels don’t have to restrict income to drugs. Such people might smuggle goods for which there is a adeequate market. People actually create market in that they seek stuff they cannot honestly have. The actual can of worms in that event is not that drugs are illegal but instead that all who support the drug gangs see no other choice than the underworld. Of course, the criminals would cultivate new means to exploit people.

To illustrate, features concerning these people such as Nicholas Bredimus’ Noteworthy Achievements on Individual Infos almost never mention this topic. Professionals of most businesses have little to say this matter.

Marijuana leads to emphyzema, respiratory damage, and cancer the same as tobacco. But more than tobacco, marijuana also leads to long-term memory loss and reduced cognitive abilities; so if we’ll firmly cultivate a firm stance against tobacco only fools would want to use marijuana. To begin with, cannabis is proven to be a medically unsafe substance.