A couple of points:
First, I see a clear distinction between alcohol and marijuana. Alcohol is frequently used for purposes other than getting drunk. Marijuana, whether used medically or recreationally, is only used for the "high" effect, or the effect that it has on the body.
What about cigarretes? The effect of cigarretes is a kind of high, and I'm not aware of any other (i.e. wine-snob type) uses.
And I don't think that I am going out on a limb to say that the majority of marijuana is used recreationally, for the high alone.
Oh, I've no doubt whatsoever that's true.
Second, even if I wanted to smoke a joint, I really don't know where I would get one. Maybe I am just the squarest guy around, but I just don't know any drug dealers or pot suppliers. That would not obviously not be the case if it were in every corner drugstore.
Third, there may be some people who would try pot if it were legal as having a criminal conviction can have very serious consequences for certain careers (like lawyers, judges) and can be serious for just anyone's career.
You seem to be arguing that pot should remain illegal because otherwise more people would use it. I see this as a kind of circular question-begging:
1) Pot should be illegal because otherwise more people would use it.
2) That would be bad because pot is bad.
3) Pot is bad because it's illegal.
So what if more people use it? There must be some independent argument, aside from its current illegality, which would not also apply to any number of other, legal, substances.
Lastly, this is directed at Vorticity: You have stated that you should have the right to screw up your own life.
Yes.
Incidentally, I'd just like to note that, despite me being the one who started this thread, I don't smoke marijuana at this time. I've smoked marijuana around five times in my life (college), and I never liked it. I dislike the sensation of smoke going into my lungs. I don't smoke anything or take illegal drugs, and I drink alcohol very rarely.
Yet you seem to not be advocating for the legalization of more serious drugs like heroin and cocaine.
No, not here.
If that is correct, why do you draw the line at pot?
I'm not sure I do.
Or, put another way, what do you see as the fundamental difference between pot and those other drugs?
I'm not sure there is one.
Look, I'm afraid I'm going to have to weasel on you. I knew that someone would probably ask these questions, and I decided ahead of time that I would openly weasel.
This is a thread about marijuana. I started it out of curiosity. In my experience, there seems to be no particularly strong public desire for pot to stay illegal. (I've found that the same is not necessarily true of other drugs.) And yet, there seems to be great resistance (from where, I don't know) to making marijuana legal. I'm curious why.
It seems like there must be someone, somewhere, that has access to some trove of stellar anti-marijuana arguments that explain why it has to be this way, and I'd like to hear them.
As for all the other illegal substances, I don't think the public thinks about them in the same way as pot, and so there seems to be less of a paradox. That's why I'm concentrating on pot.