kame-sennin
Member
AndersTheSwede said:Your whole argument falls apart in the face of the fact that they would earn more money through legalization and subsequent taxation.
I don't think that statement has any truth to it. Perhaps it varies drug by drug, but substances like marijuana can't reasonably be taxed when they can be grown almost anywhere. As for Cocaine, legalizing it is unlikely to stop the trade lines used to get it here illegally, making it hard to tax as well. Furthermore, even if the government was capable of taxing these drugs, there's no fucking way that said revenue stream could compete with the massive intake of the prison industrial system. And finally, it's not the government that's trying to earn money. Raising taxes doesn't (generally) put more money in politician's pockets. If we legalized drugs, it would add tax revenue, but said revenue would come at the expense of prison contractors and pharmaceutical companies - two incredibly powerful lobbies. Pharma doesn't want to compete with cocaine and marijuana which are easily grown, and more importantly, not patented. And prison contractors don't want to lose out on lucrative contracts which are the direct result of harsh drug laws which bloat the prison population. So even if taxation could provide more money, it would be money going to different people. And the lobbyists for big pharma and the prison industrial complex are not going to let that happen.