Friday, February 24, 2017

Blog #1



There are many interpretations on whether or not marijuana should be legalized. The two articles that I chose depict the struggle between just that. The first article is called, “Why We Should Not Legalize Marijuana” by CNBC, which clearly talks about why marijuana should not be legalized. The second article is called “This Is Why Marijuana Should Be Legal”, by Renee Jacques that implies marijuana should now be legalized. Each has similar evidence and points but are trying to convince different demographics.

In the article from CNBC “Why We Should Not Legalize Marijuana”, they are talking to all demographics. They are attempting to sway people who are old, young, have smoked, or haven’t smoked that marijuana is bad and that it correlates with crime. In the article, they use surveys and polls to show that the illegalization of marijuana has caused less to use this drug. Everybody wants to be healthy, so they state, “Reducing marijuana use is essential to improving the nation’s health, education, and productivity.” They even compare marijuana to the same bad name category as cigarettes, alcohol, and gambling. They bring up how some think if marijuana was legalized, illegal trade of marijuana would stop, but like legal and illegal gambling this isn’t the case. Also, they target parents by saying, marijuana is addictive and if marijuana was legalized it would be easier for children to get it. This next article would argue most of all of these points but also touch on some similar aspects in different approaches.

The competing article “This Is Why Marijuana Should Be Legal”, by Renee Jacques explains why marijuana should be legalized and completely discounts the first article. The demographic being reached out to in this narrative is politicians, parents, and citizens against marijuana. They start off by saying how safe marijuana is and that you cannot overdoses from it. This starts to get the audience thinking about marijuana as being harmless.  It is also compared to alcohol as in the first article but in a different manner. Now Renee is saying, “In the same year as no overdoses from marijuana, 38,329 people died from pill overdoses and 25,692 people have died from alcoholic incidents. This is Renee trying to point out why drugs are different than marijuana. She focuses on promoting how safe and harmless marijuana is so people feel safer when around or talking about marijuana. She adds to this effort by talking about health too, like in the first article on why we shouldn’t legalize marijuana. Except that Renee explains about how marijuana benefits your health. She explains how it helps you sleep, can relieve nausea, loss of appetite, and chronic pain which would make anyone who has any of these problems jump on the “pot” bandwagon. As much as these articles contradict one another how do we decide which one is right and which one is wrong?




Works Cited



Cnbc. "Why We Should Not Legalize Marijuana." CNBC. CNBC, 20 Apr. 2011. Web. 24 Feb. 2017.

Jacques, Renee. "This Is Why Marijuana Should Be Legal Everywhere." The Huffington Post. TheHuffingtonPost.com, 24 Oct. 2013. Web. 24 Feb. 2017.