The Pros And Cons Of Marijuana Possession

883 Words4 Pages

As my morals and beliefs provide a counterargument towards drug use, I was initially somewhat close minded to the article “More People are Arrested for Simple Marijuana Possession than All Violent Crimes Combined.” While it is not my place to judge, I find difficulty imagining a life in which one would feel the desire, or need, to take and/or sell drugs. However, I am not naive enough to believe drug use and drug possession is not a prominent issue in our society. Our world is full of temptation and hardship, and individuals find a variety of ways to cope with challenges, and use a variety of outlets to “deal” with the trials along the way. Furthermore, I was sad when I first began reading this article, because I see heartbreaking truth …show more content…

For example, with the “Case Assignment” section, a link was provided directing readers to The Marijuana Times (Granowicz), which also linked to The Daily Chronic, all backing up the fact stated about the mayor of New Orleans signing a law, Ordinance #31, decriminalizing marijuana possession (Clarke). Furthermore, the basis of the article, more arrests occurring for marijuana possession rather than violent crimes, is backed up and found to be proven true from following the link provided, directing readers to The New Orleans Metro Crime and Courts News (Washington Post). In conclusion to fact-checking, I have thoroughly researched the websites supporting the information within the article, and they all have been proven true by reliable, nationally approved sources. After checking snopes.com, I found articles researched on this very topic on both Independent and The NY Times (Williams). Both very trust-worthy, world-known sources, backing up the information given in the original article …show more content…

Primarily, the author of this article used major News Sources, including information from the Washington Post, The New Orleans Metro Crime and Courts News, as well as The Marijuana Times, and The Daily Chronic. A seemingly assuring consensus relating to this controversial topic, and this article in specific, is initially shock. Many believe and see first hand the sad reality of drug use, yet reading the arrests mostly accounted for are in direct relation to drug possession. This statement is startling, and potentially unbelievable at first. Yet, with thorough fact checking and ability to back this information up, brings a sad sense to many readers. The truth of this fact is incredibly astonishing, yet once you truly process the information, it makes some sort of sense. Perhaps not in the sense of understanding the reasoning, but a sad sense of facts that are evident in our world around us nearly each day. For those who have also read this article are trustworthy due to their fact checking process as well. Too often when something seems far-fetched, we might automatically assume the source is “pulling our leg,” yet we can't assume one side or another about anything we read, making fact checking so