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Subject: "5 Months After Decriminalizing Weed, Here's What's Happened in Philly" Previous topic | Next topic
Mongo
Member since Oct 26th 2005
45670 posts
Fri Jan-30-15 10:03 AM

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"5 Months After Decriminalizing Weed, Here's What's Happened in Philly"


  

          

http://mic.com/articles/109466/five-months-after-decriminalizing-marijuana-here-s-what-s-happened-in-philadelphia

In October, the city of Philadelphia decriminalized the possession of small amounts of marijuana for personal use. Just a few months later, the Philadelphia Police Department has announced that marijuana possession arrests across the city are down by an astonishing 88%.

That's right ... 88%.

Between October 20 and December 31, just 63 Philadelphians were arrested for possession compared to 559 over the final two months of the year in 2013.

The RAND Corporation, nonprofit global policy think tank, approximates that each possession arrest in the state of Vermont before legalization cost an astonishing $1,266. Assuming a similar cost, Goldstein estimates that Philadelphia has already saved $627,000 in just 60 days or about $3.75 million annually if the trend holds.

That's a lot of savings. But the benefits don't end there. Philadelphians rest easy in the knowledge that getting caught with a joint won't land them jail time or a criminal history. Since over 80% of people previously arrested for marijuana possession in the city were African-American, the dramatically lower arrest numbers are a victory for social justice as well. Hundreds if not thousands of Philadelphians will now get a $25 ticket instead of a potentially life-altering journey through the city's harsh justice system.

Not coincidentally, the new system is a lot fairer. Councilman Jim Kenney, who sponsored the decriminalization bill, explained to Philadelphia Mag that "As a white male, the odds of me being arrested for marijuana possession are virtually nil. If they want to arrest people for marijuana, why don't they walk through the parking lot of the ballpark before a game? There are plenty of white suburban people they could arrest. They could visit a frat party on a college campus and round up a bunch. But they don't."

More good news: Mayor Michael Nutter congratulated the city at the end of 2014 for the lowest violent crime rates since 1971, with a 36% reduction in homicide and 25% reduction in violent crime compared to 2007. (In far-off Colorado, where marijuana is now totally legal, crime rates fell for the first 11 months of the year.)

Reform isn't just popular, it's effective. Quinnipiac polling has shown 84% of Pennsylvanians back medical marijuana, while those in favor of legal recreational weed are nearly tied with opponents at 48% for and 49% against.

Instant savings, a fairer criminal justice system, little impact on violent crime and an electorate that increasingly seems open to reform? Marijuana decriminalization sure sounds like a good deal, doesn't it?

  

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Topic Outline
Subject Author Message Date ID
awesome. make it nationwide.
Jan 30th 2015
1
Cops barely paid attention to weed before. Now, it's even more lax.
Jan 30th 2015
2
They're telling on themselves
Jan 30th 2015
3
Agreed...marijuana use should be legal and stop and frisk laws
Jan 31st 2015
7
Wow. Talk about affecting the bottom line.
Jan 30th 2015
4
all of that sounds good on paper, but what about The Children?
Jan 30th 2015
5
http://i.imgur.com/biQbfCJ.jpg
Jan 30th 2015
6
this is great but now I can't wait for it to be completely legal
Jan 31st 2015
8

KiloMcG
Member since Jan 01st 2008
27561 posts
Fri Jan-30-15 10:05 AM

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1. "awesome. make it nationwide."
In response to Reply # 0
Fri Jan-30-15 10:12 AM by KiloMcG

  

          

a decriminalization bill is on the docket for this year's VA General Assembly, but i haven't heard if it's doing anything or not. lemme look that up.

*edit* shot down by the Republican majority Senate. one of their arguments is that it's the first step to legalization and that would increase use and encourage gang violence. you idiots, there's gang violence due to weed because it is ILLEGAL. fucking idiots.

  

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8-bit
Member since Jan 12th 2010
10841 posts
Fri Jan-30-15 10:07 AM

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2. "Cops barely paid attention to weed before. Now, it's even more lax."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Full state decriminalization/legalization is hopefully next. Governer Wolf is already talking about medical marijuana here.

---
http://twitter.com/logicalhood
http://instagram.com/hoodlogic

  

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bentagain
Member since Mar 19th 2008
16595 posts
Fri Jan-30-15 10:54 AM

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3. "They're telling on themselves"
In response to Reply # 0
Fri Jan-30-15 10:55 AM by bentagain

  

          

"Not coincidentally, the new system is a lot fairer. Councilman Jim Kenney, who sponsored the decriminalization bill, explained to Philadelphia Mag that "As a white male, the odds of me being arrested for marijuana possession are virtually nil. If they want to arrest people for marijuana, why don't they walk through the parking lot of the ballpark before a game? There are plenty of white suburban people they could arrest. They could visit a frat party on a college campus and round up a bunch. But they don't.""

They know it

we been known it

so what the fuck is taking so long to change the disproportionate enforcement of 'laws'

legal or not

the focus should be on the disparity

and MFers can barely bring themselves to address it

"Reform isn't just popular, it's effective. Quinnipiac polling has shown 84% of Pennsylvanians back medical marijuana, while those in favor of legal recreational weed are nearly tied with opponents at 48% for and 49% against."

again

WTF is taking so long?

if the people want it, it should be.

and don't give me, it takes time

not after what just happened in Greece

these old white crusty MFers got to go.

and they can take their antiquated ideas and beliefs with them

---------------------------------------------------------------

If you can't understand it without an explanation

you can't understand it with an explanation

  

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afrogirl_lost
Member since May 22nd 2012
3062 posts
Sat Jan-31-15 02:14 AM

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7. "Agreed...marijuana use should be legal and stop and frisk laws"
In response to Reply # 3


          

should be rescinded. Here in Philly, we have a black Mayor who campaigned on stop and frisk.

  

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T Reynolds
Member since Apr 16th 2007
42760 posts
Fri Jan-30-15 11:02 AM

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4. "Wow. Talk about affecting the bottom line."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

  

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Joe Corn Mo
Member since Aug 29th 2010
15139 posts
Fri Jan-30-15 11:49 AM

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5. "all of that sounds good on paper, but what about The Children?"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

somebody, think of the children.

  

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Hitokiri
Charter member
22104 posts
Fri Jan-30-15 11:52 AM

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6. "http://i.imgur.com/biQbfCJ.jpg"
In response to Reply # 5


  

          

http://i.imgur.com/biQbfCJ.jpg

--

"You can't beat white people. You can only knock them out."

  

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makaveli
Charter member
16303 posts
Sat Jan-31-15 09:46 AM

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8. "this is great but now I can't wait for it to be completely legal"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

I really love weed. jah lives.

“So back we go to these questions — friendship, character… ethics.”

  

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