Tommy Dukes
Live everyday like it's your last
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Why wouldn't they? That 84% drop translated into I think like ~140 million *NOT* being spent that otherwise would have been this year alone. Yeah it's an obvious side effect but it's still relevant and a pretty huge one.lol did they really quote a 3% drop in traffic fatalities and 84% drop in marijuana related arrests...really?
The one is obviously going to happen... Its cool and all but I mean obvious that if you legalize marijuana their will be less marijuana related arrests. The traffic one is really just horrible though. Not only are they quoting a 3% decrease(seriously?) but there is no way to relate it to marijuana legalization. Its stuff like that that casts a bad light on the whole movement.Why wouldn't they? That 84% drop translated into I think like ~140 million *NOT* being spent that otherwise would have been this year alone. Yeah it's an obvious side effect but it's still relevant and a pretty huge one.
The one is obviously going to happen... Its cool and all but I mean obvious that if you legalize marijuana their will be less marijuana related arrests. The traffic one is really just horrible though. Not only are they quoting a 3% decrease(seriously?) but there is no way to relate it to marijuana legalization. Its stuff like that that casts a bad light on the whole movement.
Decrease in Traffic Fatalities
Traffic fatalities went down in 2014, according to data released by the Colorado Department of Transportation, challenging claims that the legalization of marijuana would lead to an increase in traffic fatalities.
In the first 11 months of 2014, the state had 436 traffic fatalities, a 3% drop from the 449 fatalities in the first 11 months of 2013. The decline in fatalities in 2014 marks a continuation of a 12-year long downward trend in traffic fatalities in the state of Colorado.
Why wouldn't they? That 84% drop translated into I think like ~140 million *NOT* being spent that otherwise would have been this year alone. Yeah it's an obvious side effect but it's still relevant and a pretty huge one.
In 2010, 9,011 people were arrested for marijuana possession. Using the same data we are projecting 1,464 possession arrests for 2014. Given that arrests such as these cost roughly $300 to adjudicate, it is reasonable to infer that the state is saving millions in adjudicatory costs for possession cases alone in 2014 compared to 2010.
Over the same period, arrests for cultivating and distributing marijuana have also dropped by more than 90%
The one is obviously going to happen... Its cool and all but I mean obvious that if you legalize marijuana their will be less marijuana related arrests. The traffic one is really just horrible though. Not only are they quoting a 3% decrease(seriously?) but there is no way to relate it to marijuana legalization. Its stuff like that that casts a bad light on the whole movement.
I would say the 3% is significant because if anything it shows that accidents DON'T increase with legalization. Which tons of prohibitionists were/are saying would/will happen.