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The way i see it the only difference between marijuana and alcohol, besides their legality, is that alcohol is the most dangerous of the two,... by far. |
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It is only dangerous because it is legal, available on every corner, event and every commercial for football game. Pot would end up being the same thing. Alcohol is a depressent. Pot is a depressent. Mind is clouded and the central nervous system is put to sleep. Not much of a difference except you do not take a leak as much. However, you have unexplain cravings for 6 McDonald's hamburgers also known as the munchies. :D |
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It should be like curent alcohol legislation. It doesn't really work, but it costs billions less and it isn't tyrannical. The only people jailed would be those guilty of violating others' freedoms or putting others at risk(as per drunk driving) Does the legal system absorb enormous funds for alcohol abuse penalties? Comparitevely speaking, no. Are most people responsible alcohol users? Yes. Quote:
And having the state spend some cash is the same as forcing people to adopt a particular view. Your tax dollars support programs you may or may not agree with. Try not paying them. Police will show up at your house. If you refuse to pay, they will subdue you and take you to prison. If you resist, they might kill you. It is true that we are a society, but such a society can be easily maintained without forcing millions to pay billions in order to clumsily and ineffectively attempt to prevent drug users(or would-be drug users) from destroying their lives. Besides, the harms are inherent in the system; Unemployed or underemployed people destroy their lives anyways, whether it is through drug use or jail time for drug use. It can't be prevented, it can only be made less vexacious to the rest of the nation. Quote:
People make self-destructive decisions all the time. Sometimes it is teen pregnancy, or perhaps it is spending too much money on clothes instead of health insurance. Perhaps they owe thousands in student loans and pursue a worthless degree. Can you regulate those decisions? Who fulfills those regulatory obligations? How do they do it? This decision to use drugs is no different. Millions do it despite the efforts of people like yourself to impose your will upon such behavior and it creates greater harms because you cede the whole industry to the criminal black market. Quote:
I agree that there is more to life than money. As the old saying goes, actions speak louder than words. What has the state done to curtail drug use besides builidng a hugely expensive power monopoly that creates only violence and illegal drug empires? Has drug use not increased since the inception of the "War on Drugs"? Has the state not accquired more regulatory power? Has it not gained more funding? To the state, money is life. Your money is its' life. It is like the witch doctor of modern socio-economics. It promises whatever you want to hear, and does little, if anything, when it isnt making the problem worse. Money and power are the most valuable commodities of state. I invite you to show me one example, just one example, of state power that didn't invite state abuse and private abuse of state power anywhere in the world and I'll retract everything I said. |
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That's because prohibition turns the entire trade, including quality control, over to gangsters. Al Capone and his ilk went from two bit pimps to running vast criminal empires with millions of dollars in assets nearly overnight because of prohibition and we see the same thing happening today with the drug cartels and both extend their criminal tendrils into many facets of society, corrupting and converting everything from trade unions to politicians to professional sports. I'm sorry but I reject the concept that some Dutch smoke shop owner with a tendency toward thuggery could ever compare to the St' Valentines Massacre or the many other bloody gangland wars our country had to endure during the era of Prohibition. Not only does prohibition make criminals rich and powerful it creates an enormous and costly government bureaucracy who are supposed to fight it but whose true objective is not to actually win their war against drugs but to maintain a antagonistic but symbiotic relationship with the criminals so as to continually justify their existence and expense. Quote:
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Good job boys, reasonable intellegint debate with no flames ! :salute:
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i think it comes down to when the people that are elected to office
start listening to the people and not the lobbist that gives them money to do what they want reguardless if it is good for the country as a whole ie. the insurance companys is the usa |
@UnderseaLcpl
You make a strong argument. :salute: You said whe're thinking in different boxes, and that is without a doubt true. I'm looking at it as a Dutch person; I know the situation when it's legalized, and I don't see the benefit of it apart from increased tax revenue. I'm guessing you're looking at it from the point of view where it's illegal, and you suffer directly from it since a lot of your taxes are wasted on a seemingly pointless exercise. I'd like to explain the situation in Holland: Sale is permitted to people of age 18 and older. However, growing it is illegal. Basically, all the supply for the shops is illegal; whether it's grown here illigally or smuggled into the country. It's legal to grow 3 to 5 plants for personal consumption, depending on which city you live in. Transport is also illegal; you can buy it in the shops and you can smoke it there, but you can't take it with you. However, there's a "gedoog-beleid" (tolerance-policy). If you get stopped by police and you have weed on you, there's no problem unless you're carrying more then 5gr. This is the limit set to shops which they can sell to any one person per day, and anyone found to carry more then that is considered in "possesion with the intent to sell" (dealing). Smoking a joint on the street will likely get you into trouble, in the form of a fine and your weed confiscated. In short: It's legal to smoke the stuff in the privacy of your home or in a coffeeshop, and you can grow a little for your own use. Anything beyond that is still illegal, so most of the industry still lies underground. Thanks to the legalization of sale, the authorities have a better grasp of it and there is a taxable income. That's why I think legalization doesn't solve anything. Apart from exposing part of the food chain to give police a point to start their investigations, and generating revenue for the government, it just isn't really different from the policies in other countries. If it was implemented differently, starting with the cultivation of the plants being made legal to bring more of the industry to light rather then still forcing it underground, I might be of a different oppinion. That, and the fact that making a psychoactive drug more readily available just doen't seem like a good idea. Even people using it responsively can develop psychocoligical conditions, particularly if they are susceptable to them (family history of schizophrenia, for example). Not to say they wouldn't have developed the condition without the drug, but it can certainly speed up or trigger the process. All I have to go on are my personal experiences; I don't have a grasp of the money involved, or how something like the "war on drugs" would effect all this. Holland has a rather unique stance on all this and my experiences are limited to it. Quote:
Money and power corrupt, I think people stopped questioning that long ago. |
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However, alcohol can lower bloodsugar. IIRC insulin production is cranked up under infuence, lowering the bloodsugar and making people cranky, but that doesn't account for the violence. |
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Whatever the chemistry the effect is pretty plain to anyone who has been outside of a bar at closing time. Interesting theory though. I've never heard of "alcohol expectations". |
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Pot for recreational use? Hell no. Medical use, however, I'd have no problem with.
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