Sedrox
Member
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2009
- Messages
- 55
- Reaction score
- 6
- Location
- Ghettoville USA
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Independent
More than 200m people, or almost 5% of the world’s adult population, still take illegal drugs—roughly the same proportion as a decade ago.
...
The production of cocaine and opium is probably about the same as it was a decade ago; that of cannabis is higher. Consumption of cocaine has declined gradually in the United States from its peak in the early 1980s, but the path is uneven (it remains higher than in the mid-1990s), and it is rising in many places, including Europe.
...
The United States alone spends some $40 billion each year on trying to eliminate the supply of drugs. It arrests 1.5m of its citizens each year for drug offences, locking up half a million of them; tougher drug laws are the main reason why one in five black American men spend some time behind bars.
...
According to the UN’s perhaps inflated estimate, the illegal drug industry is worth some $320 billion a year.
Legalisation would not only drive away the gangsters; it would transform drugs from a law-and-order problem into a public-health problem, which is how they ought to be treated. Governments would tax and regulate the drug trade, and use the funds raised (and the billions saved on law-enforcement) to educate the public about the risks of drug-taking and to treat addiction. The sale of drugs to minors should remain banned.
...
There are two main reasons for arguing that prohibition should be scrapped all the same. The first is one of liberal principle. Although some illegal drugs are extremely dangerous to some people, most are not especially harmful. (Tobacco is more addictive than virtually all of them.) Most consumers of illegal drugs, including cocaine and even heroin, take them only occasionally. They do so because they derive enjoyment from them (as they do from whisky or a Marlboro Light). It is not the state’s job to stop them from doing so.
From The Economist.
The Drug War has failed. 100% failed. It costs us a tremendous amount of time and energy, and it gets us nowhere. Our prison system is bloated, inefficient, and bursting at the seams with repeat offenders, and the criminalization of drugs is only augmenting this problem. We need a solution now.
Considering the fact we have a billion extra people on this planet than we did ten years it sounds like the war on drugs is a success.Perhaps in ten years those junkies will have offed themselves and the number will be less.
World population - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
But consumption of the really hard drugs that are addictive should carry harsher penalties.
I oppose additional regulation and taxation of any kind by default (see cigarette taxes).
I oppose the social legitimization which would result from said legalization.
You haven't given me any new information, nothing I haven't seen before and discussed at length, which would encourage me to change my mind.
I hope that one day we can focus on *why* people turn to drugs instead of rather those drugs should be legal.
we tried that in the eighties with crack cocaine. and we ended up throwing millions of black americans in jail and causing huge amounts of inner city poverty.
let's try it again. :roll:
why not, but this time put users in for a year first time they get caught.. make that year one of education the first time, teach them a trade.
second time, 2 years hard labor in a tend city/chain gang situation...
dealers go in for life.....
or maybe they just go to rehab.
horrible, horrible idea.
I would prefer that no one goes to jail. Let the people dumb enough to ingest heroine and meth get as much as they would like. Natural selection at it's finest. Plus, if drugs were legalized, it would be much easier for me to find some solid LSD.rehab the hard way, by going to prison for a year they get to go cold turkey....
If you don't want dealers in prison for life, how about a halfway house, YOURS....
I would prefer that no one goes to jail. Let the people dumb enough to ingest heroine and meth get as much as they would like. Natural selection at it's finest. Plus, if drugs were legalized, it would be much easier for me to find some solid LSD.
I have no idea what this means...you can get high with least significant digits? :2razz:
rehab the hard way, by going to prison for a year they get to go cold turkey....
this is what the war on drugs has been preaching for, what, 30 years?
it doesn't work.
I have no idea what this means...
Legalization arguments are fruitless because you're dealing with two types of people; hypocrites and the emotional, or some combination thereof...
...But what do I know? I'm just a lowly drug-user.
I don't know who these people you are referring to are but it is worth pointing out a conservative, at least in the meaningful Burkean variety, is not an individualist.The hypocrites are the "conservatives" who rail against government at every possible opportunity. "Keep the government out of my life" they screech, but this aversion to government mysteriously disappears when it comes to drugs and prostitution. The fact that they are hypocrites means they are impervious to logical arguments and will employ a vast array of emotionally-based arguments in order to rationalize their self-contradiction.
what does?
drug education and rehabilitation.
trying to determine the initial causes of drug addiction would be helpful as well.
I don't know who these people you are referring to are but it is worth pointing out a conservative, at least in the meaningful Burkean variety, is not an individualist.
He certainly does not want the state to be too powerful but he is very defensive of traditional society and its intermediate associations like the family, community and church and their authority and autonomy both against the state and sometimes, yes, the claims of individuals(he feels in many ways that atomistic individualism accompanies statism.).
And if he feels drugs would endanger these institutions he is certainly not hypocritical in wanting to see them prohibited.
I'm quite open to drug legalisation, I'm just showing how some prohibition is within the realms of consistent conservatism.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?