Billy the Great Khan
Uwaa OmO
prohibition was awesome. it was so awesome it required a CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT to change it.
think about. and that was for alcohol.
It also required a constitutional amendment to enact it.
prohibition was awesome. it was so awesome it required a CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT to change it.
think about. and that was for alcohol.
It isn't like we don't have an end to Prohibition to look back on in history to be able to figure out what the cartels might do. It's like we're incapable to look back at failed policy, and the end of it, in the past. Even policy with direct links.
Try to focus. We're not discussing alcohol.
It isn't like we don't have an end to Prohibition to look back on in history to be able to figure out what the cartels might do. It's like we're incapable to look back at failed policy, and the end of it, in the past. Even policy with direct links.
It isn't like we don't have an end to Prohibition to look back on in history to be able to figure out what the cartels might do. It's like we're incapable to look back at failed policy, and the end of it, in the past. Even policy with direct links.
The idea that huge portions of people would suddenly start using Crystal Meth because it is regulated is just bad assumption.
One thing it would do is put it behind a counter, where people with licenses check IDs.
It will be more difficult for children to get hold of marijuana, currently some kid at school sells it to them.
Same with Meth, etc. If you want less people to use, put the product behind a counter and stop kids from getting it.
Most people aren't going to start into Meth just as their lives are getting good.
Try to focus, we are discussing prohibition.
The idea that huge portions of people would suddenly start using Crystal Meth because it is regulated is just bad assumption. One thing it would do is put it behind a counter, where people with licenses check IDs. It will be more difficult for children to get hold of marijuana, currently some kid at school sells it to them. Same with Meth, etc. If you want less people to use, put the product behind a counter and stop kids from getting it. Most people aren't going to start into Meth just as their lives are getting good.
The idea that huge portions of people would suddenly start using Crystal Meth because it is regulated is just bad assumption.
One thing it would do is put it behind a counter, where people with licenses check IDs. It will be more difficult for children to get hold of marijuana, currently some kid at school sells it to them. Same with Meth, etc. If you want less people to use, put the product behind a counter and stop kids from getting it. Most people aren't going to start into Meth just as their lives are getting good.
Do you really think that's going to stop them?
I don't think crystal meth addiction would get out of hand, however I do think hardcore drug usage would get out of hand, possibly at rates that we won't be able to control.
If that doesn't work for cigarettes what makes you think it'll work for cocaine?
A heck of a lot harder than asking my friend to sell me a dime bag.How difficult was it for you to score a bottle of Maker's Mark or Black Velvet when you were in your early teens? For me it was just a matter of asking my buddy's older brother - he flies, I'll buy so's to speak.
Naive is assuming that because you were ignorant, so were the rest of us.That's a bit naive, I'm of the opinion that kids today are more savvy when it comes to getting what they want than I was back in my day by a great margin.
Rubbish. Less than 3% of the population have even tried it, let alone are addicted to it. You and I have a totally different idea of what "out of control" means.Meth addiction rates have already been out of control for some time now, that the rate for kicking the habit is in the single digits only adds to just how destructive a drug it can be...starting a drug like crystal meth I can only imagine that most people don't start out with the intention of becoming a Meth head, I'm sure most of them had better lives going into a life of a yuck mouth than they were at being a full on addict.
Utter nonsense. Legalizing it would ensure that the guy at the corner with no morals or compunction against selling it to 8 year old kids no longer would be the source any more than speak easy bars where they checked no ids or your bathtub.Legalizing it would be detrimental to most urban areas much less the rural areas where it's more prevalent, where there's less resources countering the effects of that same addiction rate that's been increasing year after year.
It works better than my best pal selling MJ at the school. And I think it'll work a bit more like alcohol, but with greater penalties so the licensed purveyors have more incentive to actually ID. Currently, there is a kid at school that every child knows who can get them some cocaine.
A heck of a lot harder than asking my friend to sell me a dime bag.
Naive is assuming that because you were ignorant, so were the rest of us.
Rubbish. Less than 3% of the population have even tried it, let alone are addicted to it. You and I have a totally different idea of what "out of control" means.
According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, over 12.3 million Americans age 12 and older have tried meth at least once.
Statistically speaking, women are more inclined to pick up meth than they are to pick up cocaine.
The top two reasons reported for using meth are (1) accessibility and (2) the fact that it is relatively inexpensive.
Adolescents between 12 and 17 years old admitted to meth addiction treatment increased by 100 percent between the years of 1994 and 2004.
http://rehab-international.org/crystal-meth/addiction-statistics/
Utter nonsense. Legalizing it would ensure that the guy at the corner with no morals or compunction against selling it to 8 year old kids no longer would be the source any more than speak easy bars where they checked no ids or your bathtub
Prohibition causes most of the problems you list, it is no resolution to any of them, and it makes it far easier to get for children and ensures that only the worst of society are selling it, and they ain't checking ids. It creates an environment where really bad people are protecting "territory" by shooting people in the streets, and generates the violent crime that we would like to avoid. It ensures that if you buy bad stuff that is poisoned or if you are defrauded by a "dealer" you have no way to seek retribution other than to kill...
Prohibition itself is a bane on our society, it causes so many more problems than it will ever solve, it was a bane in the past, it is again, and we are too stupid to pay attention and now fools use some of the same danged arguments to keep it that they made near the end of constitutional prohibition.
However, there is no kid at their school selling them alcohol out of his jacket.I don't think it'll ever happen (hardcore drugs like meth, heroin, or crack) so it won't matter none anyways but for argument's sake...grabbing a bottle of booze is not the same as grabbing a couple of cooked meth syringes.
That's everywhere you go (kid that every kid knows that could get 'em some coke), imagine the horror if that kid were a hundred or two hundred kids...
Nonsense. I never had to find somebody over 18 (then later over 21) that was willing to get a child MJ. I just asked a dude that went to my school to sell it and got it. That easy. Waaaaaaaaaay easier to get drugs than it is to get alcohol. You don't even have to go to a store, you just go to the place that the government tells you that you must attend.It was easier to score booze than weed and almost near impossible to score smack or meth growing up.
Naive is assuming that because it is illegal that it will cause less kids to use it. My point is that this is a step most won't take on their first stop... Make the drugs harder to obtain by taking them away from the kids who deal and put them behind a counter where they'll check ID.Naive is assuming that because meth were legalized less kids will use it.
You mistake "even tried" with "regular use". The idea that this is a massive epidemic because very few people by number ever do it at all let alone become addicted and do it regularly is just emotive tactics. You said it was "out of control"... It really isn't.I would think percentage wise it was even less than three percent right now, nonetheless - if it is three percent that's quite extraordinary in and of itself.
Yet you still believe that locking up users is the way to go rather than working on helping them. Make sure it is more difficult to obtain quit relying on the dealers to regulate it for you.That and a friend of mine who works for the state of NY prison system had told me a few years ago that on average they'll spend about fifty thousand dollars for each meth addicted teen (he runs a prison that's similar to basic training for the military but for wayward teens) before he even gets them, they have to get cleaned up...and most of them revert right back to it like a horse to water within a few weeks of their return home.
It is very clear that we do.I'm pretty sure we've got a totaly different idea of what "out of control" means as well...
The scumbag dealer won't be there because there will be no need for him. Adults will go to the store, where somebody will check their ID, kids will have a much more difficult time getting the drugs as there simply will not be an effective cost ratio for the guy to keep standing on that corner.That guy on the corner is small time, what's changed if he (scumbag dealer) was willing to sell to an eight year old kid in the first place? The only thing I could tell is that it's gonna be easier for the scumbag dealer to get his hands on some product at the end of the day...not for nothing but your reasoning with this makes absolutely no sense...
Rubbish, this ignores the heavy consequences of alcohol addiction and the fact that far more people had access to it, it was more dangerous and likely to be poisoned, and there were less programs to deal with an addict back during Prohibition.Alcohol Prohibition and billy badass ruin your life after a few hits types of drugs are two separate things, it's silly comparing the two because the consequences for using each are starkly different.
Again, the idea that there would be an "epidemic of ungodly proportions" is the same type of hyperbole and circular logic as saying "out of control" when barely anybody is addicted to this drug that is "out of control"... Just saying it is "out of control" isn't an argument, and you haven't even suggested a subjective measure by which you could claim this. You just repeat it.Not controlling or attempting to control what could otherwise be an epidemic of ungodly proportions would be far more detrimental to our society as a whole, in no way should meth or crack or those drugs that're on that level be legalized...we can change how we deal with those who're caught using (not so much dealing) them...something similar to a minimum or low security gig with all the treatment levels one could shake a stick at if they're ready to quit...but not legalizing them...
We keep bringing up prohibition because that is what this is, it is certainly relevant to the conversation, and the result is the same. The creation of an unregulated black market and the driving force behind violent crime. The idea that because Oranges and Apples are different means we can't talk about fruit is a foolish idea. Your insistence that it isn't relative because you say so is just circular reasoning. Prohibition is relevant because we are talking about Prohibition.You fellas keep bringing up Prohibition as if it's relevant but have discarded the Opium War's stats that I've posted - which I would think are more relevant than alcohol prohibition because that's what a society would turn into left unchecked, by that standard we'd end up with thirty million plus addicts...nay, thirty million plus brain damaged addicts would be more like it, toss in the costs for cleaning up each addict (if push came to shove) and we'd be in a constant influx recession wise.
So, lets' play the game. Mj has been legalized; but regulated.
What price is it selling at, after taxes and all, and what is the amount bought, at that price?
However, there is no kid at their school selling them alcohol out of his jacket.
Nonsense. I never had to find somebody over 18 (then later over 21) that was willing to get a child MJ. I just asked a dude that went to my school to sell it and got it. That easy. Waaaaaaaaaay easier to get drugs than it is to get alcohol. You don't even have to go to a store, you just go to the place that the government tells you that you must attend.
Naive is assuming that because it is illegal that it will cause less kids to use it. My point is that this is a step most won't take on their first stop... Make the drugs harder to obtain by taking them away from the kids who deal and put them behind a counter where they'll check ID.
You mistake "even tried" with "regular use". The idea that this is a massive epidemic because very few people by number ever do it at all let alone become addicted and do it regularly is just emotive tactics. You said it was "out of control"... It really isn't.
Yet you still believe that locking up users is the way to go rather than working on helping them. Make sure it is more difficult to obtain quit relying on the dealers to regulate it for you.
It is very clear that we do.
The scumbag dealer won't be there because there will be no need for him. Adults will go to the store, where somebody will check their ID, kids will have a much more difficult time getting the drugs as there simply will not be an effective cost ratio for the guy to keep standing on that corner.
Your last sentence doesn't make sense. Care to reorganize the words into some semblance of grammatically correct English so it will be understandable?
Rubbish, this ignores the heavy consequences of alcohol addiction and the fact that far more people had access to it, it was more dangerous and likely to be poisoned, and there were less programs to deal with an addict back during Prohibition.
Again, the idea that there would be an "epidemic of ungodly proportions" is the same type of hyperbole and circular logic as saying "out of control" when barely anybody is addicted to this drug that is "out of control"... Just saying it is "out of control" isn't an argument, and you haven't even suggested a subjective measure by which you could claim this. You just repeat it.
We keep bringing up prohibition because that is what this is, it is certainly relevant to the conversation, and the result is the same.
The creation of an unregulated black market and the driving force behind violent crime.
The idea that because Oranges and Apples are different means we can't talk about fruit is a foolish idea. Your insistence that it isn't relative because you say so is just circular reasoning. Prohibition is relevant because we are talking about Prohibition.
Drive by shootings were common in the "mob" day, nowadays we call them "gangs" but it doesn't mean one bit of difference to the kid shot while trying to walk to the 7 Eleven...