Pax Mongolica
Equality is Fantasy
The War on Drugs is a very valid reason.
If we assume black people are more inclined to use drugs, possibly.
The War on Drugs is a very valid reason.
What you are implying is that black people turn areas into shit.
If we assume black people are more inclined to use drugs, possibly.
So it's a part of the problem.
It becomes a self-solving problem if we just stop policing majority black areas. Enough lethal overdoses eventually weed out the weak.
Stop making certain drugs illegal. That would solve the problem.
Pffft.Stop making certain drugs illegal. That would solve the problem.
And yes I agree. It would weed out the weak.
I'd be fine with that if we simultaneously ended the welfare state. The more the population tends to get drugged up, the less productive it becomes. Portugal saw addiction rates rise after their decriminalization experiment.
Portugal is a great model!
When the idea was first presented, it seemed interesting, but now that we have about a decade of information showing the results, it's not exactly a success story.
I would post a link to what I'm talking about, but it appears that I don't have enough posts yet to do that. Just look up addiction rates in Portugal. Nearly every substance saw a rise after decriminalization, and some of them were quite dramatic.
Portugal is a great model!
difficult to compare addiction rates to when it was illegal to now easily counted under decriminalization.When the idea was first presented, it seemed interesting, but now that we have about a decade of information showing the results, it's not exactly a success story.
I would post a link to what I'm talking about, but it appears that I don't have enough posts yet to do that. Just look up addiction rates in Portugal. Nearly every substance saw a rise after decriminalization, and some of them were quite dramatic.
Mixed Results For Portugal's Great Drug ExperimentPortugal is a great model!
I understand that they favor this approach due to it encouraging people to seek treatment, but I like the Malaysian approach. Drug trafficking still happens there, but not as much as here, since those who are caught are killed.
difficult to compare addiction rates to when it was illegal to now easily counted under decriminalization.
But the big win is for harm reduction to both the addicts and society, by legalization/decrim
and the drug cartels. etc
Now I am curious.
BTW, this is turning into a good discussion.
One thing's for sure, we would have less of a problem with the border crisis had we delegalized, say, cocaine.