I should have rewritten that. I meant to say American gun sellers, not American gun manufacturers.
That's a lot better, but how much influence do they hold on the decisions of the US government?
McHrozni
I should have rewritten that. I meant to say American gun sellers, not American gun manufacturers.
No. Next question?
A victim.What are the key differences between these two bans?
Child pornography is the distribution of imagery of abused children. This is simply a disgusting practice, and neither government nor private actors have any business doing it. None of the problems revolving around child porn would be solved by its legalization.What are the key differences between these two bans?
Knock it off with your self-righteous prattle dtugg. You admitted to using every piece of gear under the sun with your druggie friends. You admitted to buying their product. You put that money in their hands because you felt like zonking your neurons. You're the one that created the demand for their product. Now you've got the audacity to tell others that the cartels are their fault? Here's an idea; take responsibility for your actions before blaming everyone else.
Your problem here is LSD.
There was organized crime before and after prohibition.
Mafia groups limited their activities to gambling and theft until 1920, when organized bootlegging manifested in response to the effect of Prohibition. A profitable, often violent, black market for alcohol flourished. Powerful gangs corrupted law enforcement agencies, leading to racketeering. Stronger liquor surged in popularity because its potency made it more profitable to smuggle.
“The onset of Prohibition unleashed an unsurpassed level of criminal violence, and violence is the specialty of the gangs” (Abadinksky, 2003, p. 67). Prohibition provided opportunities for gangs to grow into organized crime empires and “led to a new level of criminal organization” (Abadinksky, 2003, p. 67). Prohibition acted as a catalyst for the growth of organized crime by providing an illegal structure for organized crime to generate revenue while denying the government tax revenue on alcohol.
… snip ...
Prohibition resulted in a significant loss in government revenue. “From 1919 to 1929, federal tax revenues from distilled spirits dropped from $365 million to less than $13 million, and revenue from fermented liquors from $117 million to virtually nothing” (Blocker, 2006, p. 236). The “cost of enforcing prohibition was high, and the lack of tax revenues on alcohol (some $500 million annually nationwide) affected government coffers” . Prohibition’s attempt to clean up America resulted in significant revenue loss for the government and significant revenue gain for organized crime.
… snip ...
The government finally realized prohibition was ineffective and only resulted in an increase in organized crime, a decrease in government revenue, and numerous health problems as a result of unregulated alcohol manufacturing practices. “The conclusive proof of Prohibition’s failure is, of course, the fact that the Eighteenth Amendment became the only constitutional amendment to be repealed” (Blocker, 2006, p. 233).
It's not a problem because LSD is not addictive.
There was organized crime before and after prohibition.
Thanks for the numbers. Can you provide a cite? I find that a picture is better than a thousand numbers. I thought it would also be interesting to overlay economic statistics on this chart as well. I've attached a file with a graph that also includes economic indicators for the US. I only found data back to 1929 at Bureau of Economic Analysis . I've attached a file with a graph, but I can't seem to make it display. If someone can tell me the instruction to display it, I will.Homicide Rates per 100,000
Child abuse has victims. Drug use is a victimless crime.
I find this a powerful argument for legalization as well.There have been several trials of giving junkies medical grade heroin and safe shooting galleries, and not only does crime decrease, but so do some of the health related issues, like overdose and infection.
In fact, there is some good evidence this method is more effective in getting people off heroin.
If they are held to the current standards of good practice, such as the sort of standards that the Schneiders (see link above) are being prosecuted for failing to uphold, I agree with this as well.It would be far better to have users and addicts being supervised by medical professionals, rather than the bathtub chemistry, illegal labs and illegal trade.
I don't know about you, but having drugs being legal is not going to compel me to become a heroin-injecting, coke sniffing, roid head, and I don't think that the situation would differ than much for others.
Do you think that the act of drinking alcohol has victims?
Child pornography is the distribution of imagery of abused children. This is simply a disgusting practice, and neither government nor private actors have any business doing it. None of the problems revolving around child porn would be solved by its legalization.Child porn is a form of child abuse and a crime where somebody profits, plus it hasn't been weeded out, despite ferocious efforts.
Shall we legalize that as well?
McHrozni
Knock it off with your self-righteous prattle dtugg. You admitted to using every piece of gear under the sun with your druggie friends. You admitted to buying their product. You put that money in their hands because you felt like zonking your neurons. You're the one that created the demand for their product. Now you've got the audacity to tell others that the cartels are their fault? Here's an idea; take responsibility for your actions before blaming everyone else.
That doesn't mean that there are not a fair number of people out there who want it.
The less harm argument for legalization is pretty persuasive to me.
Speaking of harm ...
1. Banning drugs has caused the substances in question to become more valuable ... so valuable that people are willing to kill in order to make/distribute/sell them and so valuable that people must often commit crimes to pay for their use.
2. Banning them has led to more deaths than the drugs would ever have caused due to actual use (tens of thousands of innocents have died in Columbia alone and many, many thousands die in drug-distribution related bloodshed here in the US each year).
3. Banning them has resulted in the transfer of TRILLIONS of dollars to the most despicable people in the world and in so doing destroyed the financial foundations of the cities and groups those dollars came from. Those TRILLIONS have been used to undermine OUR political system and been the seed money for other illegal activities.
4. Banning them has caused growing numbers of people (especially our youth) to disrespect our legal and judicial system in other regards.
5. Banning them has empowered the gangs that now infest and terrorize many of our cities.
6. Banning them has caused governments (including our own) to usurp the rights of those not involved in any way in the drug trade ... to significantly erode our freedoms and property rights.
7. Banning them has led to corruption in our legal, judicial and political systems ... so much so that even past and present Presidents are now implicated.
8. Banning them has caused the political systems of neighboring and producing countries to be corrupted and increasingly unstable.
9. Banning them has provided a mechanism for terrorists and groups like the KLA and CIA to fund themselves.
10. Banning them has made it more difficult (and risky) for those who want treatment, to get it.
Thanks for the numbers. Can you provide a cite?
beth said:The less harm argument for legalization is pretty persuasive to me.
You must be pretty easily persuaded then. In fact I feel as though I've wandered into a thread full of anarchists given the amount of terminal naivety.
One legalized drug; alcohol, kills 75,000 people a year in the US. It's the third leading cause of death. How about America's other favorite legalized drug? Cigarettes kill 440,000 people a year. It's the leading cause of preventable death. The Mexican drug war killed 10,000 in three years. How many gang-related deaths are there in America every year? Anyone wanna take a shot at that?
So given that legal drugs are the leading cause of death let's turn the government into a nationalized drug cartel to dispense even harder gear that's even more addictive. Good one. If we make hard drugs freely available and cheaper then less people will use them. Sure they will. On Planet X where economic laws run in reverse.
Sources:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6089353
http://narcosphere.narconews.com/no...r-10000-dead-mexican-drug-war-violence-ebbing
http://www.med.upenn.edu/cirna/pdf/USA_Figures.pdf
dtugg said:Therefore we should ban alcohol and tobacco, right? That would surely solve the problem.
I'm not saying we should do anything. I'm saying we shouldn't implement your harebrained idea and I'm using the best model of drug legalization we have to poke holes in it. Hack away at that straw all you want. Play bait-and-switch all you want. It won't help you.