Beth
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2004
- Messages
- 5,598
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.
Would the situation be better or worse if we were to ban alcohol and tobacco? The available evidence indicates it would be worse. If they were banned, there might be some reduction in the statistics reflecting use and abuse, but the overall impact on society is so negative that no one who suggests such an approach is taken seriously. You won't even answer the question posed to you repeatedly about whether you think those legal drugs should be banned. 'Yes' is the only answer consistent with your stance on other drugs, but you don't seem comfortable with acknowledging that.
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? Just take a guess, is it more or less than 500,000? Need another hint? There's 16,000 murders total every year in the US. So drug related murders are a fraction of 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.
Would the situation be better or worse if we were to legalize and regulate the use of hard drugs? The available evidence, looking at historical data of banning alcohol and trial studies of legalizing drugs, indicates it would be better. Looking at the situation from a harm reduction perspective, the evidence indicates that legalization is the approach more likely to reduce the overall harm to society and to individuals due to drug abuse.
The evidence you cite doesn't alter alter that expectation. It only confirms how bad the current situation is.