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To: entropy12

I congratulate you. I was raised the same way that your kids were, and I am also grateful for it. It kept me out of a lot of trouble.

Unfortunately, we have many, many kids who aren’t ‘monitored’ at all; many who have been given no moral guidance; many who haven’t been taught how to think and choose wisely.

Suggesting to them that using ‘recreational’ drugs is ‘OK’ - because it’s legal, and adults do it - is only encouraging them to think that it’s harmless to indulge. They will find ways to do so, and plenty of unscrupulous adults will be happy to help them.


70 posted on 01/19/2020 8:30:21 PM PST by Jamestown1630 ("A Republic, if you can keep it")
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To: Jamestown1630
Suggesting to them that using ‘recreational’ drugs is ‘OK’ - because it’s legal, and adults do it

So we should make illegal for adults everything we don't want kids doing? Alcohol? Tobacco? Sex?

71 posted on 01/19/2020 8:32:35 PM PST by NobleFree ("law is often but the tyrant's will, and always so when it violates the right of an individual")
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To: Jamestown1630; NobleFree
From a post now 10 years old:

What Warren Buffett and Adam Smith Tell Us about the War on Drugs

If you want to know why the war on drugs is lost start thinking about it the way Adam Smith and Warren Buffett would think about it.

Adam Smith would talk about the law of supply and demand and he tells us that when the demand goes up so does the price; when supply goes down, the price goes up. When the demand is inelastic, that is, when it is the product of an addiction, the price curve is even more radical in its upward thrust when supply is reduced. Therefore, the more the government succeeds in interdicting the supply of addictive drugs, the more it increases the price and thereby increases the incentive to increase supply. The more the government succeeds, the more it must fail.

That is why drug smugglers and dealers are so wonderfully inventive in evading the law and will ever continue to be so unless you want to live in North Korea.

Without putting words in Warren Buffett's mouth, his criteria for investing in an enterprise are well-known. He wants a company with a unique product and a huge market potential. What better than an addictive drug? He wants company with high barriers to entry against competition. What better barrier than the law and what better barriers than drug enforcement agencies raiding your competition? And if competition becomes too serious, this business model says you simply eliminate it by murdering them.

Buffett would be very intrigued by the idea that costs are extremely low, markup extremely high, and the price is ever supported by the government! By making drugs illegal, the government in effect has enacted price supports. By selling into an inelastic demand of addicts, the market as well as price are virtually guaranteed.

Because the price is high, addicts are incentivized to push the drugs onto others in order to addict them, to create a mini market which funds their own addiction. What a wonderful business model! On the macro level it is a multilevel marketing scheme on steroids, or should I say, powered by addiction, and supported by the government.

Meanwhile, this wonderful marketing scheme generates so much money that corruption is inevitable. Worse, our enemies in the Muslim world and elsewhere have exploited this market to our disadvantage and national security peril. Meanwhile, our only politically correct response is a full throated roar: "do more of the same."


88 posted on 01/19/2020 9:20:41 PM PST by nathanbedford (attack, repeat, attack! Bull Halsey)
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