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To: tpaine
You agree that prohibitions are useless, yet you go on to say:

No, I said that prohibitions against easily produced substances which also cause relatively little harm in the grand scheme of things aren't practical or necessary.

Neither plutonium nor most hard drugs can be produced by their individual end-consumers, thus prohibiting them is a lot more practical. They are also MUCH more dangerous than things like marijuana or alcohol, thus justifying an exception to basic libertarian principles. A few hard drugs, such as meth, are pretty easy to produce and still extremely harmful, but the producers are not generally significant users (sort of self-regulating -- if one becomes a heavy user, one will shortly lose the capacity to produce). Most importantly, enforcement of laws against these more dangerous substances can be effective by focusing primarily on people who are producing and selling the substances for profit. With things like marijuana and alcohol, taking out the commercial producers and sellers simply results in most of the users taking up home production, therefore the prohibition accomplishes virtually nothing, unless we start to allow random searches of private homes.

53 posted on 12/22/2001 11:47:20 AM PST by GovernmentShrinker
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To: GovernmentShrinker
The general perception of libertarianism is that it grounds "prohibit nothing" in philosophy, but then fails to adequately justify the "exceptions" on the grounds of libertarian philosophy, as opposed to on pragmatic grounds.
58 posted on 12/22/2001 11:49:56 AM PST by Christian_Egalitarian
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