Not true. If you see someone having a glass of wine or a single beer, you don’t think, “She’s getting stoned”. If you see her take one hit off a crack pipe, you know she is.
Nobody takes the equivalent of a “one can of crack”, or a “few sips of heroin”. Most recreational drug users become abusers, while a small percentage of alcohol users become abusers.
At any rate, in a civil society, the people have the right to weigh the costs and benefits of various behaviors and evaluate what behaviors pose too great a risk to innocent people.
There is no fundamental or Constitutional right to smoke pot, smoke crack, shoot heroin, or drink alcohol for that matter.
I don’t know how much to trust these stats. I would have to spend more time checking them against other sources. You say this is fine and dandy and it’s OK because it is legal to consume alcohol.
http://www.drug-rehabs.org/alcohol-statistics.php
# Alcohol is involved in 50% of all driving fatalities.
# In the United States, every 30 minutes someone is killed in an alcohol related traffic accident.
# Over 15 million Americans are dependent on alcohol. 500,000 are between the age of 9 and 12.
# Americans spend over $90 billion dollars total on alcohol each year.
# An average American may consume over 25 gallons of beer, 2 gallons of wine, and 1.5 gallons of distilled spirits each year.
# Pregnant women who drink are feeding alcohol to their babies. Unfortunately the underdeveloped liver of the baby can only burn alcohol at half the rate of its mother, so the alcohol stays in the baby’s system twice as long.
# Each year students spend $5.5 billion on alcohol, more then they spend on soft drinks, tea, milk, juice, coffee, or books combined.
# 56% of students in grade 5 to 12 say that alcohol advertising encourages them to drink.
# 6.6% of employees in full time jobs report heavy drinking, defined as drinking five or more drinks per occasion on five or more days in the past 30 days.
# The highest percentage of heavy drinkers (12.2%) is found among unemployed adults between the age of 26 to 34
# Up to 40% of all industrial fatalities and 47% of industrial injuries can be linked to alcohol consumption and alcoholism.
# In 2000, almost 7 million persons age 12 to 20 was a binge drinker; that is about one in five persons under the legal drinking age was a binge drinker.
# The 2001 survey shows 25 million (one in ten) Americans surveyed reported driving under the influence of alcohol. This report is nearly three million more than the previous year. Among young adults age 18 to 25 years, almost 23% drove under the influence of alcohol.
# Drunk driving is proving to be even deadlier then what we previously know. The latest death statistics released by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), using a new method of calculation show that 17,488 people where killed in alcohol related traffic accidents last year. This report represents nearly 800 more people where killed than the previous year.
# Alcohol is the number 1 drug problem in America.
# 43% of Americans have been exposed to alcoholism in their families.
# Nearly one out of 4 Americans admitted to general hospitals have alcohol problems or are undiagnosed alcoholics being diagnosed for alcohol related consequences.
# Alcohol and alcohol related problems is costing the American economy at least $100 million in health care and lost of productivity every year.
# Four in ten criminal offenders report alcohol as a factor in violence.
# Among spouse violence victims, three out of four incidents were reported to have involved alcohol use by the offender.
# In 1996, local law enforcement agencies made an estimated 1,467,300 arrests nationwide for driving under the influence of alcohol.
http://www.learn-about-alcoholism.com/statistics-on-alcoholics.html
Other Victims
The statistics on alcoholics that we listed above dont include the other victims, those affected by alcohol though they are not alcoholics and may not even drink at all.
So consider the alcoholism fact that alcohol is a factor in the following:
* 73% of all felonies
* 73% of child beating cases
* 41% of rape cases
* 81% of wife battering cases
* 72% of stabbings
* 83% of homicides
Think the same statistics hold up for marijuana use?