Posted on 06/21/2024 4:52:14 PM PDT by T Ruth
Bring in the Chinese.
Average annual number of deaths from excessive alcohol use, including partially and fully alcohol-attributable conditions, increased approximately 29% from 137,927 during 2016–2017 to 178,307 during 2020–2021, and age-standardized death rates increased from approximately 38 to 48 per 100,000 population.
Average annual number of deaths from excessive alcohol use, including partially and fully alcohol-attributable conditions, increased approximately 29% from 137,927 during 2016–2017 to 178,307 during 2020–2021, and age-standardized death rates increased from approximately 38 to 48 per 100,000 population.
I never understood the irrational reasoning behind legalizing drugs to “put the cartels and drug dealers out of business.”
It doesn’t work like that in real life.
There will always be a black market competing with a “legitimate” market, because the legal market will always necessarily come with constraints that the black market doesn’t have to worry about.
What did they expect?
They also use a sh*t ton of water in often drought-plagued California.
And look at the problems with drug use and homelessness in the blue cities that provide for *safe* drug use.
Most of the federal drug legalization folks rest their belief on freedom and the Constitution.
The same human right to self-determination that stood athwart forced vaccination is the same right in this case.
Where in the Constitution is the state empowered to band pot etc? And before you say the Commerce Clause, remember it required an amendment to ban booze.
To argue for Leviathan to be empowered to ban drugs is to give a cheery two thumbs up to forced vaccination and forced euthanasia and other “your body are belong to us” sentiments. Welcome to North Korea.
They already are. In Maine. They’re the ones staffing the illegal grows in the Maine woods.
The Sevan Podcast 197 - Jorge Ventura - “Cartelville, USA” Documentary
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=-8yTm1bNM9Q
We are thinking human beings with the Constitution in our hands. If we really are thinking, we'll severely curtail or ban destructive substances, especially when we have ample evidence of their destructive natures.
“There will always be a black market competing with a “legitimate” market, because the legal market will always necessarily come with constraints that the black market doesn’t have to worry about.”
How much black market beer is sold in the US?
L
Besides, it was our open borders that caused this problem, yet we want to trust the same government that left the borders open and allowed those drugs and cartels to come into the country to fight them.
There's no way of knowing because SUCH ACTIVITY IS NOT TRACKED. Duh!!!
Welcome to Narco America. 😑
If we really are thinking, we'll severely curtail or ban destructive substances, especially when we have ample evidence of their destructive natures.
Like alcohol.
And tobacco.
And sugary drinks.
And bacon.
Stop making invalid comparisons. You only look stupid doing so.
Substances which are dangerously mind- and behavior-altering are not even in the same universe as certain food items.
Regardless, my original post only posits that if you makes something legal that was previous illegal with high consequences as a cost, more people will indulge in it, not fewer as some brain-dead libertarians like to claim. That’s just basic economics. You lower the cost of an item, more is sold.
And yes, there will always be an illegitimate market for it. It doesn’t solve that problem.
Interesting except that they’ve been killing people over weed in Humboldt County for as long as i can remember.
Exactly!
it’s the same with all of the legalized gambling.
One thing though is the idea of weed kingpins is LOL.
There used to be insane mob violence and users being injured/dying of contaminated product during prohibition. Legalization with fair taxes soon eliminated that.
Yes there is still some moonshine in the poorest states but the taxes are reasonable enough where most people in the USA buy alcohol legally. Even though more expensive they prefer a regulated product so they dont risk death.
You rarely if ever hear about poisonings or gun battles over alcohol these days thanks to legalization and acceptable tax rates.
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