Posted on 12/13/2001 3:32:50 AM PST by CrossCheck
Edited on 09/03/2002 4:49:47 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
On Oct. 25, six weeks after the worst terrorist atrocities in our history, the United States was bombing Afghanistan, Colin Powell was discussing a post-Taliban government, investigators were grappling with anthrax in the mail, and federal agents were . . . well, they were going after pot smokers in California. If John Ashcroft had been around during the Chicago fire, he would have been handcuffing jaywalkers.
(Excerpt) Read more at chicagotribune.com ...
I'm sorry I though you possessed the ability to reason. We were talking about how our culture treats legal drugs. Uriel claimed that we would not have strong forms of drugs if they were legal. I just proved him wrong by pointing out our cultures affection to double expressos.
Way back in 1919, there was a little ol' Amendment to the Constitution - Amendment XVIII - that gave the fedgov the right to pass laws forbidding any American from drinking alcohol. Sure enough, the Volstead Act passed and Prohibition had begun. A whole pantheon of moralists, some religious, some political "progressives" hailed Prohibition as the salvation of the republic.
Alas, it wasn't so.
Good old human nature got in the way -- despite the "legal consequences", people still wanted their alcoholic beverages, and went to great lengths to get them. Some made their own. Some imported it clandestinely. Others, who couldn't afford the aforementioned options, substituted dangerous concoctions made from poisons such as methanol - the main ingredient in antifreeze at the time. (The term "blind drunk" actually arose from these unfortunates: imbibing too much methanol had the unpleasant side effect of causing blindness to the drinker.)
It wasn't long before the majority of Americans realized just how absurd Prohibition was. The rapid rise of organized hoodlums who controlled the trade in illegal booze, the number of people jailed on Prohibition charges, the consequences of drinking poisonous substitutes became too much for Americans to take, and in a mere 14 years, Prohibition was consigned to history's dustbin. And after it was repealed, we did not become a nation of alcoholics; rather, after a slight uptick, alcohol use leveled off to the same level it was prior to Prohibition, but alcohol abuse declined dramatically.
I believe that "repealing" drug prohibition would have the same positive effect as the repeal of the XVIII Amendment.
Despite the rationalizations of the drug warriors, such positive effects happen today in places where the tactics of the WOD have been replaced by more saner approaches (such as Holland), and if given a chance, would no doubt work here as well. Certainly the cost to the taxpayers would be far less than the WOD, and the renewed respect for law-enforcement officers that would accrue when people view them as public servants instead of jack-booted thugs would be priceless.
Answer to me this. Why is alcohol and tobacco usage WAY beyond that of illegal drugs. Tell me.
Simple. Alcohol and tobacco use have always been higher than that of the "illegal" drugs, because they have always been used across a broad range of society. The "illegal" drugs usually had a "niche" market: e.g. in addition to its legitimate medical uses as part of the physician's pharmacopia, marijuana was commonly used by Mexican immigrants prior to its outlawing. BTW, the prohibitionist Harry Anslinger, who was the architect of marijuana prohibition, claimed in the hearings leading up to the passage of the 1937 Marihuana Tax Act that the evil weed made Mexican farm workers crazy enough to chase after and rape white women (A similar argument was pressed regarding cocaine and black men). So, racism is one of the roots of the War on Drugs. Nice, eh? Imagine the hue and cry if such an argument was raised today - we all know the results of that hypothetical Congressional testimony! :-)
I don't both should be illegal to sale.
The rest of your post is quite telling of you. You need help.
This is my experience as well. The stupid people I used to know who started using drugs got no smarter - and it screwed their lives up even more than they already were. The smart people I know got no dumber. They made smart choices while "on drugs", and did not let the effects interfere with their lives. But really, this is common sense.
I feel it's wrong to allow the government to criminalize responsible Americans, and cause drugs to be of questionable purity and unknown dosage because a few fools try to take themselves out of the gene pool.
Agreed! If your childhood/school experience was anything like mine, it probably made you mad as hell when the teacher said that nobody got recess, instead of just the few kids who were acting up, because the teacher didn't want to single them out and punish them individually. Thats the way I see government - this childish notion that "because a few misbehave, they have spolied it fore you all". I say NO, punish the individual for their violations of rights, and leave the rest ALONE!
You apparently have not lived or been related to a hard drug user. I have alcoholics in my family and I have hard drugs addicts in it. Mostly my extended family. The alcoholics still hold jobs and are at least functioning humans. The hard drug users are worthless beings, that do nothing but exist. One is to such a point, that I feel that her kids would suffer less if she would hurry up and die. She is the equivalent of a demon.
I don't see a large majority of other HARD drug users being responsible. The drugs make it impossible for them to be. As I said, GHB is questionable, and I would like more info before I decide. However, still this is all very simple. Simply allow the people of each state to decide if they want to allow that drug or not.
IT ABSOLUTELY DOES!! Just because you think a person high on crack is not a threat gives you no right to force me to be threatened by him. It is a THREAT of direct force. You are a tyrant if you think you can force the people of my state to be put in harms way by allowing hard drugs to be freely sold and used. I don't take kindly to TYRANTS.
A great start on the road to sanity, but the Federal Holy Drug Warriors at the DEA and ONDCP would never let it happen.
Kudos to the first congress-critter that can get a bill enacted to make the DEA and ONDCP illegal -- anyone that truly believes in the 9th and 10th Amendments should support it.
Ron Paul, are you listening??
What if a scientist invented a device that could stop time for everyone but the person using the device and they could go around and violate anyone they wished and do anything they wanted without anyone ever knowing. Would you allow that device to be privately. Owned.
You're probably right about that ... the other drug warrior that actually debates with a semblence of intelligence is strela. haven't seen him in a while though
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