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The Problem With The War On Drugs
I submit to you that perhaps the problem with the War on Drugs is that it is not a real war.
If you made taking drugs and selling drugs a treasonous offense (as helping the drug trade enriches our enemies) and mandated the death penalty for anyone who sold drugs, and a 1 shot and you are out deal for anyone taking them (the first time you are caught you get life in prison...the second time death), do you really think that the drug trade would continue in America?
If you cooperated with the Mexicans (and other Latin American countries) to send in military forces and torch any opium fields, wipe out meth labs, and kill everyone involved and everyone aiding them (inside the US, and where possible outside), would that not nearly completely stop illegal drug use?
Maybe we just have not been taking a hard enough line...
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
Yes, China became a glorious paradise after Mao eradicated all those who stood in the way of that paradise.
No, Vuk, the demonization you represent is a much bigger problem. Narcotics is a mixed issue, but the problem stems mostly from social issues and poverty. Eradicate those, and you won't have much of a drug problem anymore. And as a bonus, you won't become a sadist in the process.
And lower the age requirement on booze. Getting drunk is a natural part of growing up, and you would want teenagers to get off on those things with the least side-effects, ie. alcohol.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
HoreTore
Yes, China became a glorious paradise after Mao eradicated all those who stood in the way of that paradise.
No, Vuk, the demonization you represent is a much bigger problem. Narcotics is a mixed issue, but the problem stems mostly from social issues and poverty. Eradicate those, and you won't have much of a drug problem anymore. And as a bonus, you won't become a sadist in the process.
And lower the age requirement on booze. Getting drunk is a natural part of growing up, and you would want teenagers to get off on those things with the least side-effects, ie. alcohol.
No, they are a very real problem, and better left out of society. There is nothing sadistic about it. The types of people you would be disposing off (murderous drug lords and the occasional dopey college student or small time street punk) would be the types of trash who would only create problems in society anyway. ~;)
Lower the age requirement? Why, because hormone loaded teenagers are not stupid and dangerous enough to themselves and the rest of society now? Now you want them sloshed as well? BRILLIANT!
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
The punishments you suggest would drastically reduce the rate of virtually any crime committed in a given country.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
PanzerJaeger
The punishments you suggest would drastically reduce the rate of virtually any crime committed in a given country.
~;)
Exactly.
And the great thing is that after you killed the first few drug smugglers to show that you were serious, you would probably never or virtually never have to dish out the punishment again. Do you know how many lives are lost because of drugs that would be saved?
Think of all the poor Mexicans being killed by drug lords trying to supply OUR market! That would no longer be happening, and we and most of Latin America would be much happier for it. :)
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
PanzerJaeger
The punishments you suggest would drastically reduce the rate of virtually any crime committed in a given country.
Indeed. It would also create a living hell.
"I want them sloshed as well"? What world are you living in? Teenagers do get hammered. The question isn't whther we want them "sloshed" or not, but whether we want them high on meth or drunk on beer. Those are your two choices.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
HoreTore
Indeed. It would also create a living hell.
"I want them sloshed as well"? What world are you living in? Teenagers do get hammered. The question isn't whther we want them "sloshed" or not, but whether we want them high on meth or drunk on beer. Those are your two choices.
It would create a living hell? lmao...you are amusing my friend...How so? Because there would be less criminals, less crime, less drug related deaths, no turmoil over drugs in Latin America (but who cares about the Mexicans, huh?), less of a burden on our health care system, and we would have smarter, more sober citizens making better choices and enjoying better lives? That is your definition of a living hell?
You are right, they do get sloshed, but with better enforcement and harsher punishments they would not. ~;)
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
Hey guys, I have this idea. So people don't want to be killed right? Well if we just made the punishment for every crime the death penalty, no one would do anything bad right. So we just need to execute everyone for any wrong doing and we won't have any crime anymore.
You disagree HoreTore? I guess that means you want our society to die in an orgy of drugs and mexicans.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
It would create a living hell? lmao...you are amusing my friend...How so? Because there would be less criminals, less crime, less drug related deaths, no turmoil over drugs in Latin America (but who cares about the Mexicans, huh?), less of a burden on our health care system, and we would have smarter, more sober citizens making better choices and enjoying better lives? That is your definition of a living hell?
You are right, they do get sloshed, but with better enforcement and harsher punishments they would not. ~;)
I don't feel such nonsense deserves a proper reply.
Have fun.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
HoreTore
I don't feel such nonsense deserves a proper reply.
Have fun.
If you can't argue it, belittle it. ~;)
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
a completely inoffensive name
Hey guys, I have this idea. So people don't want to be killed right? Well if we just made the punishment for every crime the death penalty, no one would do anything bad right. So we just need to execute everyone for any wrong doing and we won't have any crime anymore.
You disagree HoreTore? I guess that means you want our society to die in an orgy of drugs and mexicans.
Not every crime deserves the death penalty, but I believe that murder does. When you kill a murderer, you are saving lives. People who buy drugs and who sell drugs are not only funding world terrorism, but they are causing unfathomable cruelty and death in 'third-world' countries where drug lords exploit and murder people so that our pathetic, useless pot-head college kids can get their blood-fix.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
I submit to you that perhaps the problem with the War on Drugs is that it is not a real war.
If you made taking drugs and selling drugs a treasonous offense (as helping the drug trade enriches our enemies) and mandated the death penalty for anyone who sold drugs, and a 1 shot and you are out deal for anyone taking them (the first time you are caught you get life in prison...the second time death), do you really think that the drug trade would continue in America?
If you cooperated with the Mexicans (and other Latin American countries) to send in military forces and torch any opium fields, wipe out meth labs, and kill everyone involved and everyone aiding them (inside the US, and where possible outside), would that not nearly completely stop illegal drug use?
Maybe we just have not been taking a hard enough line...
.... or we could just legalize drugs and allow people to take responsbility for their own decisions?
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
Not every crime deserves the death penalty, but I believe that murder does. When you kill a murderer, you are saving lives. People who buy drugs and who sell drugs are not only funding world terrorism, but they are causing unfathomable cruelty and death in 'third-world' countries where drug lords exploit and murder people so that our pathetic, useless pot-head college kids can get their blood-fix.
I'm sorry, if we didn't have these forum rules, I'd call you some very bad names. Most pot college kids smoke around here is locally grown and produced. Futhermore, smoking pot doesn't make you "useless" or "pathetic". Abusing pot makes you useless and pathetic. Please learn the difference as you can apply the same concept to booze or most other mind altering substances.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
OMG, I figured this was going to be a revoke-the-war-on-drugs, reel in the powers of police, and give us back our civil liberties (War on Drugs does not just impact druggies, just like 99.99% of the people affected by the Patriot act are not terrorists, terrorist-sympathysers or have even read a book about terrorism)
You want a country where the Death Penalty is used for all sorts of things...well, take a look at such paradises as North Korea and Iran.
The biggest problem with the Death Penalty, especially in the US, is wrongful conviction. You can't just say "oops, we made a mistake, turns out you were innocent after all, have a nice time trying to put back together your life...", no instead it is telling a family "Oops, sorry, but when we killed him we reasonably thought he was guilty...".
Drugs are bad..OK, but so is alcohol. Some studies would say alcohol is much worse than several drugs...and very few would disagree that alcohol is responsible for more societal problems and violence than cannibis. Remember how well prohibition worked?
As long as there is money to be made, there will be people who are despirate enough, stupid enough, or greedy enough to try. And Mexico and Colombia do not need to be torn apart even further by more violence trying to purge them of drug production. We can't even stop drug production within the US, what makes you think you can stop it in the bloody jungle.
All of this is very naieve, if you ask me.
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.... or we could just legalize drugs and allow people to take responsbility for their own decisions?
Well, legalization combined wih treatment has worked in some places.
One key element of legalization is that you both effectively eliminate the criminal component (since you make it unprofitable for them). If anyone who wanted could grow a Cannibis plant in their backyard, do you think drug dealers could make anything selling it?
Another is that you remove a lot of the very dangerous elements from drug use - dirty needles, drugs being misrepresented, being pushed harder drugs without knowing (A lot of different things are sold as ecstacy...).
Anyway, to quote Princess Leia,
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the more you tighten your grip, the more systems that slip through your fingers...
. To be honest, it is true. Study after study has shown that treatment and regulation work better than the authoritarian hard-line punishment approach.
But I know this post is 99.9% likely to be a waste of time and energy, but what the heck, maybe someone in here has an open mind.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
I submit to you that perhaps the problem with the War on Drugs is that it is not a real war.
If you made taking drugs and selling drugs a treasonous offense (as helping the drug trade enriches our enemies) and mandated the death penalty for anyone who sold drugs, and a 1 shot and you are out deal for anyone taking them (the first time you are caught you get life in prison...the second time death), do you really think that the drug trade would continue in America?
If you cooperated with the Mexicans (and other Latin American countries) to send in military forces and torch any opium fields, wipe out meth labs, and kill everyone involved and everyone aiding them (inside the US, and where possible outside), would that not nearly completely stop illegal drug use?
Maybe we just have not been taking a hard enough line...
International relations
You're doing it wrong
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Jaguara
One key element of legalization is that you both effectively eliminate the criminal component (since you make it unprofitable for them). If anyone who wanted could grow a Cannibis plant in their backyard, do you think drug dealers could make anything selling it?
If anyone could grow a cornstalk in their backyard, do you think that rich, land-owning farmers could make anything selling it?
There is the matter of land needed (try growing it in a back alley), time needed, etc.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
See, this is the problem with meddling with language. With too big words, too casually tossed about.
If you call a 'coordinated and intense effort' a 'War' on Drugs, then inevitably it will become thought of in terms of war. Inevitably people will come to understand the project in martial terms. So when it isn't being 'won', the question is perfectly logical and legitimate to ask why the marines aren't send in to shoot drug using college kids.
After all, it is a war, right?
Vuk is right. Vuk is perfectly logical. It is the language of Washington that is wrong. Its projects to steer reality through langauge and terminology are mistaken, are having a debilitating effect on public discourse.
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Originally Posted by
a completely inoffensive name
Hey guys, I have this idea. So people don't want to be killed right? Well if we just made the punishment for every crime the death penalty, no one would do anything bad right. So we just need to execute everyone for any wrong doing and we won't have any crime anymore.
Summat like this, yes.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Vuk
I submit to you that perhaps the problem with the War on Drugs is that it is not a real war.
If you made taking drugs and selling drugs a treasonous offense (as helping the drug trade enriches our enemies) and mandated the death penalty for anyone who sold drugs, and a 1 shot and you are out deal for anyone taking them (the first time you are caught you get life in prison...the second time death), do you really think that the drug trade would continue in America?
If you cooperated with the Mexicans (and other Latin American countries) to send in military forces and torch any opium fields, wipe out meth labs, and kill everyone involved and everyone aiding them (inside the US, and where possible outside), would that not nearly completely stop illegal drug use?
Maybe we just have not been taking a hard enough line...
(a) - Why are you so frightened of someone getting high?
(b) - Why would you treat young people with such cruelty?
(c) - Why would you treat anyone with such cruelty?
(d) - Why would you volunteer such draconian powers over individuals to the state?
(e) - Now that the state has those draconian powers, where is the next area of personal behaviour they will be used upon?
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
Ah the War on Drugs there's a Bill Hicks analogy in here somewhere but I'm a bit afraid Vuk's head might explode from real truth.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
Well... you're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't.
I don't think Vuk's idea would work since as someone pointed out the root problem of drug abuse is poverty and until you eradicate that you will just be executing hordes of poor people. How can you try to be logical about it when they are addicts, they'll do what it takes to get their fix whatever the risks. And sure you can clamp down on the top dogs but so long as crime pays and they don't have many other opportunities in life, they're going to turn to crime.
At the same time I think liberals are too smug with their utopian vision of liberalisation. Yeah, it will solve drug abuse... just like how there's no alcohol abuse when it is legal. :rolleyes:
Nor will the black market disappear, the number of illegal cigarettes smuggled into the UK is phenomenal.
So... drug abuse will always suck whatever you do. If you are responsible then congratulations, but don't think it makes one bit of diference to an addict whether it is legal or not.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Beirut
(a) - Why are you so frightened of someone getting high?
(b) - Why would you treat young people with such cruelty?
(c) - Why would you treat anyone with such cruelty?
(d) - Why would you volunteer such draconian powers over individuals to the state?
(e) - Now that the state has those draconian powers, where is the next area of personal behavior they will be used upon?
(a) - I am not, I just don't agree with murdering people so that you can get high. Also, you are well aware of the other problems associated with drug use.
(b) - I don't think age is an excuse. If someone murders they deserve death...plain and simple. I do not discriminate.
(c) - Punishing someone for murder is not cruelty. They will be warned, and you will only end up having to kill people who (a) are dangerous criminals willing to risk it to make money or (b) desperate, dangerous individuals who will do anything for a fix...including risk their own life.
(d) - The death penalty? What is draconian about it? If someone is a murderer, they need to be killed so they will not kill more. Are you aware that many States already have the death penalty for some crimes? Treason currently can be punished by the death penalty, so nothing would really change.
(e) - So you are saying that if the state is empowered to execute murderers who are convicted of murder by a jury, next thing they will be sending in the military because you complained about taxes? Really?
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Rhyfelwyr
I don't think Vuk's idea would work since as someone pointed out the root problem of drug abuse is poverty and until you eradicate that you will just be executing hordes of poor people. How can you try to be logical about it when they are addicts, they'll do what it takes to get their fix whatever the risks. And sure you can clamp down on the top dogs but so long as crime pays and they don't have many other opportunities in life, they're going to turn to crime.
Ah, so it is poor people who mostly buy expensive drugs? Good, now they will not be wasting all their money and driving themselves into poverty. Maybe when they are not wasting $1000s on a blood fix they will move up in the world. Also, I would be willing to bet that there is just as much drug use in the middle and upper class, but they are just not cracked down on as hard...and are harder to catch.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
If anyone could grow a cornstalk in their backyard, do you think that rich, land-owning farmers could make anything selling it?
There is the matter of land needed (try growing it in a back alley), time needed, etc.
How's the black market corn trade doing?
Ajax
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Louis VI the Fat
See, this is the problem with meddling with language. With too big words, too casually tossed about.
If you call a 'coordinated and intense effort' a 'War' on Drugs, then inevitably it will become thought of in terms of war. Inevitably people will come to understand the project in martial terms. So when it isn't being 'won', the question is perfectly logical and legitimate to ask why the marines aren't send in to shoot drug using college kids.
After all, it is a war, right?
Vuk is right. Vuk is perfectly logical. It is the language of Washington that is wrong. Its projects to steer reality through langauge and terminology are mistaken, are having a debilitating effect on public discourse.
Summat like this, yes.
Sometimes you're too much of a polemicist for your own good.
Let’s go through point by point the mind numbing stupidity and intellectual dishonesty that is the op
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I submit to you that perhaps the problem with the War on Drugs is that it is not a real war.
Of course it's not, it's wrapped up in that nice little bow of jingoism to whip up the masses so congress can justify pouring money, men, and material into the same countries we've been screwing with since the Monroe doctrine. The war on drugs consists of mostly slush fund money to old anti communists and slush fund money to those that would further US interests. It is no surprise that the same drug dealers the US wishes to stamp out are the ones that give US backed interests the most problems
Those rebels in the Venezuelan jungle (backed by drug money) have had a much easier go than those in Columbia (backed by drug money)
I WONDER WHY
So yes in that sense it’s not a war, an imperialist venture would be a much more suitable and honest term
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If you made taking drugs and selling drugs a treasonous offense (as helping the drug trade enriches our enemies) and mandated the death penalty for anyone who sold drugs, and a 1 shot and you are out deal for anyone taking them (the first time you are caught you get life in prison...the second time death), do you really think that the drug trade would continue in America?
You make the naive, childlike assumption the war is actually about drugs, just like Nam was about the Communism and Iraq was about WMDs. It's amazing the bull excrement people believe when a man in a suit tells them it. I need to invest in more suits apparently. But I will indulge you in the vain hope of changing your mind lest you open your mouth and try to recruit the masses to your untenable, ridiculous position
So the rule of law is just a fad now? We're going back to draconian measures, which of course history have shown time and time again have the opposite of the intended effect. You would have 100 million poor Indians banging on the door of the DF, Caracas, and Sao Paulo by lunch time. I would love to see how you would spin yanqui breaking down doors and shooting anyone who has ever come into contact with drugs. That’ll go over real well
As long as there is money to be made the drugs will continue to flow. Now I'm sure these violent fantasy sound awesome in your head but in the real world violence seldom has the intended effect schoolboys want it to have
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If you cooperated with the Mexicans (and other Latin American countries) to send in military forces and torch any opium fields, wipe out meth labs, and kill everyone involved and everyone aiding them (inside the US, and where possible outside), would that not nearly completely stop illegal drug use?
Do you know how armed troops in Mexico would go over? Do you know anything about Mexico? Do you know how many US troops would die? How much bad favor we would curry? How many young Mexicans who would grow up with a poisonous view of the US? How much this would cost? How tenable is destroying everything?
You have no plan based in ethics or logic, just to many nights up at 3 am playing total war
And killing our own citizens for a dime bag? I can tell you were raised with the republic in mind
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Maybe we just have not been taking a hard enough line...
No the line we are taking is to hard and it is what creates gangs in the first place. If someone wants to ingest something, that's their business not the states. By forcing it underground you create these problems; we are reaping what we sowed in the 30s.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
(d) - The death penalty? What is draconian about it? If someone is a murderer, they need to be killed so they will not kill more. Are you aware that many States already have the death penalty for some crimes? Treason currently can be punished by the death penalty, so nothing would really change.
Just because we're already doing it wrong sometimes doesn't mean we should start doing it wrong more.
Ajax
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
(a) - I am not, I just don't agree with murdering people so that you can get high. Also, you are well aware of the other problems associated with drug use.
I'm not sure any sentient being agrees with murdering someone in order to get high, but murder is not in question here. The issue is drug use.
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
(b) - I don't think age is an excuse. If someone murders they deserve death...plain and simple. I do not discriminate.
Indeed.
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
(c) - Punishing someone for murder is not cruelty. They will be warned, and you will only end up having to kill people who (a) are dangerous criminals willing to risk it to make money or (b) desperate, dangerous individuals who will do anything for a fix...including risk their own life.
You speak again of murder, but murder is not the issue. Drug use is. You spoke of executions for drug users in your original post, not executions for murderers.
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
(d) - The death penalty? What is draconian about it? If someone is a murderer, they need to be killed so they will not kill more. Are you aware that many States already have the death penalty for some crimes? Treason currently can be punished by the death penalty, so nothing would really change.
I was speaking again to how drug users would be treated.
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
(e) - So you are saying that if the state is empowered to execute murderers who are convicted of murder by a jury, next thing they will be sending in the military because you complained about taxes? Really?
We must have a crossed wire here somewhere. I was speaking to the issue of drug use, as per your original post, but you are speaking to the issue of murder only.
All my questions were to the issue of how "you" would treat drug users. Sorry if I was unclear in my previous post.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Beirut
I'm not sure any sentient being agrees with murdering someone in order to get high, but murder is not in question here. The issue is drug use.
Indeed.
You speak again of murder, but murder is not the issue. Drug use is. You spoke of executions for drug users in your original post, not executions for murderers.
I was speaking again to how drug users would be treated.
We must have a crossed wire here somewhere. I was speaking to the issue of drug use, as per your original post, but you are speaking to the issue of murder only.
All my questions were to the issue of how "you" would treat drug users. Sorry if I was unclear in my previous post.
You don't understand though Beirut, it is a matter of where the drugs come from. Right now, the drug industry is responsible for untold death and destruction in Latin American countries, the Middle East, etc. When you buy drugs, you money goes toward continuing that cycle of murder and destruction. People know this, and yet they still buy drugs. That is murder...plain and simple. The question of drug use is the question of murder.
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
You don't understand though Beirut, it is a matter of where the drugs come from. Right now, the drug industry is responsible for untold death and destruction in Latin American countries, the Middle East, etc. When you buy drugs, you money goes toward continuing that cycle of murder and destruction. People know this, and yet they still buy drugs. That is murder...plain and simple. The question of drug use is the question of murder.
You're a fool
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Strike For The South
You're a fool
That was a very intelligent response Strike. Perhaps you would like to tell me how deliberately supporting an injury built around human death and exploitation is not murder. I would really love to hear it!
EDIT: Or do you not like to hear it said because you yourself are a user?
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Re: The Problem With The War On Drugs
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Originally Posted by
Vuk
You don't understand though Beirut, it is a matter of where the drugs come from. Right now, the drug industry is responsible for untold death and destruction in Latin American countries, the Middle East, etc. When you buy drugs, you money goes toward continuing that cycle of murder and destruction. People know this, and yet they still buy drugs. That is murder...plain and simple. The question of drug use is the question of murder.
Aside from the point that I believe you are utterly and completey wrong - what about someone who grows his own pot? Should he face The Big Sleep courtesy of the state?