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EverybodyDannsNow SE19 07 Dec 21 10.19am | |
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Originally posted by Stirlingsays
Alcohol is a legal drug that we allow that when abused causes considerable harm that's evident to everybody. We could probably classify some of the softer illegal drugs under that description but seemingly being one of those squares I never took/take anything other than alcohol so I couldn't really say. The whole drugs issue is one I find very difficult and I'm not one who thinks that they have the answers on it....well over and above some basic platitudes that I think most would agree with. I think the message to the young...well everybody should be to encourage them to live healthily. To an extent I think this is what we do. The default should be to discourage drugs unless their medical state makes them necessary. A default disclination towards drugs is just a sensible lifestyle choice for the vast majority of us. As for what society's attitude should be towards class A usage.....I'm caught between my own libertarian sensibility towards personal choice and my personal distain for self destructive behaviour. However, out of the two libertarianism wins out....because in a free society, if we are talking about adults, it has too. However, that doesn't mean the state shouldn't be going after the criminals benefiting from the personal misery of addicts and the endless grief their drugs cause families. Should that be far harsher than the soft touch the state has been pursuing for decades now? I know Peter Hitchens thinks so and he's a social conservative I respect. But I honestly don't know. Should we just say 'feck it' and allow all drugs, taxing it to limit the profits of criminals that way. Again, I honestly don't know....as I don't like the culpability the state would have in increasing drug usage and effectively profiting from tragedies when they inevitably occur....though you could rightly say that happens with alcohol now....but should we be expanding that? Maybe there isn't an answer that provides the decider with clean hands either way. I think your first paragraph is important - we need to move away from this all-encompassing description of 'drugs' = bad, as if weed and heroin are comparable substances. It's also created this weird sort of idea that prescribed medicines and caffeine and alcohol and the likes are somehow not drugs. I'm with you on the libertarian point - the idea that you can police these substances out of existence, or that people are not always going to have an interest in psychoactive substances is demonstrable nonsense, and 50+ years of trying hasn't made a dent - at which point do we try something else? For anyone who hasn't, it's worth looking at how Portugal have legislated drugs since 2016; [Link] - it's a better approach by moreorless every available metric, yet the rest of the world's governments pretend they don't know this.
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EverybodyDannsNow SE19 07 Dec 21 10.24am | |
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Originally posted by The Dolphin
Given the amount of people with mental health issues nowadays it is fair to say any form of drug is very bad for them - be it weed or harder types. There is no factual basis to what your saying - alcohol is every bit as addictive, destructive and harmful (I'd argue moreso) than many, many illegal drugs - the idea that if you're feeling down it's fine to drink yourself into a hole, but having a spliff is a hard no, just has zero basis in terms of the actual substances - it's just that we as society view one as acceptable/normal. To suggest alcohol isn't a likely longer term problem is a strange point - the numbers of people addicted to alcohol in this country is staggering. On the purity; de-criminalising solves that as the substances can be regulated and produced properly.
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The Dolphin 07 Dec 21 12.05pm | |
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Given my personal experience and my dealing with people who know what they are talking about first hand then I can assure you that my statement is reasonably accurate.
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EverybodyDannsNow SE19 07 Dec 21 1.08pm | |
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Originally posted by The Dolphin
Given my personal experience and my dealing with people who know what they are talking about first hand then I can assure you that my statement is reasonably accurate. Of course it is your opinion; there is no factual basis to statements like "they will get hooked very easily" - tobacco is infinitely more addictive than most illegal drugs, for example, it's not a reason to outlaw it. You've summarised that alcohol isn't as bad because it's less likely to be a long-term problem... that's a bizarre claim - how many thousands of people have long-term addictions to alcohol in this country?
What is there to suggest that this latest war on drugs will be any more successful than the last 50 years worth? And if your answer to that is there isn't anything to suggest that, then is it not time to try something different? Edited by EverybodyDannsNow (07 Dec 2021 1.09pm)
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dreamwaverider London 07 Dec 21 1.21pm | |
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A politician hooked on class A
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cryrst The garden of England 07 Dec 21 2.50pm | |
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Originally posted by EverybodyDannsNow
There is no factual basis to what your saying - alcohol is every bit as addictive, destructive and harmful (I'd argue moreso) than many, many illegal drugs - the idea that if you're feeling down it's fine to drink yourself into a hole, but having a spliff is a hard no, just has zero basis in terms of the actual substances - it's just that we as society view one as acceptable/normal. To suggest alcohol isn't a likely longer term problem is a strange point - the numbers of people addicted to alcohol in this country is staggering. On the purity; de-criminalising solves that as the substances can be regulated and produced properly. This could be a first but I make you right.
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Stirlingsays 07 Dec 21 3.02pm | |
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Originally posted by EverybodyDannsNow
Of course it is your opinion; there is no factual basis to statements like "they will get hooked very easily" - tobacco is infinitely more addictive than most illegal drugs, for example, it's not a reason to outlaw it. You've summarised that alcohol isn't as bad because it's less likely to be a long-term problem... that's a bizarre claim - how many thousands of people have long-term addictions to alcohol in this country?
What is there to suggest that this latest war on drugs will be any more successful than the last 50 years worth? And if your answer to that is there isn't anything to suggest that, then is it not time to try something different? Edited by EverybodyDannsNow (07 Dec 2021 1.09pm) I get the legalise argument. As I say I'm not saying you're wrong or right, I kind of wimp out on this one....I just don't like the realisation that all the solutions still seem to have significant problems. How do you deal with the inherent issues with legislation from within my previous post? Also, how do you answer Hitchen's point that proper enforcement against drugs has never really been tried?
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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cryrst The garden of England 07 Dec 21 3.09pm | |
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Originally posted by Stirlingsays
I get the legalise argument. As I say I'm not saying you're wrong or right, I kind of wimp out on this one....I just don't like the realisation that all the solutions still seem to have significant problems. How do you deal with the inherent issues with legislation from within my previous post? Also, how do you answer Hitchen's point that proper enforcement against drugs has never really been tried? How hard do you make enforcement though?
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The Dolphin 07 Dec 21 3.17pm | |
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I will bow out - it is a pointless argument.
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EverybodyDannsNow SE19 07 Dec 21 3.47pm | |
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Originally posted by Stirlingsays
I get the legalise argument. As I say I'm not saying you're wrong or right, I kind of wimp out on this one....I just don't like the realisation that all the solutions still seem to have significant problems. How do you deal with the inherent issues with legislation from within my previous post? Also, how do you answer Hitchen's point that proper enforcement against drugs has never really been tried? I think you broadly answer it in your own post - you will never eradicate problem users, the same way you never eradicate problem drinkers, but you ensure the support structures are there for the people who need them - treat addiction as a health problem rather than a criminal one - there's quite a lot in the Portgual study I shared about that, and we manage to do it to some extent already with alcoholics and people trying to quit smoking. Problematic use of drugs (legal and illegal) is strongly correlated with poverty and deprivation - creating a society where not so many people feel the need to alter the reality to quite that extent they do and quite as often as they do is a much more worthwhile ambition than more prohibition. Given the amount of money thrown at this over the decades and the number of people convicted, I would challenge that assertion - how much more does he want us to spend? how many more people in prison? You are someone who puts a lot of stock in human nature - basically every culture in human history have used psychoactive substances, so there is nothing unusual or unnatural in people's desire to do these things (there are many examples of animals seeking natural 'highs' in the animal kingdom) - knowing that as a reality; we either try to fight it, or we accept it and adjust our approach - I think it's fairly obvious what makes more sense. The reality is that any level of evidence-based approach to this problem would conclude that Portugal's (and other's) approach has been astronomically more successful in 5 years than the war on drugs has in 50 - the question is why do we continue to bang our head against the same wall?
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BlueJay UK 07 Dec 21 3.49pm | |
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Originally posted by The Dolphin
I will bow out - it is a pointless argument. I'm sure you have, but many have had devastating experiences with alcohol too, or partners with drink problems who routinely take out their anger on them when under the influence. Or drink drivers, violent drunks of a weekend, the list goes on and I don't think we need to turn it into a competition or claim that one causes more misery than another because it's all very situational and down to how the individual behaves - and how seeing that impacts our outlook. Edited by BlueJay (07 Dec 2021 3.56pm)
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EverybodyDannsNow SE19 07 Dec 21 4.02pm | |
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Originally posted by BlueJay
I'm sure you have, but many have had devastating experiences with alcohol too, or partners with drink problems who routinely take out their anger on them when under the influence. Or drink drivers, violent drunks of a weekend, the list goes on and I don't think we need to turn it into a competition or claim that one causes more misery than another because it's all very situational and down to how the individual behaves - and how seeing that impacts our outlook.
Precisely - and it's not to detract from what Dolphin has experienced, but it's what I mean when I say our current position on drugs is an emotional one, rather than being based on any logic or evidence. We know this stuff doesn't work, but it feels safer to use words like 'clamp down' and 'crackdown', and that holds weight when people have suffered.
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