JohnStockalypse
Well-Known Member
It sounds like you just dismiss every question/point someone makes that doesn't jive with your world view.
To be fair, I see some of this on both sides. Let's go blaze and work this all out.
It sounds like you just dismiss every question/point someone makes that doesn't jive with your world view.
You respond to none of my points, and then insult me. Bravo.
I am willing to listen to those who make actual counter-arguments and support them with more than anecdotal evidence, as I've shown in this thread.
Fair enough. Is it safe to say that I'm making a better case than Jazzspazz? Should I just resort to dismissing the academic literature in favor of personal anecdotes and knee jerk reactions?Your studies were anecdotal. Science does not study literature and draw conclusions from surveys and loose correlations with a multitude of unidentified variables.
Ugh. I may take the time, but it will likely take me several days, as I don't have internet access at my current residence (in the woods). I'm not denying that many people who move on to hard drugs do so after trying marijuana. I would guess most heroin addicts tried beer before moving on to heroin. The fact remains that an overwhelming percentage of cannabis users are not users of hard drugs (opiates, amphetamines, etc.). If cannabis use compelled people to try hard drugs, wouldn't hard drug use be more widespread?franklin said:Please lay out your scientific proof that marijuana isn't a gateway drug (not that I care if it is). I know people who started out with pot, moved up the thrill ladder, and committed suicide as teenagers.
Maybe you should change cheese's, because I have never been addicted to cheese and have eaten it off and on. If cheese is addictive to you you should stop eating it.Cheese contains opiates, rendering it extremely addictive. What should we do about cheese, especially since there are actual fatal diseases that can be attributed to overeating, whereas with cannabis there are none?
I don't buy that cannabis is not physically addictive. For argument sake lets assume you are right and it is not. It is still mentally and/or emotionally addictive. There is more to things than just physical addiction. Cannabis is often mixed with other drugs that are very addictive, as it is not always smoked on its own. If it was not addictive in some way, people would not want to smoke it, let alone smoke it often.Besides, cannabis is not physically addictive. By choosing to consume cannabis, I am exercising my liberty, not giving it up.
And the gateway theory? Really? Study after study comes back showing no pharmacological or statistical link between cannabis use and other drug use. Milk might as well be considered the most dangerous drug because it is often the jumping off point to use hard drugs. And, to further argue the point, one of the big problems with the current prohibition is that the market for soft (cannabis) and hard (opiates, amphetamines, etc.) drugs are mixed. That is, the dealer of cannabis is often also dealing in hard drugs, and thus the cannabis user is exposed to more options that he may not be exposed to in a legalized and regulated cannabis market.
Organized crime would just change what it is they are involved in, and it really would not cut down on the casualties... it would just change the name of where we associate the casualties.Beyond that, cannabis prohibition has been a boon to organized crime, just as alcohol prohibition was. Virtually all cannabis-related violence is gang/organized crime violence. Legalizing takes organized crime out of the equation, and thus would almost certainly cut down on the casualties in the worldwide War on Drugs.
Harm reduction strategies, like those being undertaken in Portugal, have been shown to lead to better outcomes, both in terms of public health and safety and financial cost. There is no rational reason for non-violent recreational drug users to be treated like violent criminals. None.
That's fine. I don't much care whether people think drugs are good or bad. I'm concerned with what policy best suits individuals and communities. The current policy is extremely expensive and is aimed at users, not dealers (and certainly not the cartels). Those are the people who are caught, prosecuted and imprisoned. If someone sells to minors, drives while under the influence of cannabis, or commits violent crimes under the influence of cannabis, there should be government/society imposed consequences. If I grow cannabis for my own personal use, there shouldn't be.I do have much less of a problem with non-violent recreational drug users.
I'm not going to give ground though and say I think it is ok.
The only serious part was about vouchers in Utah. The left screams about freedom this and that until it hits their pet projects. We wanted freedom of school choice, lower school costs, etc. and the left crushed it. They pulled every ridiculous tactic in the book, including demonizing Milton Friedman over his legalize mj stance. If that wasn't pure hypocrisy then I don't know what is.
I was going to edit my earlier post, but I'll just go ahead and make a new one.Please lay out your scientific proof that marijuana isn't a gateway drug (not that I care if it is). I know people who started out with pot, moved up the thrill ladder, and committed suicide as teenagers.
Forget the studies, I have seen it in someones actual life.
Organized crime would just change what it is they are involved in, and it really would not cut down on the casualties... it would just change the name of where we associate the casualties.
What makes you think I'm pissed off all the time? I would guess most people who know me consider me a pretty easy going, even keeled fellow.Why are guys like GVC and NUMERICA pissed off all the time?
On second thought, I'm probably going to bow out pretty soon. Sorry Franklin, but there's wood to be cut, a lawn to be mowed, and grass to be smoked. Color me de-motivated.
Thus saith homeopaths.
If you dry up a source of funding, you reduce teh damage they can do.
Why hasn't this been the case in countries that have either legalized or decriminalized cannabis? Can you provide any support of any kind for this assertion?Usage will increase dramatically.
1. It sounds like these people were sick, and didn't get the help they needed. Using terms like "thrill ladder" does a disservice to those with serious psychological disorders. The negative stigma attached to many completely normal attitudes and behaviors of young people, and the way they are often handled by families, schools and communities, lead to some terrible outcomes, like suicide. I have my doubts that prohibition, and the lies that are perpetuated by the government propaganda machine, do little to help people overcome their problems with depression and addiction.
2. Even if there were a strong gateway effect, so what? There has now been (some contend) ample time and evidence to judge whether legalization/decriminalization of cannabis leads to higher use of these substances (in Portugal, the Netherlands, and other European countries). The studies have not shown any statistically significant uptick in use post-legalization/decriminalization. So, again, even if there is a gateway effect, prohibition of cannabis likely does very little to curb the move toward hard drugs, since it does little to slow the use of the initial substance, cannabis. Further, as evidenced by some survey data, teens have an easier time getting their hands on cannabis (and other illegal substances) than they do on alcohol and tobacco. It isn't too much of a stretch to assert that if you were to legalize and regulate cannabis like tobacco, that teenage use would go down. Whether an adult decides to consume cannabis, cocaine, meth, etc. is not really any of my concern until he becomes violent, dangerous or parasitic (although the cost of walking them through the criminal justice system and imprisoning them for years is almost certainly higher than whatever societal cost their addictive lifestyle imposes on the outside).