KitemanSA wrote:Diogenes wrote:
KitemanSA wrote:
IF the drugs had been legal in the first place, the Swiss wouldn't have had the problems they did. But, they weren't legal, just unregulated. That was an honorable, but stupid, experiment.
I agree about the stupid part. A lot of conservative critics predicted that it would be a fiasco. I remember Rush Limbaugh making fun of it when the idea was first proposed, and trumpeting what a failure it was when they finally shut it down. The idea was contrary to what most people regard as common sense.
Hey, again a slight shred of agreement! Of course we have completely different reasons for thinking it stupid, but I'll take what I can get. The reason it was stupid, despite what Rush (oddly appropriate name don't you think (Oxyconton) would have you believe, was that it was based on unregulated illegality, rather than legality; irresonsibility rather than responsibility.
Your example makes my point for me. Rush was not addicted to Oxyconton till he was given it to treat a medical condition. He then became addicted to it, and has now admitted the stuff caught even him.
That's what i'm trying to say. Drugs are deceptively dangerous, and people may think they have control of them, but often times they lose control.
KitemanSA wrote: Diogenes wrote:KitemanSA wrote:
This is a common occurrence when people can't accept that they are wrong. Too much invested to change their mind, too much dissonance to listen further.
It is also a common occurrence when people of sufficient aptitude realize that a conversation is pointlessly going in circles punctuated with snide remarks and ad hominem attacks. It is like Godwin's law without the Nazis. (Although I think they may have been invoked too.) Add to that, the fact that this conversation has been ongoing between myself and MSimon for a very long time, and this just represents the nth iteration of it.
Perhaps. But which is it?
I'm still here discussing this.
KitemanSA wrote:
You seem to have made a great breakthru above, so maybe you can remain able to think and learn.
My concern is to address the bad results that affect innocent people. If there are no (or few) bad results to innocents, I have no objections. As with alcoholics, some people can take it with no ill results, and some people can't. If the law can sort the harmless people from the destructive ones, the same purpose can be accomplished without banning everyone.
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote:KitemanSA wrote: Yet again a non-sequitur.
I make the point that the drug war causes the conditions that create addicts through pushing, and you reply that some people do stupid things on drugs. Well DUHH!!
You ASSERT the point. You have yet to MAKE the point. It is a "fact" not yet in evidence in the court of my opinion. It appears to me that the "war" is an abstract to the user, who is motivated by his own desire to get high, and like water, follows the easiest course to do it. It is not the war making addicts do stupid things, it is the drugs which are interfering with their neurological processes.
I know because when I was young and stupid someone pushed drugs on me. Indeed, every user I have ever talked to about it has given me effectively the same story. NONE went searching to get drugged up. Every one had someone "turn them on", i.e., push drugs on them. My personal experience is 100% pushed, 0% did it on their own.
You seem to be saying you know a bunch of druggies, or ex-druggies. As them for yourself.
I have no argument that pushing is the initial crime. I suggested earlier that the death penalty for pushing might be appropriate. Certainly people lives have been entirely destroyed by being pushed into drugs. A life for a life seems as reasonable as we can get, though a pusher often destroys many lives.
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote: KitemanSA wrote:
LISTEN. Get it thru your head that I accept that drugs, when used with irresponsible abandon, are bad for the users. But those users are most often CREATED due to the drug war. Not ALWAYS, but by far the greatest percentage.
Again, such an allegation has not been established to the degree that it has any credibility with me. As i've mentioned, i've seen people who could get all the drugs they wanted. They didn't suddenly start behaving sensibly, they went on ever worsening drug binges. They shared their stuff with others, who accompanied them on their binges.
Ah, at last a few details. First, no one said that addicts would somehow start acting sensibly. It is probably the case they weren't to sensible BEFORE they became addicts. But the question remains, when they "shared" their drugs, did they share with existing druggies or did they go out an push on non-users? If it is the second, my personal experience would suggest that they had a slightly longer view and wanted to set up a clientele for when times got worse.
Who knows? It's not like they would sit still for an interview.

From my recollection, it was the usual suspects.
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote: MSimon mentioned tobacco earlier, if your theory is correct, that the drug war causes all the problems, why is it that we have so many problems with tobacco, and why is it's use so widespread when there was an absence of an equivalent war? We SEE what happened with tobacco. How can you allege that something completely different will happen with Crack? I am not sure what you are trying to say here. Which problems are you talking about? Are there drive by shootings to corner the cigi-butt market? Are there folks in school yards pushing over-priced chaw on kids? Or are you simply saying that tobacco is bad for people, that it makes them sick? If the former, all I can say is "get real, dude!" If the latter, then maybe that should make you think that what we should do with other such things is make them legal and very restricted to kids, and perhaps even restrictions on advertising on the public airwaves (not sure that would be a good idea, but I'd listen to an argument).
KitemanSA wrote:
Some people are self destructive. That is NOT a good reason to make the society self destructive too.
Good point. At one time in our nation's history, a huge percentage of people were cigarette smokers. The funny thing was, the more it became common place, the more self destructive people there were. (though they didn't know it at the time. ) One might suggest a causal relation from this.
Yup, but they didn't make them illegal and the incidence of smoking has been going down due to peer pressure for quite a while, no? One might detect a pattern there

No doubt, but it is only the result of people being made aware of the danger, and look how long it took and how many lives were snuffed out early before people figured it out. Also, don't discount the effect of the taxes, regulation, and counter advertising which has been waged against tobacco.
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote: KitemanSA wrote:
Further more, if drug users engage in criminal activity (please remember that I distinguish between criminal and felonious) prosecute them for that crime. Criminal activity is not acceptable no matter what the source.
You mean the criminal behavior other than using drugs which is regarded as criminal behavior, because society has deemed it a crime. If we are fudging the definition of criminal behavior for drug usage, whose to say where the boundary should be fudged for other crimes? Homosexuality used to be a crime. We fudged that. Adultery used to be a crime. We fudged that. There are those even now who try to reduce the age requirement for consent.
I gave you my definition of crime in a prior post. It is a crime when you involve another in an action involuntarily because "People have the right to voluntary action". Period. Nothing else is a crime. Making it a FELONY does not make it a CRIME (though lawyers would have you believe so as it makes them the arbiters of right and wrong so they can threaten you with legal trouble). Indeed, making it a felony is the source of all these societal ills we've been discussing. Because, "You can't do GOOD, by doing WRONG".
This is a good general statement. My issue is that the broadness of it overlooks the fact that some personal actions have consequences that DO hurt others. It's the "big picture" view. In many ways we are like cells in a body. The notion that one cell can be infected with a virus, and that is only THAT cell's business overlooks the fact that that virus poses a threat to other cells as well.
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote:KitemanSA wrote:
For some reason, many who champion the drug war don't seem to think that folks who commit crimes while under the influence are culpable. Silly, but there it is.
Not sure where you got that notion. Driving under the influence is a crime, whether it be alcohol or narcotics. I don't know of anyone who leans toward leniency on the basis of drug usage.
Driving under the influence is a felony. Injuring someone while doing it is a crime. See the difference?
Driving under the influence is a crime whether you injure someone or not. This concept relies on the principle that you have recklessly endangered others, and it is only through luck that none of them were injured. Merely putting people at threat, is a crime. Not just actually injuring them.
KitemanSA wrote:
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote: Yeah, it's like trying to separate Slavery from the civil war.
It wasn't the slavery that was wrong, it was the war. Slavery had nothing to do with the war. Hmmm....
Not even you can be that stupid, so I now know you are willfully miss-stating me.
Diogenes wrote: Not misstating you, providing an example of similar thinking in a different context.
Absurd. Slavery is the violation of another's right to voluntary action in the extreme. Slavery is a CRIME, but was for many years not illegal. It's lack of illegality did NOT make it right. In the complete opposite, drug usage is a violation of NO-ONE except one-self. Drug use is NOT a crime, but for many years it HAS been illegal. That does NOT make it wrong. Night and day. Totally opposite. Sorry, maybe I was wrong. Maybe you CAN be that stupid?
As a question of Philosophy, legal or illegal is irrelevant. As a point of fact, slavery was legal at one time, and slaves weren't considered to be the equal of non slaves, legally or in any other regard.
The notion that all people are equal, regardless of race or creed, is in fact a relatively new attitude in human history, and it is actually a moral question. The people who maintained slavery, always objected to "Morality" being introduced into the legal system, but contrasted with Libertarians, it was just a different version of "Morality" that they were objecting to, one which most libertarians nowadays accept as valid, and so therefore have no objections to THIS "Morality" being imposed on everyone. (except TallDave, who has made it clear that he is consistent in his opposition to morality being imposed)
What I am saying, is by the rules of the day, slaves weren't regarded as full fledged "Persons" under the law, and so they didn't have the same rights as everyone else. The operative word is "Zeitgeist."
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote: KitemanSA wrote:
Thank you for a semi interesting discussion. Please quit acting like such an idiot, it makes the rest of your views look questionable in other's eyes.
Yeah, that's a strong argument for making me behave.

Most of my life has been spent bucking the trend, and refusing to bow to peer pressure.
Good on ya. Do you think the world is flat too?
From a short perspective, such as a libertarian might have, it is indeed flat as far as the eye can see, but being able to envision the big picture, (in this and on other things) it is quite apparent that the world is spheroid.
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote: KitemanSA wrote:
People's responsibility in society is to respect the rights of others. The drug war is a major violation of those rights. .
I disagree completely. It is an effort to prevent the irresponsible from spreading misery and pain all over their friends, associates, and neighbors because they get an endorphin release when they tamper with their biology.
I know you do. You have made that abundantly clear. But that just goes to show that you have a faulty understanding of what is right. Your mantra, grasshopper is "People have the right to voluntary Action. Therefore it is wrong to involve someone in an action involuntarily... ohmmm". Say that to yourself each night for 15 minutes before you sleep. When you understand it, let me know and I will provide your next mantra!
Master Po was blind too!
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote: It is no more a right than firing a gun up in the air without regard to where the bullets are coming down. You can say "I didn't mean to do that!" all you want, but the behavior engenders bad results by it's nature.
Yup, but if you are out in the middle of the Pacific and you can see that there is noone anywhere around, is firing your gun straight up a CRIMINAL act? It may be stupid, but not criminal. Doing it in a city becomes criminal to the degree it involves others involuntarily (e.g., comes down thru their roof without permission).
I agree, and now our analogies match exactly. Someone who cannot victimize anyone else, by accident or intent, can do whatever they want. So if you agree that addicts can be moved out of society, before they have children to hurt, then I see no objections to them becoming a full time lotus eater.
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote: KitemanSA wrote:
It, by definition, makes people irresponsible. That irresponsibility is what causes the ill effects on society. Good bye. Have a nice herd-cuddle. Mooo, to you.
Interesting goodbye you have on your planet.

Nope, I was being polite and speaking in a manner consistent with YOUR world. You know, government cattle world. Though maybe you are from government sheep world instead. In which case, sorry for the foreign language. Baa instead!

It's a joke. Don't have a cow, man!
