Government, like most toxic substances, is subject to the J-Curve.Diogenes wrote: The State is a necessary evil.
A little is beneficial, a lot is toxic.
WOW!!! What a total disconnect between these two statements.Diogenes wrote:You are going to half to clarify your statement. I'm not grasping whatever it is you are trying to say.KitemanSA wrote:I think the distinction is that most kids and other people can see the distinction between "can't do this TO" and "can't do this WITH"; unlike many conservative theorists.Diogenes wrote: In accordance with this theory, I would suspect we have the most murders in those parts of the country that punish it the most?
My position is that often, people wish to disown responsibility for the consequences of their actions if they are not obvious and immediate. Spreading a disease that kills later, or making a child that others pay for later, being but two examples of this sort of behavior.
MSimon, he's got you. You do keep saying that. What you SHOULD be saying is that Democrats and Republicans... not liberals and concservatives. The unfortunate thing is, there are VERY few "conservatives" in elective office. Of course, by D's definition, Libertarians are "conservative" and Republicans are not.Diogenes wrote:MSimon wrote:Well yes. The state is a necessary evil. Which is why I would like to reduce it by a factor of 10X. Because - you know - I want to reduce systematic evil.
Both liberals and conservatives want an increase in the state - for their own pet projects. The real clue to the question is that neither side ever reduces the work of the other side. i.e. while acting seemingly in opposition they are actually in cahoots.
You keep repeating this false mantra
False? Take it up with these folks:You keep repeating this false mantra just as you kept repeating the absurdity that it was easier for a child to get drugs than a beer.
MSimon wrote:Well we are in fact making progress. There are prohibitions people will NATURALLY obey and others they will not.
The latter ought to be taken off the books because they cause disrespect for ALL law. It was one of the reasons we ended alcohol prohibition. The LAW was getting a bad name. Which was leading to a general breakdown of Law and Order.
You can't just do one thing.
Both too much and too little is toxic.KitemanSA wrote:Government, like most toxic substances, is subject to the J-Curve.Diogenes wrote: The State is a necessary evil.
A little is beneficial, a lot is toxic.
KitemanSA wrote:WOW!!! What a total disconnect between these two statements.Diogenes wrote:You are going to half to clarify your statement. I'm not grasping whatever it is you are trying to say.KitemanSA wrote: I think the distinction is that most kids and other people can see the distinction between "can't do this TO" and "can't do this WITH"; unlike many conservative theorists.
My position is that often, people wish to disown responsibility for the consequences of their actions if they are not obvious and immediate. Spreading a disease that kills later, or making a child that others pay for later, being but two examples of this sort of behavior.
KitemanSA wrote:MSimon, he's got you. You do keep saying that. What you SHOULD be saying is that Democrats and Republicans... not liberals and concservatives. The unfortunate thing is, there are VERY few "conservatives" in elective office. Of course, by D's definition, Libertarians are "conservative" and Republicans are not.Diogenes wrote:MSimon wrote:Well yes. The state is a necessary evil. Which is why I would like to reduce it by a factor of 10X. Because - you know - I want to reduce systematic evil.
Both liberals and conservatives want an increase in the state - for their own pet projects. The real clue to the question is that neither side ever reduces the work of the other side. i.e. while acting seemingly in opposition they are actually in cahoots.
You keep repeating this false mantra
MSimon wrote:False? Take it up with these folks:You keep repeating this false mantra just as you kept repeating the absurdity that it was easier for a child to get drugs than a beer.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/200 ... rugs_N.htm
MSimon wrote: Or these:
http://www.casacolumbia.org/articlefile ... Report.pdf
A police officer (retired) says:
Since 1975 teens in government surveys report that marijuana is readily available and easier to obtain than alcohol.
COPS
http://www.casacolumbia.org/templates/H ... &zoneid=32
BTW something needs to be done about the #1 most dangerous drug in America. Alcohol:
http://www.brad21.org/facts.html
http://www.alcoholcostcalculator.org/ki ... -teens.php
Now if PTSD is the real vector for drug/alcohol use (people in chronic pain chronically take pain relievers) wouldn't you have better results fighting causes (child abuse) than symptoms (drug use?).
There was a reason I was an alcoholic at age 16. And availability of alcohol wasn't it. Severe child abuse was the reason. The alcohol caused many problems. But it did ease the pain. Fortunately it didn't interfere with my studies.
Your argument is skewed because of the higher probability that teens would prefer a joint over beer. I have little doubt that if it were beer they were looking for, it would be far easier to obtain. In any case, you don't usually say "marijuana" you usually use the term "drugs" which in my mind generally means crack, meth, Xanax, Vicodin, or some such.MSimon wrote:More interesting, but buried in the news coverage of the report, was the teens' response to a question about the availability of various substances. Specifically, teens were asked which was easier to obtain among cigarettes, beer and marijuana. While the overwhelming majority of teens listed cigarettes as the easiest, marijuana was a clear second. In fact, seven times as many teens (35%) listed the prohibited marijuana as easiest to obtain as listed beer (5%), which of course is legal and regulated.
http://www.casacolumbia.org/
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle-old ... tudy.shtml
Maybe that is so. Is it worth this?ladajo wrote:At least, according to underage users, drugs have been getting harder to get.
http://www.monitoringthefuture.org/data ... ig09_7.pdf
And there are other studies that agree with this one.