Teahive wrote:Diogenes wrote:But you don't know that legal drugs are a bad thing because you haven't lived long enough to discover it, and are unable to apply the lesson of what happened to China. That is my point exactly! The Consequences are too far away from the initiating event!
Opium was illegal in China when its consumption first started to soar. China was up against an extremely powerful drug cartel, so powerful that they could openly dictate laws.
Yes, the Drug Cartel was called "the United Kingdom" and the law they dictated was "Opium will be LEGAL."
Teahive wrote:
It also seems they didn't have the medical system or social structure necessary to treat the addicts.
There IS no such thing. Dope works directly on biochemistry. Tampering with the pleasure center of your brain cannot be repaired by medicine. (at least not yet.)
Teahive wrote:
Why not take lessons from situations which are much closer to today?
There is no modern analogy for what happened in China. You people are trying to create one.
Teahive wrote:
There are several modern first-world countries with more liberal views on drugs than the US.
As they are likewise doing everything else wrong, I see no reason to follow their lead on this. It will also be wrong.
Teahive wrote:
Diogenes wrote:Yes, once we eliminated the "bad thing" (fertility)which was preventing us from having all the sex we want outside of commitment, there is no reason to call the behavior "bad" any longer.
And the world is a much better place for it.
Not much better, not much worse.
It depends on how you measure it. I measure it in dead bodies and potential dead bodies. Wrecked lives and man caused poverty are also units of measurement, but bodies are easy to count and totalize. By the standards I use, things are way off optimum.
Teahive wrote:
I have no issue with shaming and punishing parents that renege on their commitments. That's the problem, not sex.
Sex shares the same functional area of the brain with drugs. It is hardwired into human physiology. Sex, is in fact, a drug, albeit a naturally occurring one which the brain releases under certain conditions. It is intended to drive a necessary biological process, (reproduction) and is essential for the survival of the species.
Again, as with drugs, people want to tamper with biological processes for recreation, and then they don't want to be held responsible for the consequences of their tampering.
Teahive wrote:
But I don't think abortion is a crime, either.
It was a crime until 1973, and I defy you to explain the legal theory upon which it's "legalization" is based. The will of the People was that it should be illegal, it is the will of a liberal court which decided otherwise. There is NO basis in law justifying their ruling, which was merely an exercise in raw judicial power.
Teahive wrote:
Sex is not equal to commitment to having a child.
Just as driving is not a commitment to avoid running over someone.
Teahive wrote:
In fact I think parenthood should be a similar pledge to marriage. One which also forms the foundation of personhood of the child.
The "personhood" of the child is independent of that of the parent. As Reptiles evolved into mammals, they ceased laying eggs and started carrying them within. That the eggs were once independent lives cannot be denied. What they once were, they yet remain.
Teahive wrote:
Diogenes wrote:Yes, and malaria is caused by a parasite, not by mosquitos.
If you could target malaria, trying to eradicate mosquitos would be sheer folly.
And yet that is exactly what we do. Oddly enough, it prevents malaria. We can thank Rachel Carson for causing the deaths of millions of human beings.
Teahive wrote:
Diogenes wrote:Teahive wrote:So what? The crime is still molestation, not "homosexual behaviour".
Yes, the crime is Terrorism, not Islamic extremism. We should not profile terrorists, but consider little girls and grannies just as dangerous as Jihadist Mullahs.
False analogy.
If 2% of the population is responsible for 20% of all molestations, and 100% of all boy child molestations, it is time to look at what is peculiar about that 2%.
Teahive wrote:
Diogenes wrote:It is a common belief that just because someone believes in and practices one sort of aberrant sexual behavior does not mean that they will go beyond that particular flavor, and try to taste another flavor.
I would argue, that if you are of a mind to desire penile insertion of an adult male rectum, why should you object to that of a little boy? (And the numbers support this point) Is there really a clear boundary between the first behavior and the second?
Please explain why you think the argument and conclusion would be different if you replace "abberant" (by whose standard, anyway?) with "normal" behaviour, or replace male with female (and corresponding body parts) in the case of either person involved.
That doesn't even make enough sense to warrant a response. In any case you dodge the point.
During normal sex, the partners swap hormones which are beneficial to both. Females absorb male produced hormones by direct injection, while males absorb female produced hormones by trans-dermal absorption. (see diagram, the absolute thinnest skin on the male body is the penis)

This swap of hormones produces feelings of satisfaction and happiness in both the male and the female, due to the interaction with the biochemistry of the opposite.
This effect is not reproduced by the male rectum or the contents thereof. I have long speculated that the hyper-promiscuity that is a common occurrence in male homosexuality is the result of not receiving the expected female supplied hormones during/after sex. The male brain is left with an "unfinished" feeling, and of course the response is to re-initiate sexual activity in an effort to acquire the missing female hormones.
This is why reports of 11 sexual encounters per night on average in San Fransisco bath houses makes a sort of sense. Obviously unsatiated, they attempt to gain satiation through repetition, not consciously realizing that they are fighting their own biochemistry because the physiological processes of the brain cannot be fooled.
I hope that better explains these things to you.
‘What all the wise men promised has not happened, and what all the damned fools said would happen has come to pass.’
— Lord Melbourne —