Stubby wrote:Diogenes wrote:
Now that you have explained it better, there is a reason I didn't understand it the first time. It is an irrelevant and stupid point.
100 years of nothing (1729 1838) constitutes prohibition? Really?
And still you don't grasp the salient point. Legalized drugs killed China.
I haven't 'grasped' your point because you have failed to meet any burden of proof that it is valid.
The word "Axiomatic" comes to mind. What kind of proof do you need to understand that 2,500 metric tons of opium per year are not good for a country? (And that was only in 1842!)
Are you arguing that it had no ill effects?
There are plenty of articles online claiming that it caused the collapse of 2,000 years of Imperial rule.
Stubby wrote:
You assert and provide pretty graphs for the argument that legalization of drugs prompted increased usage.
There were active anti-opium laws in existence during the time period of your graphs. The edicts against opium were introduced in 1729, 1796 and 1800. Furthermore, in 1838 the Chinese government seized and burned thousand of tons of opium from the Bristish which prompted the drug war.
The graphs show increased supply shipments. Those shipments are a proxy for usage. If shipments were increasing, Usage was keeping pace. Do you have a different interpretation?
Stubby wrote:
You don't get to make an assertion and provide irrelevant graphs and stomp your feet in a tantrum when someone points out your graphs are wrong and your assertion unsupported by the presented evidence.
I did not create the graphs. How are the graphs wrong? How are the graphs irrelevant? Do you have better data? I think the truth is you just do not like them because you don't have a good response for them. They do not fit what you really really really
WANT to believe, and therefore you need them to be wrong or irrelevant. "Please daddy, make the bad graphs go away!"
Stubby wrote:
You have not demonstrated a linkage between legalization and increased usage.
I do not understand why you are hung up on this "legalization" word. If the sh*t was getting into the country without being stopped, it was defacto legalized whether it was technically legalized or not.
If it makes you feel better, let us use the term "Widely Available" as opposed to "legalized." It makes no difference to the salient point anyway. Drugs really really really F*****-up China.
At this point though, we might as well do the same thing. There will be fewer people to have to fight if the addicts end up removing themselves from the Gene pool.
‘What all the wise men promised has not happened, and what all the damned fools said would happen has come to pass.’
— Lord Melbourne —