DanS -
These "acts" were committed because of the illegality of drugs, that means the users are not to blame, but the people who created the black market with their laws. Am I also responsible for terrorism if I pay taxes and the politicians give that money to the Taliban? OBL and Al Qaeda have been in Afghanistan for quite a while after the embassy(s) and Cole attacks, yet the Congress was giving the Taliban our money after those attacks. It is a lie to accuse someone of funding terrorism when it is "government" policies that created the black market being used as a source of revenue. It's also the worst kind of hypocrisy, the kind used to hurt the innocent. Btw, where is the proof buying heroin will fund OBL now?
"Tenuous"? C'mon! If no one bought cigarettes, millions would not have died from tobacco-related diseases, so buying cigarettes enabled more than just advertising. Of course, I don't think like you, people are responsible for their own actions so this "responsibility" you try to impose on the innocent is illusory IMO.
"Necessarily"? The first "step" in this chain of events was making cocaine illegal in the first place thereby creating both the incentive of enormous profits and farmers growing the crop to seek out "protection" from people outside of the "government" attacking the farmers.
Clem didn't say it wasn't illegal or criminal, he said you're assuming it is inherently criminal. It isn't and nothing you said proves otherwise.
And that's where we get down to the immorality of the drug war. That because some people use a drug and hurt others - "society" - ALL people who use it are being punished (or would be if caught). Apply this logic to cars, guns, and so on, and we'd all either be in cages or guarding them.
No BS there! You are the one making arguments based on a "step by step" chain of events to indict drug users, but you ignored the first step that created the situation - criminalization!
Irrelevant! Then those who "wished" for the results of codifying the laws they like - the black market and all it's nasty effects - should acknowledge what they've done instead of blaming people for exercising their freedom.
You mean like "crackheads" do now? When was the last time we had "speakeasies" in this country? Alcohol prohibition! How can you be surprised to see crackhouses under prohibition? It is immoral to put people in cages for using drugs because SOME drug users hurt others. I think you'd understand this if you were put in a cage because I murdered someone, true?
Imran -
Far enough to "justify" incarcerating millions of people for using drugs not popular enough to be kept legal while trying to ignore the same "logic" when it comes to other potentially dangerous products like alcohol and tobacco.
"The good of society must prevail over the good of the individual" - Benito Mussolini
Not at all a pack full of lies. It's a very direct connection. If somebody buys crack, for instance, they are responsible for all of the acts down the line that got them that crack. Same too with oil, although the responsibility is scrubbed somewhat by the blind-buyer, blind-seller commodity market.
Only a tenuous responsibility in that instance. By buying a pack of cigarettes, you are enabling further tobacco advertising.
But in the instance of drugs, the responsibility is much clearer. If you buy cocaine or crack cocaine, you directly trigger a long list of actions to supply you that cocaine, all of which are necessarily on the other side of the law.
Yes, it's illegal.
Because of the ill effects of using it on a personal and societal basis, and the reasons for which it's used, I don't contemplate it ever being legal.
-"The reponsibility lies equally with the criminalizers."
That sounds like a BS whitewash of drug use to me, clem.
The representatives of the people have merely codified the people's wishes.
These wishes seem reasonable because of the ill effects of drug use. Nobody wants crack heads taking over the neighborhood.
Imran -
So, if you buy a pack of cigarettes then you are responsible for the deaths of those that die of lung cancer from cigs?
How far do you go?
How far do you go?
"The good of society must prevail over the good of the individual" - Benito Mussolini
Comment