Merchandising or Murder
Here's how a lucrative business in the Middle East works: About once every six weeks in Asscrackastan, a soldier will pick up about a hundred kilograms of pure heroin, worth six hundred thousand dollars to the seller. Poppies grow like weeds and require less water than wheat. It's worth eight million dollars to the gangs in the USA and it is bought by the kilo and cut for sale. It's worth $40 million on the street. When you consider the stuff grows for free, that's a pretty damn good profit. Now here's my question: Should we be applauding all those ambitious business people or should we be condemning them? And if so, why?
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Adults should be allowed to sell or use any substance they want, so long as they tell the truth about what's in it.
And for the same reason, our punitively high taxes on booze need to fall. On the other hand, there are workarounds. Carter made it legal to brew up to 200 gallons/year of your own beer or wine.
The 18th and the 21st amendment...
Lessons lost?
Regards,
O.A.
Jan
I know many people who've struggled with drugs and/or booze. We all do. For the life of me, I've never figured out why people do that to themselves. It's like hitting your fingers with a hammer on purpose...
from beer to fentanyl, are abused. . you can kill yourself
by drinking too much water and bursting your stomach.
those who think that these drugs should be legalized
have probably been studying the lottery. . about two-thirds
of the money spent on the lottery goes to the government
in taxes. . Colorado and Washington are raking in tax bucks
over marijuana legalization. . we might think that the
black market folks are just circumventing taxation,
which could be praised. -- j
.
Therefore I would not prohibit or regulate any drug someone wants to use, and I would not inform on a drug seller or maker, nor (on a jury) vote to convict one -- with some narrow exceptions. (1) If you're selling to juveniles, all bets are off. (2) Something like date rape drugs, where the end use is very likely to be non-consensual, should be controlled enough to at least make the stuff traceable if it happens.
Seems to me the case for prohibition is poor on grounds of pragmatism, when considering property rights and individual liberty the conclusion is a clear no.
But should there be compulsory labeling and warnings? I am not decided but tend to think otherwise.
What they found was that for the majority of illegal drugs (including heroin) the major negative repercussions of drug use per se were...nothing. Nothing at all. All of the 'negative repercussions' of the use of most drugs were due to the illegality of the drug and not to the use of the chemical itself.
Heroin was the example they used most frequently. Apparently, if you become addicted to heroin you have to keep using it for the rest of your live - kinda like oxygen. So you keep a container of it on the door of your refrigerator, next to the orange juice. Taking it no longer gets you high; you just need it in order to live. So it is not good but it does no damage.
Hepatitis, STDs, prostitution, crime...these are the results of the illegality of drugs, not of drugs themselves.
Consumers Report did make exceptions for PCP and for LSD (which would be illegal or restricted to constrained use), and they did define normal social limits of drug use as that which was evidenced by alcohol consumption - so if you were on a drug that induced change of consciousness, you could not drive.
My take away from reading the book was that the authors had their beliefs overturned by having been part of this study and that the drug bandwagon was yet another vehicle driven by Mr Social Hype.
Jan
Even under the simplicity of Mark Hamilton's Prime Law, they would be guilty.
Note: I am no fan of the present system...I prefer suggestion, knowledge, ethics and morality over initiatory force.
As to the ethical question, when you come right down to it, aren't the "criminals" just supplying a demand? The consequences are on the users for the most part, and if the drug commodity could be picked up at your local pharmacy, wouldn't that eliminate most of the criminality? If the main criteria was health, we'd have to close up all the McD's and similar enterprises as well. I think the onus is on the user and the government more than the supplier.
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