Hmm.
I agree that Prohibition was a major mistake (a mistake of the "Progressive" Era, BTW)...but to be honest, alcohol and drugs--even "recreational" drugs--are two different matters.
Only because we label them differently. In reality, alcohol is a drug, and it's more dangerous than many of the softer drugs that are illegal.
I seem to recall that the current scientific consenses (I know...a critic of the "global warming" concept talking about "current scientific consensus"--shocking) is that true alcoholism--honest-to-goodness addiction to alcohol--requires a genetic element. Effectively, it's hereditary.
There is a hereditary element to addiction, but you don't have to have the addiction gene to develop a chemical dependency. A normal person may have a 10% chance of becoming an alcoholic, whereas a person with the addiction gene may have a 30% chance. Anyone can develop an addiction to any drug if their body becomes accustomed to it, you don't need the gene. If you drink 12 beers every day for a year and then stop, you will get sick because your body will become accustomed to having that much alcohol in your bloodstream.
I'm addicted to caffeine. I don't mean that in a cute "I can't live without coffee" kind of way, I mean that if I don't drink my regular dose of caffeine a day, I get sick. I've been drinking tea for as long as I can remember, and I usually drink around 6-8 mugs of tea a day. On days where I'm unable to drink tea as normal, by around 18:00 my muscles tense up and I start to get an almighty headache. If I drink some tea of coffee at that point, my body begins to return to normal and the pain subsides. I don't consider this a problem in my life, it's very rare for me to be in a situation where tea of coffee isn't available, and the stimulant effect doesn't impact on my life. But if society collapses and tea imports stop, I'm in for a painful couple of days until my body adjusts.
Now, while one could argue that the "addicitive effect" of rec-drugs are to a lesser extant than alcohol. Nonetheless...one doesn't require a "druggie gene" to become addicted to drugs.
It's not an "alcohol gene" or a "heroin gene" or a "caffeine gene", it's a straight up "addiction gene". If someone is liable to become an alcoholic then they're liable to become an addict of all sorts of drugs, that's why a lot of drug addicts have also been alcoholics at some point.
But hey. Scientific consensus is often wrong. What say you?
I say you have a poor understanding of science.
Ignoring the alcohol dependency side of things for a moment, the biggest problem associated with alcohol isn't alcohol dependence, but alcohol abuse. I'm not sure how big a problem it is in the US, but in Ireland and the UK alcohol abuse is a big problem within society. It's not that people are addicted to alcohol, it's that people drink too much an act in an unruly manner, so people get into fights, or vomit in the street, or cause criminal damage to store-fronts. Most of those people don't have a problem with alcohol dependency, they can go weeks with drinking a sip of alcohol, but when they decide to go out on the town they drink too much, lose control and become a nuisance.
Meanwhile, alcoholics tend not to cause trouble, they generally prefer to drink alone and not draw attention to the fact that they have a problem. They'll destroy their personal lives, they may lose their jobs and their families, but they're usually not the people that cause trouble for others while drunk.
Or reviewing
Voyager?
It wasn't alcohol that made me do that, it was my meth addiction. Luckily, I'm clean now.
Sooooo... does anyone happen to have any meth I could borrow?
Vurok said:
Remember that the ends do not justify the means. Drugs are bad for you, taking them is utterly immoral and disgusting.
An absurd statement, but one that I would have agreed with 6 or 7 years ago, back when I thought that cigarettes and alcohol should be banned.
However, neither I nor government have the right to stop you taking them if you want to.
That, I agree with.
shouldn't drug addiction be a medical issue and not a legal one?
if a person were to eat something poisonous like some rare poison, they'd be taken to a hospital for treatment, not to jail.
i just don't see the difference.
Once again, I agree, but you should remember that it wasn't that long ago that some countries (and states in the US) considered suicide, or attempted suicide, a criminal act.
And the issue gets more complicated when you include the issue of who sold the poison. Who is to blame, the person that bought and ingested the poison, or the person that sold it to them?
Alas, since we lack for a Havlock Vetinari, we'll have to muddle through...
We do have a Vetinari, but he is currently the Prime Minister of Russia.
why is the government unable to legislate on morality, yet can use force and steal the product of your labour?
Because if you put me in a room with 19 other people, I'm statistically most likely to be the smartest guy there, and I wanted to go to college rather than be forced to drop out of secondary eduction like my parents.
I am Surak said:
Count - me - SURAK - in this statement too.
So, the puritanical guy that expelled millions of his people from their home because they didn't see anything wrong with laughing every now and again, is a conservative? Interesting.
Personal freedom, the freedom to fail and to succeed, is expression of the explorative gene.
Brave explorers founded America and the space program.
I have never encountered a leftist that is blessed with this gene. Maybe in talk but not in the harsh reality of life.
I've pretty much been arguing that point about "freedom to fail" for the last few days, but I'm a leftist, so where does that leave me?
iguana_tonante said:
The "horrors of marijuana smoking" actually amount to a few potheads that spend all their time playing guitar and eating cheerios. I can live with that.
I don't know.

How loud do they play those guitars? If they sing too then marijuana should definitely be banned.