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Originally posted by mishigas
reply to post by Ghost375
Ron Paul is 100% right about our drug policies.
Legalize them. As he said, "Prescription drugs kill more people than illegal drugs."
Prescribed drugs (legal drugs) kill more people than illegal drugs do.
Therefore, we should legalize all drugs. Then all drugs will kill more people.
So THAT'S the piece of Ron Paul's philosophy I've been missing! Now it all makes perfect sense!:
You did well when you defended Romney on that genocide remark. Then, afraid of peer pressure, you succumbed to RP apology tactics. Man up! Think for yourself!edit on 23-11-2011 by mishigas because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by JacKatMtn
Dog gone it Ron!!
He still rambles after he made the best point, using Paul Wolfiwitz' own words...
Quit while you are ahead Ron!!
reply to post by mishigas
You COULD stand some enlightening on both Paul's view AND a rational approach to this issue...
First off, getting the federal government out of the drug issue does NOT legalize drugs. False argument. States would be able to make their own drug laws, and as far as I'm aware *most already have their own in place anyway*.
Secondly, prohibition and criminalization come with a slew of problems. You drive something underground, you drive it away from any regulation, any controls on who can buy from suppliers, any quality controls, make it profitable and put it squarely in the hands of criminals who will likely become violent as a result of large profit margins.
Thirdly - why are we handling a public health issue as a criminal matter? Criminalizing personal behavior that does not lead to any other crime or offense against anyone else is utterly nonsensical, and it doesn't work. Since you seem to support the prohibition view, please let me know how much progress we've made in the war on drugs in the last few decades - last I checked, drugs were cheaper, more plentiful, stronger, and easier for kids to get than alcohol and cigarettes. GO PROHIBITION!
Much more sensible to treat public health issues AS public health issues and actually do some good - the Netherlands and Portugal are both great examples here. Lower per capita use across all age ranges. Less AIDS deaths from needle sharing. Less overdoses, less addiction, less EVERYTHING bad related to the drug problem. How terrible - "addicts" living normal lives as functioning members of society instead of social lepers, even!
Do we want people to do drugs? No - but our policy is an utter failure and backfires in every regard, clogs our prisons with the non-violent, actually serves a gateway function by putting soft users into more contact with hard substances. Continuing to throw money down this hole will accomplish nothing - it's time for common sense and to follow SUCCESSFUL examples that ruin less lives and doesn't spike our fiscal heel for no good reason.
Before we address the standard Ron Paul response (make it a states rights issue) my problem is not so much the prohibition angle, but the fact that he seems to shrug it off and think it is just fine for anyone to do any drugs at all. He's welcome to hold that personal attitude. When he is a leader of the most powerful nation on earth, that attitude must mature.
I get the feeling that if all 50 states allowed any drugs to be ingested, Ron Paul would think that was just fine.
You state the obvious because.....???
Your argument gives two choices: legalization or prohibition. History has taught us that neither choice works. And you want me to come up with a solution right here right now? No can do.
The old pig-lipstick attempt. Call it something clean and antiseptic, like 'Public Health Issue'. That will result in LESS crime LESS addiction LESS everything bad. See? Problem solved! The US has about 20x the population of the Netherlands, and about 30x Portugal. Believe me, factoids like that matter.