I think there are as many, if not more, people casually using cocaine than smoking spliffs. I've been in 'respectable' pubs in affluent areas on a weekend evening and would be surprised if there were less than 50% of the people in there that hadn't been in the toilets sniffing a line, many of these are people over 50 years old who are comfortably off and just want a 'high' other than getting rat-arsed...
My first concern with legalising it would be an influx of people using the product, followed by an influx of additional road accidents and fatalities by people affected by it. To me, I'm not bothered by it, I just would not like to see more innocent people affected in a third party way as listed. Besides, I'm silly enough without it. I guess if you want a legal high, go climb the Eiger!
Mine could be and others as well....by some idiot who reckons it's ok to drink and drive and other alcohol induced situations. I appreciate that maybe is the extreme but it does happen. Conversely I could smoke 100 ***s and still be safe to drive.....not that I would, I gave up the ***s cold turkey over three years ago after smoking heavily for 40 years. Right, off to polish the halo!
This clip was all over our local news 9's. The blessing is, at least they didn't kill anyone else, only themselves.
I don't get your point on alcohol. I would not want to criminalise it, or tobacco. It's your choice as an individual to allow it to 'blight' your life. Some people can't help it, addiction is part of their make up, and your mate Theodore thinks that people want to be addicted, it's easy to stop. I've referred to the links with mental health above, there is plenty of research out there, whatever Hitchens C thinks. Why assume that use of cannabis, long term, will rise with decriminalisation? Tobacco use is falling, as is alcohol use. You would simply make an illegal, untaxed habit which is rarely prosecuted legal and taxed. You will never stop cannabis use, or alcohol and tobacco use if you criminalise them - you simply put them in the hands of criminals. You could cut their use dramatically by taking Mao's route of threatening to execute 20 million heroin addicts unless they stopped (source:Theodore). Fact is consumption of mood altering substances is a part of human nature (and animal nature - monkeys and elephants seek out fermenting fruit and then fall over, it's hilarious). Alcohol has been a part of European and Middle Eastern culture for thousands of years, mescal and peyote in Central America, coca in South America, kava in Fiji and other Pacific islands, mushrooms in Siberia.......legal or illegal it's going to happen, some people will be damaged and will damage others, most won't. Passionate stuff Ninesey. How many fires caused by gambling have you put out?
I once got called to a 'Patient Alight' in St Thomas's Hospital, Lambeth. When we turned up this poor bloke was in a pretty bad way. After we had dealt with him the nurse told us that apparently his mate had a bet with him that he couldn't smoke a *** in the hospital and get away with it. He thought he would as he was in one those hyperbaric oxygen tents and assumed that it would contain the smell of the smoke.
Let me see if I can help you with this. I was merely trying to point out that some advocates for the decriminalisation of cannabis claim that the harm that alcohol does to society is far worse than legalised cannabis could ever achieve. They might be correct, but how can this possibly be a sound argument for decriminalisation? If you lived in a village besieged by man-eating tigers, would you object to me releasing a leopard? In an earlier post on this thread (I believe) you expressed surprise that, as a libertarian, I wasn't an advocate of decriminalisation myself. From a personal perspective I couldn't give a damn how people choose to spend their time, but I think we should all be concerned about how their choices impact upon others. Yes, like alcoholism, gambling 'addiction' etc. If 'addiction' is part of some people's make-up, should we encourage these practices by decriminalisation, or do our utmost to dissuade them from these pursuits? Another argument for decriminalisation seems to be that fact that the authorities seldom prosecute for possession. Sadly, the authorities seldom do much to deter anti-social behaviour in children and teenagers, so perhaps we should decriminalise vandalism, threatening behaviour and violence too. I wish that he was of my acquaintance, Stan, as I learn a great deal from his essays. As somebody that spent his early years in Liberia I was fascinated by his travelogues to that country (amongst others), as well as his pieces on subjects that I would never ordinarily have sought out such as Ibsen, Dr Johnson and so forth. Don't people want to become 'addicted' then? There is enough information out there concerning the dangers of pursuing certain pastimes, so it might be reasonable to assume that they do want to become addicted. If this isn't a reasonable assumption, then the conclusion must be that such people are stupid or vulnerable. Shouldn't we be protecting such people? I think you mean Hitchens P. Hitchens C is the one whose output has somewhat tapered off in the past 4 years. I'm glad that you read Dalymple's piece, Stan. Though of course an extreme example, it is nonetheless interesting to learn that more severe enforcement or punishment can lead to a reduction in drug abuse. I have no idea whether decriminalisation will increase cannabis use or not, but I can imagine that certain more law-abiding citizens could be tempted to try what was once considered (by them) to be forbidden fruit. I dunno, but it would be one hell of an experiment to get wrong, wouldn't it? Back where we started.
The first time I've seen anyone comparing the legalisation of a mild form of cannabis to the legalisation of youth violence, Uber. Isn't this slightly hysterical...?
Probably (chortle, chortle). I was merely trying to point out that just because the authorities don't actively pursue something that is supposed to be 'against the law' it shouldn't necessarily follow that said something should be decriminalised. I'm certainly guilty of being hysterical about releasing leopards.
I had created a long and utterly brilliant response to your post but the format was all wrong (tried and failed to imitate your very neat division of my post) and in a drug an alcohol fuelled frenzy I deleted it, beat the wife, and tied a lit firework to the dog while smoking a cigar.
Of f%$k. Lucky the whole place didn't go up. I heard of a guy that climbed into a newly installed air conditioning set that was still full of mastic fumes for a sly joint. He was a dread and after the fumes ignited he came out with his dreads still smoking from the flash. Might be bull might not but the vision in my head is funny.