People who are willing to take the risk in health should also be willing to take a risk with the law. I mean, what's another small risk, right?
-konfusion
-konfusion
That doesn't make sense. Smoking weed and accepting a risk in health is a personal decision. Doesn't mean you should go around breaking every law because you don't care what you do your physical and mental state.konfusion wrote:
People who are willing to take the risk in health should also be willing to take a risk with the law. I mean, what's another small risk, right?
-konfusion
Last edited by m3thod (2008-06-03 10:28:49)
According to studies, EVERYTHING is bad for you.The News Everyday wrote:
Studies show.....
right? wrong. If that were the case, then cigarettes and alcohol would be illegal, as both have shown extraordinary levels of danger for the user and non-users.konfusion wrote:
People who are willing to take the risk in health should also be willing to take a risk with the law. I mean, what's another small risk, right?
-konfusion
And also far more addicting. Im afraid to even try a cig, i'd hate to end up like most of my family. I have doped occasionally and i feel no need for it at any time, but i'm always wanting to get shitfaced from whiskey. (all underage BTW, pigs GTFO)liquix wrote:
right? wrong. If that were the case, then cigarettes and alcohol would be illegal, as both have shown extraordinary levels of danger for the user and non-users.konfusion wrote:
People who are willing to take the risk in health should also be willing to take a risk with the law. I mean, what's another small risk, right?
-konfusion
but it does have impacts on others.Ratzinger wrote:
What's the difference between the drug argument and the abortion argument?
You know, "It's my body and my right to live the way I wish" type thing, which is just fine if it has no impact on others.
The Nanny state, we have to legislate to protect you from yourself.....
Very true, but as prohibition showed us, keeping a product with high demand and easy access illegal only generates even greater criminal costs than any health ones from its use.S.Lythberg wrote:
but it does have impacts on others.Ratzinger wrote:
What's the difference between the drug argument and the abortion argument?
You know, "It's my body and my right to live the way I wish" type thing, which is just fine if it has no impact on others.
The Nanny state, we have to legislate to protect you from yourself.....
be it second hand smoke, intoxicated driving, or violent behavior, drugs, alcohol, and cigarettes aren't just your problem, they're everyone's
well, how about legalization, with extremely heavy taxation and harsh penalties for driving while impaired?Turquoise wrote:
Very true, but as prohibition showed us, keeping a product with high demand and easy access illegal only generates even greater criminal costs than any health ones from its use.S.Lythberg wrote:
but it does have impacts on others.Ratzinger wrote:
What's the difference between the drug argument and the abortion argument?
You know, "It's my body and my right to live the way I wish" type thing, which is just fine if it has no impact on others.
The Nanny state, we have to legislate to protect you from yourself.....
be it second hand smoke, intoxicated driving, or violent behavior, drugs, alcohol, and cigarettes aren't just your problem, they're everyone's
I would argue the same is true of marijuana and it would be of tobacco as well.
That's what I support.S.Lythberg wrote:
well, how about legalization, with extremely heavy taxation and harsh penalties for driving while impaired?Turquoise wrote:
Very true, but as prohibition showed us, keeping a product with high demand and easy access illegal only generates even greater criminal costs than any health ones from its use.S.Lythberg wrote:
but it does have impacts on others.
be it second hand smoke, intoxicated driving, or violent behavior, drugs, alcohol, and cigarettes aren't just your problem, they're everyone's
I would argue the same is true of marijuana and it would be of tobacco as well.
Breaking the law is a personal decision. It's the consequences that aren't ^^m3thod wrote:
That doesn't make sense. Smoking weed and accepting a risk in health is a personal decision. Doesn't mean you should go around breaking every law because you don't care what you do your physical and mental state.konfusion wrote:
People who are willing to take the risk in health should also be willing to take a risk with the law. I mean, what's another small risk, right?
-konfusion
You're assuming all these risks are the same magnitude -- which they aren't.konfusion wrote:
Breaking the law is a personal decision. It's the consequences that aren't ^^m3thod wrote:
That doesn't make sense. Smoking weed and accepting a risk in health is a personal decision. Doesn't mean you should go around breaking every law because you don't care what you do your physical and mental state.konfusion wrote:
People who are willing to take the risk in health should also be willing to take a risk with the law. I mean, what's another small risk, right?
-konfusion
-konfusion
Last edited by konfusion (2008-06-03 17:14:42)
that's the only way I would consider legalization.Turquoise wrote:
That's what I support.S.Lythberg wrote:
well, how about legalization, with extremely heavy taxation and harsh penalties for driving while impaired?Turquoise wrote:
Very true, but as prohibition showed us, keeping a product with high demand and easy access illegal only generates even greater criminal costs than any health ones from its use.
I would argue the same is true of marijuana and it would be of tobacco as well.
In the case of weed, yes. In the case of harder drugs, no. You can do the same amount of coke over an extended period of time that won't hurt you that much that would land you a pretty sizable mandatory sentence if you were caught with it.konfusion wrote:
Turq: All I'm saying is that if you're so willing to take health risks, what's a jail sentence?
edit: I think health risks are worse than the tiny risk of getting called smoking weed, don't you?
-konfusion
I think you'll find most sober supporters of legalizing weed support stringent laws against intoxicated driving and high taxes on weed. The idea is to sell it in liquor stores.S.Lythberg wrote:
that's the only way I would consider legalization.Turquoise wrote:
That's what I support.S.Lythberg wrote:
well, how about legalization, with extremely heavy taxation and harsh penalties for driving while impaired?