nuttynutskin
Bluelighter
- Joined
- May 15, 2011
- Messages
- 10,725
It's funny to see drug users on here that are all for legalization but have no problem with restrictions on cigs or alcohol just because they don't like those drugs.
It's funny to see drug users on here that are all for legalization but have no problem with restrictions on cigs or alcohol just because they don't like those drugs.
It's funny to see drug users on here that are all for legalization but have no problem with restrictions on cigs or alcohol just because they don't like those drugs.
Just because I'm for legalization of drugs doesn't mean it should be a free-for-all. Cute straw man though.
Just because I think an adult should be able to buy heroin at CVS doesn't mean I think a 12-year-old should be able to (or even an 18-year-old necessarily).
roping in young, vulnerable users has been big tobaccos modus operandi for decades. IMO, this is what this legislation hopes to curtail.
regulation allows the market to be controlled to a degree so long as those regulations don't create a black market.
did you even read my post?
But it is ridiculous and naive to think that a problem is fixed by changing an irrelevant number to another one.
It's funny to see drug users on here that are all for legalization but have no problem with restrictions on cigs or alcohol just because they don't like those drugs.
It's true that I don't like those drugs much (though I have a bit of a love-hate with alcohol) but I would restrict all drugs until age 21. It's not about the drug, it's about the age.
18 is too young - this is my opinion, but based on developmental neuroscience.
Once someone is 21, go for it, I would say.
huh? I don't get what you're saying here.A kid can go into a CVS and buy heroin. It happens every day. All you have to do is fake a sports injury, or if you're a girl, say you have very bad menstrual pain.
Actually, I shouldn't say "buy" because 80% of the time these kids have no copay. Parents with good insurance, or medicaid.
I just hand them their "heroin". With a receipt.
18 is too young - this is my opinion, but based on developmental neuroscience.
Once someone is 21, go for it, I would say.
The argument is that really young people are more susceptible to tobacco addiction, and the older you get, the less likely the filthy habit will get its claws into you. There is plenty of evidence to back this up, too.
Personally, if this happened in australia, i'd support it. Smoking costs our health system (which is funded to a large extent by the govt, ie tax $$). Instead, over here they've taxed the fuck out of tobacco, which really fucks poor people who are already addicted
Where do you draw the line then? Obesity is a major problem here in the US. Does that mean we should make junk food illegal?
Nobody's making tobacco illegal, so it's a flawed analogy.
Where do you draw the line then? Obesity is a major problem here in the US. Does that mean we should make junk food illegal?
But as you say - kids will be kids and will get their hands on shit anyway - so what's the fuss? I mean, this sort of legislation isn't perfect, but imo they're at least trying to do something positive for public health.
I am not sure what you are trying to argue, except maybe that you believe in freedom.
(Like the freedom of children to use drugs? or the freedom of people to get addicted to whatever they want, at whatever age the want? Or that any regulation whatsoever is wrong?)