but I'd rather have a few robbers and killers exist than a whole lot of new people driving around in their SUVs high on meth, thinking that they are just normal and great because meth's legal
who said anything about legalizing driving while under the influence of drugs?
A separate issue (that coincidentally involves driving): When the speed limit is 40, people go 50. If they changed it to 50, people go 60. Marginal law breaking.
Plus, seriously: 90% of the meth users that I
didn't learn about from "govt propaganda" are still going to drive, as long as they're not "too fucked up." Yes, there are rational meth users that wouldn't drive, and perhaps the only law they currently break are those that make doing meth illegal. But the world is chock full of morons. I just don't want those morons to keep marginally breaking the law, when the law already says "meth is legal."
Because marginal law breaking is the way the world works. We don't live in a machine that functions based on what the law or the govt says. People do whatever they want to a certain extent, and that extent is somewhat based on what the rules are. Lighten the rules, and people will bend them a bit more.
The best thing meth users can do is stay under the radar and hire good lawyers if they get caught. Same goes for me, and everyone else who does drugs. The world's not a fair place - I don't know what to tell you.
But the last people that deserve to feel the brunt of an unfair world are people walking around who get hit by meth-addled housewives in their SUVs.
Because meth-addled housewives would drive their SUVs under the influence of meth, period. I understand some people are responsible, but you know this would happen all the time if meth was legal. It's not safe to legalize it, because not everyone is as responsible as the people on this board.
but I'd rather have a few robbers and killers exist than a whole lot of new people driving around in their SUVs high on meth, thinking that they are just normal and great because meth's legal
who said anything about legalizing driving while under the influence of drugs?
You can't apply the same general "stigma" argument to meth. It has different effects than alcohol. I won't draw any conclusions, but you have to take this into account. It it should be considered more complicated than just being able to compare the reults of lax alcohol laws.