1. Huh? Not only is that a bad idea, the idea that murderers somehow don't commit rape, car jackings, burgluries etc... Makes no
sense
2. Again, Huh?
3. Don't agree. There are only a couple drugs that should be outright legal IMHO. All the hard drugs are just as dangerous as ....(even alcohol).
4. With you on that, the almighty dollar rears it's head. Not to mention the pharma industry(self medication), alcohol and big tobacco industries. Big financial loss if herb were made legal.
1. Definitely agree that it's a bad idea. But repeat murderers are exceedingly rare. The only real ones are psychos, who cannot be deterred, or pros, who rarely get caught.
2. It is statistically valid, but impractical and wouldn't happen for various reasons. Most people convicted of murder have the lesser charges dropped (what's the point in charging a murderer with carjacking) so they don't necessarily show up in the statistics for recidivism.
3. Not true. Hundreds of thousands of people go to work and function for years upon years with a heroine habit. In some countries, successful programs of maintenance have been implemented. Drugs are inherently cheap and its obtaining them that causes 99% of the problems. An addict gets to the point where he doesn't even get high anymore, all the drug does is prevents him from feeling sick. ...., PCP and alcohol are exceptions. Nonetheless, few drugs make the addict cause as much harm as the illegality of them does. As bad as alcohol is, I don't remember the last time an alcoholic robbed me for a drink. The fact that they are dangerous is irrelevant. Dangerous to whom? The user? So what? Give them treatment or let them kill themselves. Don't waste money you could use for treatment on enforcement and imprisonment.
Dangerous to society? Eliminate the "The drug made me do it" defense. At one time or another during my youth, I did almost every drug there is once or twice, except heroine The only one that "made me" do anything I wouldn't ordinarily do was alcohol.
Now, if I had been addicted to any of them, I might have done something to obtain them. But that would have only been because of their legal status.
.... is unpredictable and dangerous in and of itself, IMO.
PCP is so bad that either you quickly realize it, or you become a jellybrain.
So, I make an exception for those. Those two, especially ...., are probably worth the enormous cost and effort of a prohibition.
4. Big financial loss if
any illegal drug were made legal. Not to society at large, (it would save huge money), but to the many parasitic industries that depend on, and support, a perpetual drug war.
Also, a big financial loss to organized crime, the natural allies of the drug war industry parasites.
Once you declare war on something like this, be it terror or drugs, and enlist mercenaries to fight it, you virtually guarantee it's continued existence. It must continue to exist, even in a phantom form, because vast financial empires are built to leech off of whatever the war needs. These empires will not just go away because the war is won. They will ensure it is never won. Even if the enemy should surrender, they will not admit it. They need an enemy to sustain them. They will use every resource at their disposal to perpetuate the war they depend on.
Declaring a war on terror ensures continued terrorism, a useful tool to implement other agendas, chiefly private profit at public expense.
Declaring a war on drugs ensures continued drug abuse, a useful too for private profit at public expense.
Think about this. MJ will never be legalized in the U.S.. Never, ever. It's best shot was in the mid '70s.
Want to know why? Partially the oil, chemical, paper and textile industries that hemp would compete with. They are mostly concerned with hemp, but as long as MJ is illegal they will be safe from hemp.
No, it's the insurance and drug testing industries that lose the most were MJ to be legal.
The testing industry makes billions on the fact that MJ stays in your system so long. If they had to rely on finding the other drugs, most of which are gone in 24-48hrs., they'd be out of business.
I'd be willing to bet that over 90% of positive drug tests are for MJ.
The insurance industry saves billions by denying W.C. claims to injured workers based on a drug test that shows MJ in their systems, but proves nothing more than consumption within the last 30 days or so.
Those two behemoths will never allow full legalization. Never, ever, not in a zillion years.