Decriminalize all drugs

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Turdacious
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

Post by Turdacious »

Blaidd Drwg wrote:You're such a phenomenal chickenshit.
Because I believe that cannabis is different? Try and compare employment consequences, health consequences and associated medical costs, criminal behavior of users, etc...

There's a reason there is legalization efforts are not equal for all drugs.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Turdacious wrote:
Blaidd Drwg wrote:You're such a phenomenal chickenshit.
Because I believe that cannabis is different? Try and compare employment consequences, health consequences and associated medical costs, criminal behavior of users, etc...

There's a reason there is legalization efforts are not equal for all drugs.
Case in point. Evasive, cowardly, and obfuscating.
Blaidd Drwg wrote:I made no claims as the the veracity of the paper. Only that there are lots of people outside of activist journalists who are considering Portugal. Follow the ball.
Of course cannabis is different, you superfluous twat. Bravo...now say something useful. Besides waiving "shoddy science" misidentifying arguments and confusing two page position papers with "Studies."

You're the one making claims about the science (fair game) by taking potshots (pussy), no followup up, no reasoning of your own. (Chickenshit). Something tells me, for all your blather you must work in an environment that never requires you to reveal your thought process.

Seriously, Elevate your game.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Turdacious wrote:That study takes more shortcuts than a Trump speech. They talk about racial disparities in drug arrests, but not changes in crime. The implicit conclusions about Iran are another issue I have-- there's not enough data to make the conclusions they imply (plus the refugee issue complicates everything). Lazy science should never be acceptable.
For those who want to read the actual study: http://press.thelancet.com/DrugsPolicy1.pdf
Alright neighbor...I took a deeper look. First off, get your terms right, it's not a study, it's a report, essentially a position piece. You can pick any number of soft sources and criticize them but doesn't make the conclusions a house of cards.

No one here is a scientist writing a response paper on a meta review of the 432 citations in the document. So rather than diverting to your standard chump mode, step back from your favorite association fallacy (The Lancet was a cunt on Iraq deaths, ergo....) and just tell us what YOU think is wrong with the thinking underlying the position...better yet, If your balls have dropped while no one noticed, give us a your solution as a philosopher king.

You think Cannabis is different? How should it be treated differently to say Crystal meth, shrooms or MDMA? Fuck, Rudy is functionally illiterate and he can almost do that. Pick a lane, son.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Blaidd Drwg wrote:
Turdacious wrote:That study takes more shortcuts than a Trump speech. They talk about racial disparities in drug arrests, but not changes in crime. The implicit conclusions about Iran are another issue I have-- there's not enough data to make the conclusions they imply (plus the refugee issue complicates everything). Lazy science should never be acceptable.
For those who want to read the actual study: http://press.thelancet.com/DrugsPolicy1.pdf
Alright neighbor...I took a deeper look. First off, get your terms right, it's not a study, it's a report, essentially a position piece. You can pick any number of soft sources and criticize them but doesn't make the conclusions a house of cards.

No one here is a scientist writing a response paper on a meta review of the 432 citations in the document. So rather than diverting to your standard chump mode, step back from your favorite association fallacy (The Lancet was a cunt on Iraq deaths, ergo....) and just tell us what YOU think is wrong with the thinking underlying the position...better yet, If your balls have dropped while no one noticed, give us a your solution as a philosopher king.

You think Cannabis is different? How should it be treated differently to say Crystal meth, shrooms or MDMA? Fuck, Rudy is functionally illiterate and he can almost do that. Pick a lane, son.
Already did, but I put them in bold for you. And congratulations on finally reading it. Gold Star. Maybe you should go through the rest of the posts, Rudy's included, and actually read them too.

To your point:

Did the increase in arrests lead to a decrease in property and violent crime, and a rise in property values? From the evidence I've seen, it did in a lot of high profile areas (NYC for example).

Second the relationship between Iran's execution rate and drugs (which they admit), and the implicit correlation with Mexico's problems. Big red flag. Iran is a different beast altogether.

Cannabis is different than the others. Better as a revenue source, and low rates of negative consequences relative to the others (medical issues, job loss of users, etc...).
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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You stupid fucking cunt. What's wrong with the POSITION? not the evidence cited, not the analysis you would like to dress up in dolly clothes. Quit shambling about with the question you think is being asked, quit shittin on the studies you haven't read.....JUST RESPOND TO THE GOD DAMN POSITION.

The POSITION: Decriminalize everything.

What's wrong with it?

What would you do?

Grow a fucking pair of balls and say something dispositive you retarded shitbag.

You are a consistent disappointment in that when you actually have soemthign to say you bitch out entirely (see above) and take potshots and when you have nothing to say you're as strident as a Folsom Street Fair drag queen.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Seriously I'd hit it from both sides. Let states vote on pot legalization with no nasty federal penalties, study the consequences, and find a way to tax it effectively. Take away the federal financial incentives for small scale pot busts and stop the abuse of civil forfeiture laws. And have the FDA restrict use of opiate painkillers.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Turdacious wrote:Seriously I'd hit it from both sides. Let states vote on pot legalization with no nasty federal strings, study the consequences, and find a way to tax it effectively. Take away the federal financial incentives for small scale pot busts and stop the abuse of civil forfeiture laws. And have the FDA restrict use of opiate painkillers.

That wasn't so hard now was it?

What about:

Non Rx'd opiates?
Mushrooms and Psychedelics?
Crystal and Coke?

As an aside I find it odd that you would leave legalization to the states but would intervene in medical practices of individual doctors at a Federal level.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Blaidd Drwg wrote:
Turdacious wrote:Seriously I'd hit it from both sides. Let states vote on pot legalization with no nasty federal strings, study the consequences, and find a way to tax it effectively. Take away the federal financial incentives for small scale pot busts and stop the abuse of civil forfeiture laws. And have the FDA restrict use of opiate painkillers.

That wasn't so hard now was it?

What about:

Non Rx'd opiates?
Mushrooms and Psychedelics?
Crystal and Coke?

As an aside I find it odd that you would leave legalization to the states but would intervene in medical practices of individual doctors at a Federal level.
The aside gets closer to the crux of the matter than anything else-- it comes down to cost and benefit. Pot can be produced in the States and taxed; that revenue can take the place of the revenue sources I don't like (i.e. civil forfeitures). Pot doesn't seem to have the public health costs that other drugs do either, and a lot of those costs are borne by the taxpayer. That includes opiate painkillers, those have some longer term cost consequences too.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Turdacious wrote:The aside gets closer to the crux of the matter than anything else-- it comes down to cost and benefit. Pot can be produced in the States and taxed; that revenue can take the place of the revenue sources I don't like (i.e. civil forfeitures). Pot doesn't seem to have the public health costs that other drugs do either, and a lot of those costs are borne by the taxpayer. That includes opiate painkillers, those have some longer term cost consequences too.
You're dancing again.

The taxpayer/citizen is paying now..in the both loss of liberty and in taxation for the expensive prohibition model. We already shoulder the long term costs of opiate addiction. Are you implying you expect costs to rise significantly with decriminalization of certain opiates?

Maybe it's the word choice...Cost is a big word and now you're mucking about with it. When you say Cost, are you talking about the health impacts of drug use on the body physically? If it's cost benefit and societal impact then it's clear there's the big three. Alcohol and heroin...stims (coke and meth) toddle along behind with tobacco pulling up the rear. Even these on an individual level are not "harmful" unless used to excess...therefore the societal cost is much messier to dissect given that the amount of users far exceeds the amount of addicts. If you're talkign about dollar cost, why do you anticipate and increase in addictive behaviors? Addictive behaviors are easier to understand and account for but what's the rationale that they go up?

Turdacious wrote:That study takes more shortcuts than a Trump speech. They talk about racial disparities in drug arrests, but not changes in crime. The implicit conclusions about Iran are another issue I have-- there's not enough data to make the conclusions they imply (plus the refugee issue complicates everything). Lazy science should never be acceptable.
For those who want to read the actual study: http://press.thelancet.com/DrugsPolicy1.pdf
For the good of the order, describe what you think the conclusions are being drawn regarding Iran that are of import. Iran shows up as a fairly tangential reference from what I see in that paper.

If you think the racial disparities in arrests are not compelling describe why. From your earlier post I can only parse that you think the racial disparity ends up being warranted becuase the net effect of arresting more Negroes was an overall drop in other crime?

What conclusions about your view of due process am I to draw from that? It's not SO bad that we rounded up the Nisei and put them in camps becuase we saved so much money policing them in Montana instead of keeping an eye on them back in the homes they once occupied? Not unlike stop and frisk to reduce gun crime (it seems to), this logic feels strained. Personal liberty is not a fungible asset.

There's some very odd statist dogma floating in your arguments.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Here's another set of considerations for a "harm reduction model"
Some experts say the complexity of the issue should be embraced. Caulkins and Peter Reuter, a drug policy expert at the University of Maryland, suggested a model in which all the major risks of drugs are drawn out and each drug is ranked within those categories. So heroin would be at or near the top for mortality, alcohol would be at or near the top for cause of violent crime, and tobacco would be at the top for long-term health risks. But there wouldn't be a single ranking for all the drugs' harms. The idea is lawmakers could look at this model to help decide on an individual basis which policies are better for each drug.
http://www.vox.com/2015/2/24/8094759/alcohol-marijuana

http://www.sg.unimaas.nl/_OLD/oudelezingen/dddsd.pdf


Keep in mind, I don;t buy many of the underlying assumptions in the study becuase they are comparing unlike things. for instance not enough data is out there one functional opiate addicts who practice good hygiene as opposed to street users are a greater risk for Hep and HIV. There's a number of assumptions that don't square with actual behavior across the spectrum but it's a good starting model to think about.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Rudy Van Horne wrote:
I believe that methadone clinics do indeed lower crime, which is the entire point. If heroin was legal, cheap and less stigmatised how many addicts would seek out a methadone prescription? The alternative to expensive heroin being cheaper heroin is no alternative at all.
It is not alternative because... it's just not, is it? There is often a big difference between "logical" thinking and real life data.

The Impact of Heroin Prescription on Heroin Markets in Switzerland
Abstract: A program of heroin prescription was introduced in Switzer- land in 1994. This initially targeted 1,000 heavily dependent heroin users, most of whom were also involved in drug dealing and other forms of crime. It has recently been extended to cover 3,000 users.

Evaluation of its impact on users shows large reductions in use of illicit drugs and in drug-related crime. The evaluations were not designed to assess the program's impact on drug markets, but some data can shed light on this. It seems likely that users who were admitted to the program accounted for a substantial proportion of consumption of illicit heroin, and that removing them from the illicit market has damaged the market's viability. Before involvement in the program, a large proportion of users sold drugs to finance their own use, since the illicit drug market in Switzerland relies heavily on users for retail drug selling. It is likely, therefore, that the program additionally disrupted the function of the market by removing retail workers. The workers no longer sold drugs to existing users, and equally important, no longer recruited new users into the market. The heroin prescription market may thus have had a significant impact on heroin markets in Switzerland.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Of the two things I did in the last hour and some to get a buzz, one was completely legal and the other is illegal in most of the USA except Colorado and 1,2 others and DC.

Guess which one is giving me heartburn and making me goofy as fuck?

Not the illegal one.

While I can not embrace BD's total legalisation of all drugs and substances, ect although as long as we had true 2nd Amendment rights, I could live with it and I can see Turd's arguments to some degree...


CAN'T WE ALL FUCKING AGREE IT"S STUPID TO MAKE MARIJUANA ILLEGAL IN A COUNTRY WHERE BEER, WHISKEY AND WINE ARE LEGAL AND IT'S EASY TO GET A SCRIPT FOR PILLS?!!!!




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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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To be fair, Turd has no argument... He just likes swinging at imaginary pinatas and has taken no real position.

I support total decriminalization of personal use amounts with attendant support in rehab and supply interdiction where it's deemed warranted . IV drugs are nothing to fuck with for most people. Coke is overblown but again causes enough apparent problems to be worth a lot more study.

So full blown legalization is not something I can really support at this point in time.

Weed and mushrooms, PEDS, and psychedelics should be sold retail, taxed with QC the state. Additionally, certain classes of the benzo group should be considered for less supervised use as well as certain dissociatives.

Remember kids .... There are only two drugs it's easy to die from and they are also the only two you can die from withdrawals as well. Alcohol and barbiturates...two of the most widely used legal substances. Dying from heroin is actually hard unless you mix them with other depressants.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

Post by Rudy Van Horne »

Sangoma wrote:
Rudy Van Horne wrote:
I believe that methadone clinics do indeed lower crime, which is the entire point. If heroin was legal, cheap and less stigmatised how many addicts would seek out a methadone prescription? The alternative to expensive heroin being cheaper heroin is no alternative at all.
It is not alternative because... it's just not, is it? There is often a big difference between "logical" thinking and real life data.

The Impact of Heroin Prescription on Heroin Markets in Switzerland
Abstract: A program of heroin prescription was introduced in Switzer- land in 1994. This initially targeted 1,000 heavily dependent heroin users, most of whom were also involved in drug dealing and other forms of crime. It has recently been extended to cover 3,000 users.

Evaluation of its impact on users shows large reductions in use of illicit drugs and in drug-related crime. The evaluations were not designed to assess the program's impact on drug markets, but some data can shed light on this. It seems likely that users who were admitted to the program accounted for a substantial proportion of consumption of illicit heroin, and that removing them from the illicit market has damaged the market's viability. Before involvement in the program, a large proportion of users sold drugs to finance their own use, since the illicit drug market in Switzerland relies heavily on users for retail drug selling. It is likely, therefore, that the program additionally disrupted the function of the market by removing retail workers. The workers no longer sold drugs to existing users, and equally important, no longer recruited new users into the market. The heroin prescription market may thus have had a significant impact on heroin markets in Switzerland.
I'm not surprised that prescribing heroin to addicts reduced crime. If it's free, there's no need to go out robbing to pay for it, obviously.

I still don't think it's fair to society to say they should pay for addicts to indulge and put no insistence on the addict themselves to behave, but hey ho, that's probably a matter of opinion and depends on whether you personally see addicts as a victim of the drug trade or collaborators in it. Paying burglars to sit home playing X box would likely see a reduction in burglaries but you'll have a hard time convincing anyone it's a good idea.

But it's still not even what's being discussed here, which is the full decriminalisation of all drugs, and full legalisation and organised selling and taxation in some cases.

Again, any success that can be attributed to decriminalisation is more likely just a result of increased investment in treatment programs, as these links clearly point out;

http://ukleap.org/portugal-drug-policy- ... -overdose/

Portugal’s low death rate can’t be attributable solely to decriminalisation. As Dr. Joao Goulao, the architect of the country’s decriminalization policy, has said, “it’s very difficult to identify a causal link between decriminalisation by itself and the positive tendencies we have seen.”

http://www.policeone.com/drug-interdict ... ug-policy/

University of Kent professor Alex Stevens, who has studied Portugal's program. "The answer was simple: Provide treatment."

https://www.unodc.org/documents/ungass2 ... rtugal.pdf

"While decriminalisation played an important role, it is likely that the positive outcomes described below would not have been achieved without these wider health and social reforms"


Broadly, there are four ways you can approach problem drug use (five ways if you want to pretend there's no such thing, I guess)

1; Decriminalised with no investment in treatment - according to one of the links above, the Netherlands saw an increase in drug use when it took a 'live and let live' approach

2; Prohibition with no investment in treatment - pretty much what a lot of places are doing now, especially after public spending cuts, not working well

3; decriminalisation with an investment in treatment - what Portugal is doing, to some success, but even the guardian, which is mindlessly liberal to a fault, can only bring itself to say that drug use has stablised

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/s ... ugs-debate

4; Prohibition with investment In drug treatment - what the NTA did here in the UK to good success

Seems to me, purely looking at numbers, that number 4 is the golden ticket. You can increase this effectiveness even further by better focusing your efforts and stop pestering the kid who wants a few disco biscuits for his weekend, or the guy topping up his lousy wages by growing a bit of weed.

Really though, you could argue figures back and forth till the end of the universe and it's still mainly going to come down to opinion. What you want your drug legislation to achieve is going to guide your thoughts. If, like me, you think that some substances are so inherently damaging they are best kept out of reach you'll want your laws to reflect that. If you think that no such substance exists you'll want your laws to facilitate people's access to the things they want.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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I feel your pain Sangoma.

After all this the kid can't even get the question right let alone get his own argument threaded together.. Dunning Kruger in the extreme.

This is why he rides the pine.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Rudy Van Horne wrote:I'm not surprised that prescribing heroin to addicts reduced crime. If it's free, there's no need to go out robbing to pay for it, obviously.

I still don't think it's fair to society to say they should pay for addicts to indulge and put no insistence on the addict themselves to behave, but hey ho, that's probably a matter of opinion and depends on whether you personally see addicts as a victim of the drug trade or collaborators in it.
I don't think the article said it was free, but maybe it is. More to the point, getting caught up in the definition of "fair" can get in the way of "effective". Similar to PL54 and BD's argument over whether addition is a disease or a choice, to me the real question is which label leads to effective treatments that reduce it. We can all agree that reducing it = good.

I'm all for making decisions based on the outcomes that result.
Again, any success that can be attributed to decriminalisation is more likely just a result of increased investment in treatment programs, as these links clearly point out;...
4; Prohibition with investment In drug treatment - what the NTA did here in the UK to good success

Seems to me, purely looking at numbers, that number 4 is the golden ticket.
The whole drug fighting thing is a fixed resource problem. Where do we put our bucks?

For example, back in the late 80s and early 90s I probably did 10 detachments of a week each flying drug interdiction missions over the Caribbean looking for drug smugglers, at tens of thousands of dollars per flight hour plus all the other costs of moving a bunch of assets to Key West (party time) Puerto Rico, Panama, Corpus Christi, Pensacola, and other coastal sites. This cost on top of redirecting DoD assests to criminal matters, etc. Fun flying, but ineffective other than giving an appearance of doing something about it.

That is a lot of rehab that could be done instead, for pennies on the dollar but a huge change in effectiveness.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Blaidd Drwg wrote:
Turdacious wrote:The aside gets closer to the crux of the matter than anything else-- it comes down to cost and benefit. Pot can be produced in the States and taxed; that revenue can take the place of the revenue sources I don't like (i.e. civil forfeitures). Pot doesn't seem to have the public health costs that other drugs do either, and a lot of those costs are borne by the taxpayer. That includes opiate painkillers, those have some longer term cost consequences too.
You're dancing again.

The taxpayer/citizen is paying now..in the both loss of liberty and in taxation for the expensive prohibition model. We already shoulder the long term costs of opiate addiction. Are you implying you expect costs to rise significantly with decriminalization of certain opiates?
And you've spent four pages acting like a twat before admitting you hadn't read the Lancet piece this whole discussion is based on. I'm not dancing at all-- I'm not ready to go for the full legalization model, but willing to take a hard look at the partial legalization model.

I'm not looking at just total cost, but relative cost too. Costs to the feds, the state, and municipalities should be separated. The reason I bring up civil forfeiture is because the local costs seem to have the nastiest effects and the hardest to pass to anyone else. There is a taxation cost to the prohibition model, but it doesn't raise much revenue.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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nafod wrote: For example, back in the late 80s and early 90s I probably did 10 detachments of a week each flying drug interdiction missions over the Caribbean looking for drug smugglers, at tens of thousands of dollars per flight hour plus all the other costs of moving a bunch of assets to Key West (party time) Puerto Rico, Panama, Corpus Christi, Pensacola, and other coastal sites. This cost on top of redirecting DoD assests to criminal matters, etc. Fun flying, but ineffective other than giving an appearance of doing something about it.

That is a lot of rehab that could be done instead, for pennies on the dollar but a huge change in effectiveness.
So it provided a necessary training opportunity? How much of the money spent was money the DoD realistically needed to spend anyway? The overage is the only cost that really.

And you'll have to show numbers on the rehab, because I've seen how hard it is to maintain at a state and local level where the cost is compared to the cost of incarceration
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

Post by Rudy Van Horne »

Nafod, my assumption was that prescribed means free, which is a Brit thing, but turns out the Swiss healthcare system works slightly differently, I have no idea if they were getting it for free, my guess is yes though.

And I agree that the outcome sought from all points of view is lowered usage rates. I'm just saying that from the numbers available (which are difficult to compare because obviously no one place can try both approaches at once) prohibition + treatment trumps decriminalisation and treatment. This is why I don't agree with the 'fuck it, legalise, it can't hurt' stance.

Fuck knows why a policing issue is so militarised, especially by the US. Our Royal Navy do similar stuff, one of the reasons I picked the service I did was to hopefully join them and get in on in the fun. Not cause I had any desire to fight the good fight, I just liked the sound of whizzing about in the Caribbean. I would say our warships out there is more to show that they are actually doing something and earning their keep, military spending is more closely scrutinised here than other the pond, from what I gather.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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Turdacious wrote:
nafod wrote: For example, back in the late 80s and early 90s I probably did 10 detachments of a week each flying drug interdiction missions over the Caribbean looking for drug smugglers, at tens of thousands of dollars per flight hour plus all the other costs of moving a bunch of assets to Key West (party time) Puerto Rico, Panama, Corpus Christi, Pensacola, and other coastal sites. This cost on top of redirecting DoD assests to criminal matters, etc. Fun flying, but ineffective other than giving an appearance of doing something about it.

That is a lot of rehab that could be done instead, for pennies on the dollar but a huge change in effectiveness.
So it provided a necessary training opportunity?
No it didn't. Going out ones and twos and hunting slow moving boats or small A/C was a completely different scenario from fighting a big air-sea-land battle against the Russian/Chinese/Iraqi hordes, with hundreds to thousands of assets flitting around. Just not our core mission.
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

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nafod wrote:
Turdacious wrote:
nafod wrote: For example, back in the late 80s and early 90s I probably did 10 detachments of a week each flying drug interdiction missions over the Caribbean looking for drug smugglers, at tens of thousands of dollars per flight hour plus all the other costs of moving a bunch of assets to Key West (party time) Puerto Rico, Panama, Corpus Christi, Pensacola, and other coastal sites. This cost on top of redirecting DoD assests to criminal matters, etc. Fun flying, but ineffective other than giving an appearance of doing something about it.

That is a lot of rehab that could be done instead, for pennies on the dollar but a huge change in effectiveness.
So it provided a necessary training opportunity?
No it didn't. Going out ones and twos and hunting slow moving boats or small A/C was a completely different scenario from fighting a big air-sea-land battle against the Russian/Chinese/Iraqi hordes, with hundreds to thousands of assets flitting around. Just not our core mission.
Fair enough, but was was the cost compared to the training you would have done otherwise and the utility of that training?
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

Post by nafod »

Turdacious wrote:
nafod wrote:
Turdacious wrote:
nafod wrote: For example, back in the late 80s and early 90s I probably did 10 detachments of a week each flying drug interdiction missions over the Caribbean looking for drug smugglers, at tens of thousands of dollars per flight hour plus all the other costs of moving a bunch of assets to Key West (party time) Puerto Rico, Panama, Corpus Christi, Pensacola, and other coastal sites. This cost on top of redirecting DoD assests to criminal matters, etc. Fun flying, but ineffective other than giving an appearance of doing something about it.

That is a lot of rehab that could be done instead, for pennies on the dollar but a huge change in effectiveness.
So it provided a necessary training opportunity?
No it didn't. Going out ones and twos and hunting slow moving boats or small A/C was a completely different scenario from fighting a big air-sea-land battle against the Russian/Chinese/Iraqi hordes, with hundreds to thousands of assets flitting around. Just not our core mission.
Fair enough, but was was the cost compared to the training you would have done otherwise and the utility of that training?
That's a fair question. Probably a one-for-one swap between training that would be for our mission (fighting wars from a carrier) and going off and doing drug interdiction. Very little cross-over in skills, other than basic operation of the platform, which we'd rather have done home with our families since we were in-between deployments. No tactics crossover.
Don’t believe everything you think.


Blaidd Drwg
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

Post by Blaidd Drwg »

Turdacious wrote:
Blaidd Drwg wrote:
Turdacious wrote:The aside gets closer to the crux of the matter than anything else-- it comes down to cost and benefit. Pot can be produced in the States and taxed; that revenue can take the place of the revenue sources I don't like (i.e. civil forfeitures). Pot doesn't seem to have the public health costs that other drugs do either, and a lot of those costs are borne by the taxpayer. That includes opiate painkillers, those have some longer term cost consequences too.
You're dancing again.

The taxpayer/citizen is paying now..in the both loss of liberty and in taxation for the expensive prohibition model. We already shoulder the long term costs of opiate addiction. Are you implying you expect costs to rise significantly with decriminalization of certain opiates?
And you've spent four pages acting like a twat before admitting you hadn't read the Lancet piece this whole discussion is based on. I'm not dancing at all-- I'm not ready to go for the full legalization model, but willing to take a hard look at the partial legalization model.

I'm not looking at just total cost, but relative cost too. Costs to the feds, the state, and municipalities should be separated. The reason I bring up civil forfeiture is because the local costs seem to have the nastiest effects and the hardest to pass to anyone else. There is a taxation cost to the prohibition model, but it doesn't raise much revenue.
Wrong again you stupid cunt..

I read it and the three other major pieces long before I made comment one. What I went back with an eye to checking your shabby conclusions to find, as I suspected, you are flinging poo without a clue...(back up your Iran statement, you're the one making outlandish claims about science when you cant tell a study from a position paper)

You've not said a god damn thing. You are as you have consistently been on this forum, a total intellectual coward.
"He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of that." JS Mill

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Turdacious
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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

Post by Turdacious »

Blaidd Drwg wrote:
Turdacious wrote:
Blaidd Drwg wrote:
Turdacious wrote:The aside gets closer to the crux of the matter than anything else-- it comes down to cost and benefit. Pot can be produced in the States and taxed; that revenue can take the place of the revenue sources I don't like (i.e. civil forfeitures). Pot doesn't seem to have the public health costs that other drugs do either, and a lot of those costs are borne by the taxpayer. That includes opiate painkillers, those have some longer term cost consequences too.
You're dancing again.

The taxpayer/citizen is paying now..in the both loss of liberty and in taxation for the expensive prohibition model. We already shoulder the long term costs of opiate addiction. Are you implying you expect costs to rise significantly with decriminalization of certain opiates?
And you've spent four pages acting like a twat before admitting you hadn't read the Lancet piece this whole discussion is based on. I'm not dancing at all-- I'm not ready to go for the full legalization model, but willing to take a hard look at the partial legalization model.

I'm not looking at just total cost, but relative cost too. Costs to the feds, the state, and municipalities should be separated. The reason I bring up civil forfeiture is because the local costs seem to have the nastiest effects and the hardest to pass to anyone else. There is a taxation cost to the prohibition model, but it doesn't raise much revenue.
Wrong again you stupid cunt..

I read it and the three other major pieces long before I made comment one. What I went back with an eye to checking your shabby conclusions to find, as I suspected, you are flinging poo without a clue...(back up your Iran statement, you're the one making outlandish claims about science when you cant tell a study from a position paper)

You've not said a god damn thing. You are as you have consistently been on this forum, a total intellectual coward.
Iran is located next to the poppy growing capital of the world, hosts a large, impoverished Afghan refugee population, has a young underemployed population (especially in rural areas), has a porous border (as evidenced by the number of Afghan migrants going to Europe who took the Iranian route), extremely limited opportunities for working class Iranians to migrate to find better work, really don't allow international monitors (UN organizations, World Bank, IOM) in to do much assessing outside their oil sector, and have more complex international relationships with their neighbors than Mexico does.

I'll be happy to discuss this with you when you calm down.
"Liberalism is arbitrarily selective in its choice of whose dignity to champion." Adrian Vermeule


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Re: Decriminalize all drugs

Post by Yes, I'm drunk »

Just for clarity:

are those in favor of legalization saying that all drugs should be available to all competent adults, without the need for a doctor's prescription?

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