- This topic has 128 replies, 31 voices, and was last updated 12 years ago by konabunny.
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So, its looks like world leaders finally have finally seen the light…
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chewkwFree Member
Bushwacked – Member
chewkw – Member
I wonder if there is drug problem in North Korea?
I hope so, but imagine its not the best place to get the munchies!
The only drug they need is to prevent them from hunger and the drug of cult worshipping.
Naahh … just cull the drug dealers. Waste of space and feed them to the crocodile. Their human rights need to be abused badly.
airtragicFree MemberI wonder if there is drug problem in North Korea?
Don’t know, but there’s a huge heroin problem in Iran, so it’s a problem for authoritarian societies too,
yunkiFree MemberIf you have read any accounts of the more wealthy hard drug users.. you will perhaps have noticed that without the inherant poor quality and criminality that street users have to face.. most hard drugs are not quite the demonic force that we have been led to believe..
EdukatorFree MemberThe “no harm” thing is nonsense. Since French drivers involved in road accidents in which people are injured have been systematically tested it’s become clear that drug users do a lot of harm. The same is true in the work place with both illegal and prescription drugs increasing the risk of accidents. Is it any coincidence that the most unpleasant characters I’ve “met” on MTB forums also brag about their substance abuse?
grumFree MemberAnd how would doing the same with drug laws (only more so as they’re completely illegal at the moment) be any different.
It’s possible it might do in the short term, but the example of Portugal suggests not.
The same is true in the work place with both illegal and prescription drugs increasing the risk of accidents.
Even more reason to adopt an effective strategy rather than the current failing one then.
yunkiFree Memberit’s become clear that drug users do a lot of harm
but you can’t really blame the drug surely..?
It’s got to be the idiot abusing it that’s the problem…chewkwFree Memberairtragic – Member
I wonder if there is drug problem in North Korea?
Don’t know, but there’s a huge heroin problem in Iran, so it’s a problem for authoritarian societies too,
I am not surprised since they can get them rather easily from their brotherly neighbour the Afgan … yeah … “brothers feeding each other drugs” … Oh no … it’s good drugs because it is produced by the brother.
konabunnyFree MemberBritish drinking culture is the result of the best part of 100 years of uber tight licensing laws.
Is it?
EdukatorFree MemberIf you don’t let idiots have guns they can’t shoot people with them. If you don’t give people anti-depressors or heoin they won’t mow down pedestrians while undert the influence.
ransosFree MemberLegalising recreational drugs doesn’t automatically mean you can buy crack in Tesco. You could, for example, make drugs available on prescription.
yunkiFree Memberedukator.. take a chill pill maaaaaaaan..
If you don’t let idiots have guns they can’t shoot people with them
so what you’re saying is that because some folk look at child porn on the internet we should ban computers..?
chewkwFree Memberyunki – Member
edukator.. take a chill pill maaaaaaaan..
Theerrree issss morrree funnnn inn cullll themmm … to freee uppp llivvviinnngggg sssppaaccee …
konabunnyFree MemberI wonder if there is drug problem in North Korea?
Yes, there is. DPRK is a manufacturer and trafficker of stimulants and there is reported to be widespread abuse.
Even your unworkable hyperbolic solution isn’t a solution.
http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2011/03/05/2011030500353.html
http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/RL32167.pdfEdukatorFree MemberI don’t feel the need for any pills at all, Yunki. What are you on to be ordering me around and slurring like that?
konabunnyFree Memberransos – Member
Legalising recreational drugs doesn’t automatically mean you can buy crack in Tesco. You could, for example, make drugs available on prescription.How dare you say things like that, with your fancy facts and words.
grumFree MemberLegalising recreational drugs doesn’t automatically mean you can buy crack in Tesco. You could, for example, make drugs available on prescription.
Yup, there’s absolutely zero chance of that happening so I don’t know why people seem to be suggesting it. I know I keep harping on about this, but if anyone here has a genuine interest in this issue then research how it works in Portugal.
Or just carry on with ridiculous straw man arguments based on nothing. :shrug:
ahwilesFree Memberransos – Member
You could, for example, make drugs available on prescription.that’s a good idea, and we already do it, we give methadone to heroin addicts.
(but why we don’t give them heroin, in a clean, controlled environment, with the support required to help them lower their dose, is beyond me.)
CougarFull MemberThe number of alcohol-related hospital admissions in England has topped one million for the first time, according to official statistics.
Ah, ok. I looked for a little while for reports and could only find Daily Mail articles which ran for a page of scaremongering followed by a sentence at the end going “a spokesman from people who actually know about these things said ‘what a load of bollocks,'” so good spot.
Looking at the non-video ‘read more’ link from that page takes us to the full story here. It includes this graph,
Now, the licensing laws were changed in 2005. Can you see the massive spike in that graph? No? Me neither.
Conclusion: the 24-hour drinking laws have made no statistical difference, positively or negatively, on alcohol-related hospital admissions. It’s climbing, but it’s been climbing for at least years.
EdukatorFree MemberBeing on the high of life is fine by me, Yunki. Excellent even. If you’re feeling so high on life why object to someone stating the obvious on an MTB forum? You’re on the attack for reasons known only to yourself and bringing in child porn and computers which is about as red as herrings get. Since when was child porn the primary function of a computer?
Perhaps you should take some of your own advice and chill a little.
heuer27Free MemberIf you look at the facts surrounding the Dutch decrimminalisation of cannabis ,it reveals that subsequent to this they have encountered a huge problem with Heroin misuse. Whilst there is no real evidence to link the two ,my experience is that drug takers are thrill seekers looking for the rush and when one drug stops providing that, they move on to some other substance/activity.
When the Americans first entered Afghanistan they destroyed the poppy fields totally decimating the worlds supply of heroin (95% of which originates from there). This lasted for one season when they realised that they had also killed the Afghan economy stone dead. The Americans then turned a blind eye and let them grow the poppy again in order that the country could have some sort of income.
These self same people have told us that they have failed in the war on drugs .If they had maintained their original stance then Heroin would not be the problem it is in our society.No doubt something else would have filled the void but it shows that the war on certain drugs can be won if there is a determination to do so.grumFree MemberIf you look at the facts surrounding the Dutch decrimminalisation of cannabis ,it reveals that subsequent to this they have encountered a huge problem with Heroin misuse. Whilst there is no real evidence to link the two I’m going to spout about my own prejudices as if they are facts/evidence
FTFY.
No doubt something else would have filled the void but it shows that the war on certain drugs can be won if there is a determination to do so.
Really? Are you actually serious?
chewkwFree MemberYou guys are missing the point.
If drugs is the problem for the society then cull the drug pushers. The more the merrier so that we have more space to live in. Effective or not at least you have more space to live in. Stop pussy footing … human rights I hear … shite. Cull that too.
CougarFull MemberIf you don’t let idiots have guns they can’t shoot people with them
Whilst factually correct, this sidesteps the point that the problem isn’t guns, it’s idiots. Make it hard to get guns and you’ll still have idiots.
If you could hypothetically remove access to all the knives in the world, you’d see a massive drop in knife crime but a comparable rise in broken bottle and tyre iron crime. Crime, as a whole, would go on regardless.
Legalise or criminalise drugs, it doesn’t matter. You want to reduce drug usage, you need to address why people take drugs.
heuer27Free MemberGrum I said experience not prejudice. Over 20 years of dealing with addicts on a daily basis . What is your experience ?
The information about Afghanistan is fact so yes I am serious.
EdukatorFree MemberYou do realise that if you extroplate that graph back there were no admissions at all before 1996, Cougar. That graph shows the dramatic increase in recent years after a long period in which admissions were below the 600k mark. A period that ended in about 05.
grumFree MemberGrum I said experience not prejudice. Over 20 years of dealing with addicts on a daily basis . What is your experience ?
The information about Afghanistan is fact so yes I am serious.
You work with addicts and you believe we can ‘win the war on drugs’? So what, stop the international trade in drugs and end drug addiction/use completely? 😕
konabunnyFree MemberIf you look at the facts surrounding the Dutch decrimminalisation of cannabis ,it reveals that subsequent to this they have encountered a huge problem with Heroin misuse. Whilst there is no real evidence to link the two
Look, I realise it’s “only” wikipedia but I strongly suspect you’re talking shite. Can you substantiate even the first part of what you say (seeing as you’ve based the second part of what you say not on research – and drugs and their users have been researched to death – but on your own anecdotal experiences).
While the legalization of cannabis remains controversial, the introduction of heroin-assisted treatment in 1998 has been lauded for considerably improving the health and social situation of opiate-dependent patients in the Netherlands.[3] In 2010 research shows that the “heroin-junkies” have disappeared from the streets of the Netherlands and the treatment is upgraded from a test-trial to standard treatment for otherwise untreatable addicts. Also, the number of heroin addicts has dropped by more than 30% since 1983.
konabunnyFree MemberOver 20 years of dealing with addicts on a daily basis . What is your experience ?
In what capacity? Copper?
EdukatorFree MemberIt’s the primary fuction argument, Cougar. People do lots of things with knives and most don’t even consider using them for anything more than eating with. There are hammers, a chain saw oand all sorts of things that could easily be used in weapons in my shed but they aren’t going to be used for anything else.
The primary function of a gun is to shoot living things and the priamry function of illegal drugs is to get out of your head which is dangerous to anyone around you on the roads and in many jobs.
grumFree Member[video]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wEolSjlcqng[/video]
Now that is scientific fact. There’s no real evidence for it, but it is scientific fact.”
chewkwFree MemberThe problem is not the addicts nor the drugs but the pushers. Cull them because they have no regards about the side effects on society. They are on the high on £££$$$.
Pushers advertise their products which naturally means some idiots start buying them because they are caught up with all those advertisement of feel good factor as they “cannot” control their urge. The by product of taking those drugs are societal ills which everyone knows.
heuer27Free MemberFor the hard of understanding,
I said with determination the war on some drugs could be won however another substance would no doubt come along and fill the void.
Grum what point are you trying to prove.
grumFree MemberI said with determination the war on some drugs could be won however another substance would no doubt come along and fill the void.
So the war on drugs couldn’t be won then. 😕
Your statement about Afghanistan is full of all sorts of innacuracies and logical jumps also – what makes you think production wouldn’t have just increased somewhere else? Was there a massive decline in heroin use in this country when 95% of the world’s supply was apparently cut off?
CougarFull MemberYou do realise that if you extroplate that graph back there were no admissions at all before 1996, Cougar. That graph shows the dramatic increase in recent years after a long period in which admissions were below the 600k mark. A period that ended in about 05.
So what’s your point? I’m not extrapolating anything, because then we move from “facts” to “guesswork.” Show me the figures.
Where’s this magical 600k cutoff come from? It’s arbitrary and meaningless. You could equally well argue that the graph shows “the dramatic increase in recent years after a long period in which admissions were below the 1000k mark. A period that ended in about 2010” or “… admissions below 400k which ended in 2002.”
You can extrapolate what you like but there is nothing in that graph to show that anything different or special happened in 2005 when the licensing reforms took place.
yunkiFree MemberSince when was child porn the primary function of a computer?
sorry.. I have to pull you up on this..
by your own logic you now appear to be claiming that the primary function of drugs is for people to drive dangerously while under their influence..!!
I’m gonna step out very quietly and carefully and find something more constructive to do as you are being completely unreasonable and a little hysterical..
my ‘attack’ was merely an undermining of your flawed argument..enjoy the rest of your day folks..
Reports that show the war on drugs has failed:
http://idpc.net/publications/failure-regime-selected-publicationsReports that show alternative approaches of decriminalisation and regulation are working:
http://idpc.net/publications/alternative-strategies-selected-publicationsGeneral report on drug law reform in practice:
http://www.tni.org/report/legislative-innovation-drug-policyThe Global Comission on Drug Policy that will call on the UN to end the war on drugs
http://www.globalcommissionondrugs.org/Documents.aspxDrug War by the Numbers
http://www.drugpolicy.org/facts/drug-war-numbersFinal Report of the Latin American Comission on Drugs and Democracy
http://www.drogasedemocracia.org/English/Destaques.asp?IdRegistro=8General report on drug law reform in practice:
http://www.tni.org/report/legislative-innovation-drug-policygrumFree MemberGiven how many people (in this thread and elsewhere) seem to be happy to substitute their own ill-informed prejudices for any kind of evidence-based discussion – it looks like we get the policies/politicians we deserve. 🙁
konabunnyFree Memberthe priamry function of illegal drugs is to get out of your head which is dangerous to anyone around you on the roads and in many jobs
The primary function of a skipping rope is to use it to jump up and down, skipping which is dangerous to anyone around you on the roads and in many jobs. Of course, if you don’t act like a **** and don’t try to use a skipping rope when you’re driving and not at work, then it’s a lot safer.
chewkwFree Membergrum – Member
Given how many people (in this thread and elsewhere) seem to be happy to substitute their own ill-informed prejudices for any kind of evidence-based discussion – it looks like we get the policies/politicians we deserve.
I have no prejudice I just want to free up space on the planet so everyone is treated equally with fairness like equal opportunity.
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