Originally Posted by
*Classic*Charm*
But that's the thing when it comes down to it: legal and illegal. Black and white. If Alcohol and tobacco are legal, pot should be. Then if pot is legal, so should cocaine be. Then cocaine is legal, and if something as harmful is that is legal, we should have the right to narcotic painkillers. That's the problem. I'm not saying it would be a "free-for-all". I'm not saying we'll have people driving along throwing pills out to the general public. It would be as controlled as alcohol and tobacco are, but even with legal buying ages and penalties for misuse, there are still astounding levels of alcoholism and there would be astounding levels of drug misuse as well.
And I don't see the validity of your prison overcrowding argument either. If the prisons are overcrowded, the dealers end up back on the streets, correct? Either the dealers do it illegally and end up back on the streets, or they do it legally and never leave the streets in the first place. And I disagree- violent offenders aren't getting off easy because we don't have room for them, they get off easy because we feel the need to protect them from each other while they're in jail. People incarcerated because they're child molesters are kept separate from other convicts because they would be killed by the other convicts. I see that as being wasted space, but that's another argument altogether.
And I'm certainly not arguing against drug education! I think it's very valuable because for the most part as far as I've found, the schools do a better job of keeping up with what's currently popular than the parents do. I just think that if it is the government's responsibility to educate the children instead of the parents, it should to some degree be the government's right to impose restrictions.
I think that's the problem, though, Sheep. There's a lot of different people doing a lot of different influencing and there needs to be something to trump it all.