Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Gweeedo wrote:Quote: Legalize all drugs and make them taxable, this would fix so many problems to do with guns. End quote.
Besides Drugs (war on drugs) already being a big (huge) money maker.
Trading a gun problem (minor in comparison) for a even bigger drug problem?
What's the "even bigger drug problem?"
I suspect, although I haven't done the research, that less people are killed by drugs they aren't themselves using than people killed by guns they aren't themselves using.
Also, if you're going to respond to me, use the quote function.
Fun fact: More people overdose from legal drugs than illegal drugs!
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-07-0 ... caine.html
That's not meaningful if they don't normalize to the total availability of those drugs. Since there are a lot more prescription drugs in use than illegal drugs, that conclusion will likely not hold when we take that factor into account.
Sure, and there's problems with collecting and analyzing data on illegal drugs. Nevertheless, this still supports the claim that more people die from legal drug overdoses than illegal. Hopefully, this frames your perspective. If it were the opposite case, many would simply nod their heads and say, "well of course there's more illegal drug overdoses than legal because we have the FDA to protect and yada yada." I have yet to see enough evidence that the opposite is true--given your contention.
Yes, but you should very well know that making claims based on "X > Y" is meaningless unless X and Y are normalized to the same scale. For example, suppose I'm a public health professional and I'm trying to determine whether I should target my work to teach people how to use legal drugs responsibly, or how to use illegal drugs responsibly. The correct metric to look at is the number of overdoses per unit of the drug, because that tells you how likely a given person is to misuse the drug. Since there are also lots of public health benefits to those prescription drugs, but presumably not many associated with cocaine and heroin, it is very likely the case that you do the most good per capita by focusing on the illegal drugs.
True, unless one is concerned about total number of people dying.
Any good music come from illegal drugs? How about any other kinds of creative goods? Is marijuana a sufficient substitute for pain relief or for other symptoms? How about cocaine or heroin? How about all the other drugs which are beneficial yet are prevented from being researched? You should be skeptical about your public health argument.