BigBallinStalin wrote:
What has been slowly worn down? US is #1 in per-capita prison population. That's extremely unproductive. Unemployment rates for the poor, especially for young African Americans is 33%. This is mainly due to prohibition and its unintended consequences (profits of black markets are high compared to unskilled/low-skilled labor).
Those increase over the years, especially as more resources are dedicated toward prohibition. There's no wearing down of this; you'd see an inverse relationship between "prohibition spending" and "crime," but you don't--from what I recall. You can't remove black markets and their effects with policies which bring them into existence. That's counter-productive.
Yes the US has a lot of inmates, but that's because it has had a lot of inmates for quite a long time. The facts are quite the opposite of what you present.
Drug expenditures are dropping. (see page 11)
https://www.ncjrs.gov/ondcppubs/publica ... d_2002.pdf
Drug related homicides are dropping
http://www.bjs.gov/content/dcf/duc.cfm
Prison population percentages are dropping.
http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2 ... -guess-why
One thing that has been increasing is the abuse of legal painkillers.
http://www.cdc.gov/homeandrecreationalsafety/rxbrief/
Freer access to narcotics is unnecessary and possibly dangerous. Most of us can remember meeting or being that "bad kid" at one point, the one that snuck that cigarette or beer from dad and offered it to friends after school. What if that was a crack-pipe instead? Many of our lives might be quite different today.
But go ahead, I'm open minded, can you provide any statistical evidence that legalizing a controlled substance has ever had a positive corollary effect on aggregate crime?
For someone who plays the "strawman" card so often, you should be more aware of your opponent's actual argument. Did I say that we needed to get rid of guns? I'm pretty sure I specifically said that wasn't the point twice now. I simply want the proper measures in place to curb unlicensed individual's illegal access to guns, do you have any specific problem with that?BigBallinStalin wrote:The underlined is not a sufficient explanation. "They got tired." Are the criminal organizations which currently operate in the UK and Japan tired? No. If they 'forget about guns', have criminals forgotten about knives and other weapons? No. This is why saxi keeps mentioning the similar crime crates of UK and US--given their different gun laws. Again, it shouldn't be about gun laws if your goal is to reduce crime.