With all respect, kellyb, you are missing a few key points.By 1923 it was and stayed higher than in 1918. So, if anything, a slight overall increase compared to pre-prohibition.
Your claim stands only if your pre-Prohibition data comes exclusively from 1918 -- a year where the sale of alcohol was already MAJORLY discouraged, due to the war. It was considered "unpatriotic" to drink, since alcohol was associated with Germans and grain was needed for the war effort. Countless regulatory hassles were put in place for brewers and retailers, greatly reducing consumption before it was finally banned outright... ironically after the armistice was signed, by the Wartime Prohibition Act.
In 1910 and 1915, before the U.S. joined the war and all the silliness, drinking rates were much higher.
You know it.Would you start smoking crack if crack were decriminalized?
I can't wait for the law to change so I can start smoking crack!
I see your point, but I think the anti-drinking "propaganda" push probably would have existed without the war. And yes, that's effective. (see: smoking)
Maybe we can agree that overall, after a couple of years, prohibition had little if any effect on overall consumption. (whether there was a slight increase or decrease we can disagree on, but since we're talking about really small numbers here, it's irrelevant.)
Oh, definitely. They'd been around since the 1840s, but it wasn't until a combination of Civil War/immigration fallout (which creates a lot of drunks, apparently?) that they started getting any traction. The propaganda had been around for ages, but they used the war to their full advantage!I see your point, but I think the anti-drinking "propaganda" push probably would have existed without the war. And yes, that's effective. (see: smoking)
I actually agree with that (from the data I've read, anyway). I don't even have a problem with the possibility that people were drinking more. It just makes me crazy when I hear somebody say "Prohibition actually made people drink more" with certainty, because of the lack of any hard evidence.Maybe we can agree that overall, after a couple of years, prohibition had little if any effect on overall consumption. (whether there was a slight increase or decrease we can disagree on, but since we're talking about really small numbers here, it's irrelevant.)
I don't think other countries experiences with legalizing the consumption of banned substances should matter. I don't care what happens, or happened in Portugal, or Holland, or any other country. I care about the Constitution from which all laws in the U.S. are ultimately derived from. If it took a constitutional amendment to ban the production, sale, and consumption of alcohol, then the same procedures should be required to ban any other substance. If drugs are so very, very bad, then lining up a majority of the states behind a constitutional amendment shouldn't be a problem, right?
rehab typically is offered several times before a prison sentence is imposed. So, for these individuals- what makes you think the decriminalization would change their behavior, when prior attempts at rehab coupled with the threat of imprisonment did nothing to stop them? Why not just continue on? What you are saying might work with some people- but most drug users and abusers never end up in prison. We are talking about the worst of an already sorry lot.
Do you know anything about crack?
Effects:
*If a person has used within the past hour his or her pupils will be huge and glassy. This goes along with symptoms that can occur anytime along which may include; sweating, drastic weight loss, sensitivity to light and sound, very hyper and does not sleep followed by exhaustion, not eating then eating like crazy, sexual dysfunction, extreme sexual fantasy but cannot follow through, dramatic mood changes, extreme self confidence that you know will never happen, anger, depression, paranoid, suicide thinking, unable to hold a job, intense arguing, very chatty, financial and legal problems, not paying bills, no food in the house, highly skilled at covering up the where’s, the who’s, and the what’s, denies and lies. He or she may have burns on mouth or hands from smoking crack and unable to control urination or bowel movements. Sometimes there are allergic reactions to crack cocaine or the additives in street drugs, menstrual cycle problems, malnutrition, and infections in the brain. If you think they are using they are.
Cost: $20 per dose/hit
Time under the effects: 10 minutes.
They steal, strong arm robbery, prostitution, etc to get the money because there is no way they can do a normal job with normal pay to feed the habit.
I Pledge Resistance, to the Nazi Flag, of the United Police States of America, and to the Private Federal Reserves for which it stands. One Corporation, under Goldman Sachs, unaccountable, with poverty and slavery for all.
What exactly is it about the populations of Portugal and the United States that leads you to this feeling?
Calm down, sissy. Just because you've been beaten up doesn't mean you have to cry. Just screaming out that you don't feel good about changing the law isn't a "deconstruction" of anything.
Cute. Now, do you have anything of substance to offer?
So, do you have any statistics to back up your feeling that decriminalizing drugs wouldn't change anything?
Any evidence at all? I know the idea frightens you, but do you have any rational basis for it?
Red herring. Kind of typical, but yes, it probably would. I saw that happen in the beltway a few years ago. A massive power fault killed all the traffic lights in one part of the beltway, and they stayed down for two days, and for two days it was joyful driving to work. Not a good statistical sample, but you have no evidence to couter it. Just your fear of a lack of controls on public behaviour, which is what you're whole tantrum is about.
Hahaha. Says the guy in the middle of a hysterical breakdown in fear of a lack of formal controls on the evil poor people.
Most likely. He wouldn't need to if the market for cocaine weren't so dangerous, the prices would drop considerably. Cocoa isn't that expensive. The price problem is law enforcement.
But those countries allow people to be freer, and their freedom to choose for themselves is the basis of their improvement in social stability. It's true for all people: More freedom creates a better society, although people like Phool are scared to death of the idea, and will always be there to fight it.
"All that stuff I was taught about evolution, embryology, Big Bang theory, all that is lies straight from the pit of hell [the bible] teaches us how to run all our public policy and everything in society." Rep. Paul Broun (R)
"I hope I live to see the day when, as in the early days of our country, we won't have any public schools. The churches will have taken them over again and Christians will be running them. What a happy day that will be!" -- Jerry Falwell
Off Topic: Where do you get LSD? Anyone know?
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