Story Highlights

  • 50% of U.S. adults say they have experimented with marijuana
  • About one in six Americans (17%) are current users
  • Three in four Americans are concerned about effects on young/teen users
        • mwguy@infosec.pubOP
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          1 year ago

          Marijuana isn’t an opoid. That’s an actual classification of drugs. Equating Mary J to Opioids is like equating grape juice to whiskey.

          • Finnish_nationalisti@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            That is an arbitrary classification. Call it what you want, it still is a substance that heavily alters one’s mind and has no real use outside of medical use, and as such must be banned outside of medical use. There is no argument for recreational drugs of any sort, and before you say it, yes this applies to alcohol too.

            • mwguy@infosec.pubOP
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              1 year ago

              It’s an arbitrary classification that you brought up…

              There is no argument for recreational drugs of any sort, and before you say it, yes this applies to alcohol too.

              That’s objectively untrue. Not only is it stupid when you think about it for like 45s, but just because it’s an argument you might not accept doesn’t mean there isn’t an argument for it. Additionally, the current system (in the US) does exactly that. It schedules those mind altering drugs based on their medical applications.

              • Finnish_nationalisti@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                If you want to go down that road, then every classification is arbitrary as there is no definition of drugs sent down from the heavens. In any case this is just sophistry, call it what you want, it is irrelevant. The point still stands, it is a heavily mind altering substance that has no benefits when used recreationally (this is the point of the word recreational), and as such must be banned.

                • mwguy@infosec.pubOP
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                  1 year ago

                  The point still stands, it is a heavily mind altering substance that has no benefits when used recreationally (this is the point of the word recreational), and as such must be banned.

                  What? How does that point stand? That logic is heavily mastubatory at best. Most recreational activities have “no benefits” beyond the recreation itself. Banning them isn’t the answer.

                  Banning a common activity is itself harmful. The decrease on organized crime in states that have legalized should be proof enough that the ban just doesn’t fit our society.

                  • Finnish_nationalisti@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    Most recreational activies are productive and serve a purpose other than mindless pleasure, be it reading, exercising, creative projects or other such activites. Recreational drug use serves no such purpose and only exists to numb one’s mind from the outside world, and likely their troubles, this fact just is covered by pretty words about “relaxation” and such.

                    Banning a substance (with strategic eye of course, for example a total immediate ban on alcohol would cause more problems than it would solve, a incremental ban is better in this case) that complements this behaviour also discourages this behaviour, as no-one who isn’t addicted to the substance will take the risk of procuring it illegally. And the ones who are addicted obviously require medical care.

                    The decrease of organised crime in drug trade is no argument, one could argue that murder should be legal since the amount of convicted murderers goes down if it is legalised. Not to mention how the ban on certain drugs in America isn’t designed to lower the usage of drugs to begin with, rather simply profit off it in various ways.