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Re: Drug law reform
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The point being is the drug advisors to the government looked at many drugs and their scientific conclusion was that MDMA was harmless and most drugs should be legalised due to actual harm levels (both to the person and others). Yet once again the PM has ignored that due to personal or political reasons. So very valid point about biased based on media, personal experiences, religion or whatever. ---------- Post added at 23:37 ---------- Previous post was at 23:34 ---------- Let me add that if every stimulant or drug got banned, like coffee, tobacco, alcohol etc, I don't think many would be able to handle the stress of every day life. Its a little escape and simple pleasure for what can be a hell of day/week otherwise. |
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I don't agree with the term harmless though ,i think some cause so little harm as to be insignificant but they can cause harm .Lets face it we apply acceptable losses to life every day ,we accept that we could get knocked over by a car but the risk is actually negligible so we don't ban cars but there is still a risk ,the same with just about everything ,It's also why we have different categories for drugs |
Re: Drug law reform
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2007 study by Nutt, Blakemore, et al: http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2...rugsandalcohol http://www.thelancet.com/journals/la...464-4/fulltext 2010 updated study: http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/20...ck?INTCMP=SRCH |
Re: Drug law reform
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The thing with drawing the line I think is that at the end of the day human beings will indulge in vices,be it gambling,prostitution,drinking,doing drugs or smoking.... since we can't stop people from doing it we need to regulate these activities so to they cause the least possible harm.To me these activities are self-harming,and as long as it happens with consent then I think people should be free to do what they want,as long as they don't harm others! Of course there is pain and suffering in families with addicts,and yet it is family and friends who are the ones who can and should help,if possible.No law will stop an addict from indulging! Quote:
one thing I learned when I quit,and I've been sober for a while,is that when you quit the trouble starts! How to live without.... I'm happy to say though that it's possible. ;) All in all this is a very difficult subject and there are no easy answers.Selling Heroin and Coke at the off-licence is out of the question,equally I'm not sure we need so many places that flog cheap booze..... Quote:
That's why you're a teacher and I'm an uneducated buffoon! :D |
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Agree with Maggy in most respects. |
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Biased in what way?
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biased in that the worst case scenario in drug abuse will always be presented with doctors ,and vice versa for users .There never seems to be a study showing that some users lead a full and rewarding life, results of any research always show one extreme or the other depending on who interpreted them ,doctors or users
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Re: Drug law reform
Not totally sure of the relevance of your point to these studies. They were not studies into e.g. just one drug, concluding the "worst case scenario" at "one extreme" due to the authors being doctors.
They were studies (by doctors, chemists, pharmacologists, psychiatrists, etc.) that took detailed looks at a wide range of drugs (illegal and legal) and ranked the level of harm they each cause by looking at various types of physical harm and social harm plus likelihood of addiction... The first study concluded that, of the 20 drugs they investigated, heroin & cocaine were the most dangerous. Alcohol came in at 5th most dangerous, 6th place went to ketamine, in 9th place was tobacco, 11th place cannabis, 14th place LSD, and 18th place was given to ecstasy. The second study was a more detailed update of the first, which addressed criticisms of the first study. It concluded that, for overall harm, alcohol was the most dangerous drug in the UK, with heroin and crack in second and third place respectively. When looking purely at harm to the individual user, the top three were heroin, crack, and crystal meth. Cannabis and ecstasy were (again) quite low down like they were in the first study, with ecstasy (again) the lower of the two. |
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Re: Drug law reform
But the doctors and other experts who carried out these two studies did not simply say "drugs bad" for everything.
They looked at a wide range of drugs, legal and illegal, and a range of types of harm, and ranked them accordingly, giving them scores for types of physical harm to the user, social harm to others, and overall harm. Don't seem to have the bias you say, and as mentioned previously they actually concluded that e.g. alcohol is more harmful than various illegal drugs (including ecstasy). Physically harmful and socially harmful. |
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Ok Matt ,you managed to find surveys that aren't biased well done you ,i didn't say it was impossible i said that it was hard Quote:
and i was correct because the study you linked to was inaccurate at first so it was redone moving alchohol to a class A drug and being the most harmful ,i don't dispute that ,but is the study realy suggesting that drinkers should be punished or put on the same level as crack users ?,what punishment is suitable for the most harmful drug ? Quote:
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I've linked to and quoted from these studies repeatedly in past drug threads over the last few years... including in direct replies to you which you have then replied back to. They're not talking about "punishing drinkers" the same as crack users (nor saying it should just be a free for all with no classification system at all, as some critics of Nutt and co claim they're saying), nor is the study just something for the "number crunchers". The current classification system is BS and should be re-thought. It should actually take into account levels of harm, e.g. why are some people severely punished for choosing to use something that is far less socially harmful and physically harmful than other drugs in the same Class and even other drugs that are actually legal? Quote:
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