Poor Colorado is not going to get its new taxes
Oh, poor government babies. They legalize pot, not because it is harmless and there is no logical reason for it to be illegal, but so they can get new taxes. It looks like they might not get them. My heart bleeds for them. *snif snif*
Previous comments... You are currently on page 3.
You've read my accounts of Rome, elsewhere? I'm not enraged, I'm frustrated. A modern-day Cassandra. Anyone with eyes should be able to see what's already happened, but as y'all are okay with it, and are interested in arguing hedonistic points of destructive principle, there's nothing to be done to save the civilization... *again*.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassandra
Addictions exist because of the first, universal addiction: sex.
The only extent I tell you how to live your life is to live it away from me if you're going to smoke pot or do drugs or otherwise impair your ability to reason more than it already is.
No, I have no regard for the liberty of others, so long as we are heading down this path. You figure out a way we can repair society so people won't fight so hard for the "right" to blow their minds out on pot, let me know.
As much as I disagree with pretty much everything you've said in this thread, I think I've found one point of commonality between us. You're last paragraph about your drinking habits, or lack thereof, applies lockstep with me.
I don't know what else we have in common, but I understand your position on drugs better than you would imagine. What you are spouting off as good law/policy, is how I feel on a personal level. I don't use drugs, and I refuse to associate with people that do. I really don't like it when I see my friends drinking to excess, because I hate to think they could be as stupid/loud/obnoxious/whatever as they are when they're drunk. If/when it becomes an ongoing issue, I'm done with them.
The point that I am ultimately trying to arrive at is that while we probably agree with each other about drug/alcohol use on a personal level, where we disagree is in terms of policy/law. I am able to separate my personal opinion about what is right for me from what I think should be law applied with force to everyone else. You, on the other hand, seem to have no regard whatever to the liberty of others. You, on the other hand, seem to think that some bunch of arbitrary laws based on your opinion is the way to go, and the freedoms/liberties of others be damned. The comment you made below about castrating those idiots who wear their pants too low to your liking being a case in point.
If it's all the same to you, I don't care to have you or anyone else telling me how to live my life when none of my actions has a thing to do with you.
Jan
Bear in mind, I'm also in favor of laws that would make it a crime punishable by castration to wear one's pants below one's buttocks, thus exposing one's underwear... I don't want such people breeding.
Think if I put on a pair of size 14 tennis shoes I can get a job with the Thunder?
I'm glad you reject my sex ed argument; I rejected it too, when it was said to me over... and over... and over.
I'm not trying to get the government to legislate morality. I don't regard drug abuse as a moral issue. I regard it as a character issue, and I regard it as a threat to society, because it takes away people's ability to reason.
I don't drink. I've been drunk. I didn't like it. It turns out I'm a very... very happy drunk. I don't like not being in control of myself (in a world where I can't control much of anything else...). I can't understand the mentality of anyone who would choose to regularly get themselves into that condition.
You said, "Tobacco use is down, because the ball-less wonders who hated their daddies for being men launched a campaign decades ago . . ." Am I supposed to take you seriously on any level when you say something like that? Are you suggesting that we should have more people puffing away on 4 packs a day so that tobacco use can go back up?
I agree with you that smokers should never have been treated like pariahs. I get that, I really do. Beyond that though, your entire post just came off as incredibly stupid.
By the way, how old are you? You sound like a grumpy old octogenarian know it all with your tired old arguments and your constant use of the word "moderns".
How's that for a real world example?
As far as your "gateway drug" argument, that, too, is little more than rhetorical nonsense. The nanosecond I see you lobbying for the criminalization of tobacco and alcohol, I might begin to take you seriously. Until then, the "gateway drug" argument is hypocritical at best.
As for your sex ed argument, I reject it completely. Believe it or not, people, young and old, are going to be interested in sex. They are going to have sex regardless of what the law or the Bible or you or me or anybody else has to say on the matter. We're hardwired from birth this way whether you like it or not.
Similarly, some people are just self destructive with addictive personalities. They are going to use drugs, "gateway" or otherwise, regardless of what the law says on the subject. On a personal level, I pity/loathe them. On a policy level though, I just don't see the point is having the federal government trying to legislate morality. It has never worked, and it never will. If anything, drug laws ought to be left to the states, in any case. Go reed the 9th and 10th Amendments if you don't believe me. I'm a big fan of liberty, and a big part of that means keeping the federal government as far out of my life, my wallet and my business as possible.
"drag us back to the 1940s or earlier, culturally."
is what I said. I didn't say "technologically".
I have been watching with growing enthusiasm the change in dress among Fox News babes (I believe the change was actually led by Stacey Dash on RedEye). The tight, tubular dress suits seem to be giving way to "blousier", fuller skirts, in some cases pleated. Now if we could just get them to hang below the knee, I could stop feeling bad for the uncomfortable-looking knee-lock the Fox News babes have to prevent an upskirt exposure...
oh, and before someone else brings it up, no, I'm not pining for segregation. Even segregated, back then, most blacks and whites shared a culture. Desegregation didn't require the path we took.
Scream, make personal insults, and shake your fist at what you believe is morally wrong as if your morality should be everyone’s gospel. Your words are irrational and overly emotional, and if you think they will make me loose interest in continuing this conversation you are correct. Count it as another win for yourself, because I do not debate with the emotional arguments of those who would have the federal government dictate morality.
Load more comments...