...But you are only banning certain impairments. Drunkenness is still allowed in some cases, which impairs someone's judgment.
It isn't about banning some impairments. It's about banning a substance that cannot be used without the result of intoxication. I take your point though. A person indulging at home would be doing nothing essentially different from the person drinking to excess at home. I wouldn't advocate either. But again, alcohol isn't legal because you can get drunk in the privacy of your own home. And drinking needn't be intoxicating, etc., previously set out.
I would bet they'd rather keep it illegal than have to formulate ways to provide a better product. :chuckle:
Who knows?
At least you are consistent. Even if you're wrong.
At least you're half right (no, don't).
The argument stands, though. Why would doctors want a competitor when there is none now? Even if it is a small percentage.
Know any doctors scrounging for business?
lain:
So change my statement to I don't find your argument compelling enough to maintain it's illegal status.
Good for you, but unless you can find an argument for legalizing it that's not really going to amount to anything but a statement regarding my lack of persuasive power or your intransigence.
But regardless, it hasn't always been banned. And from what I've seen (need to do some more reading) the laws against marijuana were more based in racism than what you've been offering. So without racism we might be in a completely different situation right now.
That's the great thing about vague theories.
lain:
Both alcohol and marijuana can be used safely.
Sure.
Both can have health benefits.
Well, depends on how you mean that. There's nothing healthy about smoking pot. There may be some medical benefits related to treatments for various ailments or as a lessening agent for discomfort relating to certain treatments. That would fall under the medical application though and not as a general use. Generally speaking it isn't beneficial or healthy, as alcohol can be.
Alcohol can be. Pot is made for the purpose that would make the use of alcohol an abuse.
Both can impair judgment which can lead to harmful behavior.
Yes.
The only difference is that you can drink alcohol without getting intoxicated, which isn't true of marijuana (though I'm not sure on that).
No (supra), but it's a very important difference in its nature. To be effective in any beneficial or detrimental way pot must be taken to the extent it impairs judgment.
So in effect you are making a law against the state of being intoxicated, but it is focused on intoxication by marijuana, as you can be drunk without being arrested.
No. I'm supporting the law prohibiting a drug that can't be taken without inducing a state that, outside of narrow confines, is illegal, one that is almost entirely used for that purpose, and which has no inherent beneficial use outside of certain medical applications (which I'm open to, as established).
Then penalize the errors instead of penalizing an action that doesn't inherently lead to harm.
Again, my argument in favor of the laws restricting the practice don't rest on one leg. If they did I'd say fine, make it another form of public intoxication.
Of course, you could make the same sort of argument for heroin, crack, crystal meth. So obviously there's a larger concern and more than one consideration here. And so my approach.
The gist of my response is that I believe the bible is more concerned with what you do while drunk rather than being concerned with the state itself.
And I think you're wrong. The body is a temple. It is, to the Christian, a thing no longer wholly his. 1 Corinthians 6:19-20 And I don't believe a Christian can reconcile drunkenness of any sort with scripture. Colossians 3:17 Ephesians 5:18 We are commanded to retain control of our faculties. 1 Peter 1:13 and to separate ourselves in conduct from the worldly. Romans 12:2 1 Thessalonians 5:6-8
And I've already noted Galatians. :e4e: