zlacker

[return to "Ross Ulbricht granted a full pardon"]
1. anothe+O[view] [source] 2025-01-22 00:18:07
>>Ozarki+(OP)
Paraphrasing an aphorism I saw elsewhere: "Crime is legal now".
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2. l0ng1n+R1[view] [source] 2025-01-22 00:23:19
>>anothe+O
“If a law is unjust a man is not only right to disobey it, he is obligated to do so” - Thomas Jefferson
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3. adrian+R3[view] [source] 2025-01-22 00:37:05
>>l0ng1n+R1
Is it unjust to prohibit the sale of illegal drugs, weapons, etc.? Society has good reasons for regulating certain goods. I regularly see people in my community who are enslaved by fentanyl and I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy. The society I live in decided to make selling it illegal. What is unjust about that?
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4. l0ng1n+I5[view] [source] 2025-01-22 00:55:09
>>adrian+R3
As I recall weapons weren't permitted on the platform.

The society didn't decide, the ruling class decided to use drug policy to attack their own citizens.

History shows that prohibition is an abject failure. The fent epidemic is symptomatic of this failed policy.

If they actually cared about the epidemic, addicts would have access to regulated, pharmaceutical grade heroin whilst also having ready access to treatment.

But then we'd have empty prisons and the police would be free to solve real crimes so we can't have that.

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5. adrian+Rh[view] [source] 2025-01-22 02:16:47
>>l0ng1n+I5
> addicts would have access to regulated, pharmaceutical grade heroin

We tried that, it was called the opioid epidemic and Purdue was the pharmacist. We had readily available, doctor-prescribed, high quality narcotics available to anyone who wanted them and the result was an epic disaster that cost thousands of lives.

> weapons weren't permitted on the platform

My mistake.

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6. l0ng1n+Zn[view] [source] 2025-01-22 03:02:36
>>adrian+Rh
>We tried that, it was called the opioid epidemic and Purdue was the pharmacist.

Not really, this was a case of a private company deliberately pushing narcotics for profit without oversight or any associated increase in access to treatment options.

Now the "opioid epidemic" has been replaced with a "fentanyl epidemic" which is objectively a much more dangerous drug with absolutely no regulation and murderous cartels instead of doctors - and we're still throwing people in prison for the crime of being addicts rather than treating it as a medical issue.

I don't know the stats (or if it's even possible to accurately collect statistics due to prohibition) but I'm fairly certain this costs more lives than the short lived opioid epidemic.

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