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#31
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 18:59:48 -0500 , X ` Man
wrote: On 12/10/11 6:46 PM, JustWait wrote: On 12/10/2011 5:11 PM, wrote: On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 12:30:05 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 09 Dec 2011 17:04:02 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 09 Dec 2011 12:49:58 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 08 Dec 2011 21:53:05 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 08 Dec 2011 21:43:02 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 08 Dec 2011 21:07:28 -0500, wrote: uh no. if we destroy all guns, etc etc the 2nd is anti american and should be repealed I suppose you are going to repeal the 4th, 5th and 6th amendments too. That is what you are talking about. garbage. meaningless garbage. so typical of the right. you guys are such slime How are you going to get all of these guns without house to house searches? (4th) daniel patrick moynihan came up with the solution decades ago shut down gun shops no more cartridges sold eventually the gun culture will disappear. I guess you never heard of reloading. Is the government going to give "just compensation" for the ones they take?(5th) absolutely! Ah another $300 billion dollar unfunded mandate. Is there going to be due process for every one of these confiscations? (6th) if the 2nd is repealed, there is no 'due process' necessary any more than there is for possession of heroine Yeah the banning of heroin was soo successful. You just created a criminal enterprise around it. Agreed. Didn't we learn ANYTHING from prohibition? Heroin has been all but replaced by legal otc meds like Oxy and Percs.. Perhaps that is the case in your crowd, but nationally, heroin addiction hasn't dropped. Here's a source for you...Stanford University School of Medicine: http://scopeblog.stanford.edu/2011/0...rug_addiction/ Here's a quote: "Likewise, some drug policy analysts believe that if marijuana were legal, alcohol use would decline because some people could get some of the alcohol consumption effects they enjoy by smoking marijuana instead. But throughout the wave of prescription opioid addiction, heroin addiction in the United States hasnt dropped a bit. A number of smart people have been speculating about this mystery, but no one has an empirically based explanation of why the complementarity hypothesis isnt panning out." There are many other professional sites reporting the same fact...that heroin addiction is not diminishing. So, as usual, you're blowing it out your butt. Oh...and Oxycodone and Percodans (oxycondone and aspirin) and similar narcotic drugs are not Over the Counter (OTC) drugs. You cannot buy them OTC; they require a 'script. It's a wonder you can wipe yourself, assuming you can. http://flickr.com/gp/hakr/8272ug You seem to be extremely interested in getting Mary Jane legalized. Do you have an appetite for the stuff? -- 2012, the end of an error:-) Yee Haw! |
#32
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posted to rec.boats
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#33
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posted to rec.boats
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#35
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posted to rec.boats
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On 12/11/2011 2:56 PM, Drifter wrote:
On 12/11/2011 2:27 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 13:16:42 -0500, wrote: On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 10:46:07 -0500, wrote: You seem to be extremely interested in getting Mary Jane legalized. Do you have an appetite for the stuff? The real reason a lot of us want to see this legalized is because the war on drugs has become one of the worst examples of a bloated government program that simply wastes tons of money and returns nothing to the tax payer. The blow back has resulted in some of the worst constitutional assaults (profiling,.warrentless car searches, warrantless aerial surveillance with IR imagery, warrantless wire taps, financial monitoring and the list goes on) Most of the abuses in the patriot act have been SOP for the DEA for years. === In addition to that, the "war on drugs" has become very much like prohibition. The demand is there, the consumers are there, so a huge illicit and illegal industry has sprung up to keep the market supplied. Profits of this industry are artificially inflated because of the illegality, and because of the huge profits, corruption and crime run rampant everywhere the drug trade operates. Like prohibition the supporting criminal supply network is far worse than the original problem. Everyone wanted to make drugs illegal to protect their children but the kids are getting drugs anyway along with the societal problems of the drug industry which have become pervasive. The war on drugs is unwinable. The war on crime is unwinable. The war on terrorism is unwinable. Wars, the way we fight them, are unwinable. Let's abandon those efforts. We should also can all laws and the IRS code in favor of the ten commandments. Then we won't need no steeenkin lawyers no more. So big mouth, tell me what's so bad about pot? What justifies keeping it illegal beyond "because it is"? |
#36
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posted to rec.boats
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On 12/11/11 3:50 PM, JustWait wrote:
On 12/11/2011 2:56 PM, Drifter wrote: On 12/11/2011 2:27 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 13:16:42 -0500, wrote: On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 10:46:07 -0500, wrote: You seem to be extremely interested in getting Mary Jane legalized. Do you have an appetite for the stuff? The real reason a lot of us want to see this legalized is because the war on drugs has become one of the worst examples of a bloated government program that simply wastes tons of money and returns nothing to the tax payer. The blow back has resulted in some of the worst constitutional assaults (profiling,.warrentless car searches, warrantless aerial surveillance with IR imagery, warrantless wire taps, financial monitoring and the list goes on) Most of the abuses in the patriot act have been SOP for the DEA for years. === In addition to that, the "war on drugs" has become very much like prohibition. The demand is there, the consumers are there, so a huge illicit and illegal industry has sprung up to keep the market supplied. Profits of this industry are artificially inflated because of the illegality, and because of the huge profits, corruption and crime run rampant everywhere the drug trade operates. Like prohibition the supporting criminal supply network is far worse than the original problem. Everyone wanted to make drugs illegal to protect their children but the kids are getting drugs anyway along with the societal problems of the drug industry which have become pervasive. The war on drugs is unwinable. The war on crime is unwinable. The war on terrorism is unwinable. Wars, the way we fight them, are unwinable. Let's abandon those efforts. We should also can all laws and the IRS code in favor of the ten commandments. Then we won't need no steeenkin lawyers no more. So big mouth, tell me what's so bad about pot? What justifies keeping it illegal beyond "because it is"? Drugs have made iSnotty the successful man he is today. |
#37
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posted to rec.boats
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On 12/11/2011 4:02 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 12/11/11 3:50 PM, JustWait wrote: On 12/11/2011 2:56 PM, Drifter wrote: On 12/11/2011 2:27 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 13:16:42 -0500, wrote: On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 10:46:07 -0500, wrote: You seem to be extremely interested in getting Mary Jane legalized. Do you have an appetite for the stuff? The real reason a lot of us want to see this legalized is because the war on drugs has become one of the worst examples of a bloated government program that simply wastes tons of money and returns nothing to the tax payer. The blow back has resulted in some of the worst constitutional assaults (profiling,.warrentless car searches, warrantless aerial surveillance with IR imagery, warrantless wire taps, financial monitoring and the list goes on) Most of the abuses in the patriot act have been SOP for the DEA for years. === In addition to that, the "war on drugs" has become very much like prohibition. The demand is there, the consumers are there, so a huge illicit and illegal industry has sprung up to keep the market supplied. Profits of this industry are artificially inflated because of the illegality, and because of the huge profits, corruption and crime run rampant everywhere the drug trade operates. Like prohibition the supporting criminal supply network is far worse than the original problem. Everyone wanted to make drugs illegal to protect their children but the kids are getting drugs anyway along with the societal problems of the drug industry which have become pervasive. The war on drugs is unwinable. The war on crime is unwinable. The war on terrorism is unwinable. Wars, the way we fight them, are unwinable. Let's abandon those efforts. We should also can all laws and the IRS code in favor of the ten commandments. Then we won't need no steeenkin lawyers no more. So big mouth, tell me what's so bad about pot? What justifies keeping it illegal beyond "because it is"? Drugs have made iSnotty the successful man he is today. Did Krause offer you the explanation you were looking for, Scotty? -- 1-20-13 The end of an error |
#38
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posted to rec.boats
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On 12/11/2011 4:02 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 14:56:27 -0500, wrote: On 12/11/2011 2:27 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 13:16:42 -0500, wrote: The war on drugs is unwinable. True The war on crime is unwinable. Somewhat true but it is controllable. Think about how many resources we would have to fight real crimes with victims if we stopped trying to fight victimless crimes. If people want to hurt themselves, let them. It is none of our business. The war on terrorism is unwinable. True But again it is controllable. Wars, the way we fight them, are unwinable. True We should change the way we fight wars. We are using a 19th century philosophy of take ground and hold it, in a 21st century world where the enemy lives inside our perimeter. That has been true since Vietnam. .. I won't nit pik with you on what you say is controllable. I assume that you say drug use is a "victimless" crime. I strongly disagree on that point. Think about it. -- 1-20-13 The end of an error |
#39
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posted to rec.boats
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On 12/11/2011 3:05 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 14:16:47 -0500, wrote: On 12/11/2011 1:16 PM, wrote: On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 10:46:07 -0500, wrote: You seem to be extremely interested in getting Mary Jane legalized. Do you have an appetite for the stuff? The real reason a lot of us want to see this legalized is because the war on drugs has become one of the worst examples of a bloated government program that simply wastes tons of money and returns nothing to the tax payer. The blow back has resulted in some of the worst constitutional assaults (profiling,.warrentless car searches, warrantless aerial surveillance with IR imagery, warrantless wire taps, financial monitoring and the list goes on) Most of the abuses in the patriot act have been SOP for the DEA for years. I C If it's difficult to police then legalize it. Does that make sense? It is easy for the police, they love the Rambo aspect of kicking down doors and slapping people around. It is just hard on the tax payer and the innocent people who end up paying for it or just get swept up in the violence (narco or police) I suppose you thought alcohol prohibition was a great idea too. There are far more parallels than differences. In fact the laws against pot were strengthened in the 30s to fill the gap when all of the prohibition agents were laid off. There was more than just a little racism involved too. Pot was seen as being a black and latino drug of choice while middle class people just got drunk on the "good" drug. Alcohol abuse often has the same result as drug use. I don't know of any drug, alcohol included, that enhances your senses, awareness, and motor control. I suppose that is why employers frown upon the use of any of those substances in the workplace. Gosh, they've even banned smoking,"for the public good". It's tough when people can't act responsibly. They have to be regulated and I know you don't like it. -- 1-20-13 The end of an error |
#40
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posted to rec.boats
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On 12/11/2011 4:02 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 12/11/11 3:50 PM, JustWait wrote: On 12/11/2011 2:56 PM, Drifter wrote: On 12/11/2011 2:27 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 13:16:42 -0500, wrote: On Sun, 11 Dec 2011 10:46:07 -0500, wrote: You seem to be extremely interested in getting Mary Jane legalized. Do you have an appetite for the stuff? The real reason a lot of us want to see this legalized is because the war on drugs has become one of the worst examples of a bloated government program that simply wastes tons of money and returns nothing to the tax payer. The blow back has resulted in some of the worst constitutional assaults (profiling,.warrentless car searches, warrantless aerial surveillance with IR imagery, warrantless wire taps, financial monitoring and the list goes on) Most of the abuses in the patriot act have been SOP for the DEA for years. === In addition to that, the "war on drugs" has become very much like prohibition. The demand is there, the consumers are there, so a huge illicit and illegal industry has sprung up to keep the market supplied. Profits of this industry are artificially inflated because of the illegality, and because of the huge profits, corruption and crime run rampant everywhere the drug trade operates. Like prohibition the supporting criminal supply network is far worse than the original problem. Everyone wanted to make drugs illegal to protect their children but the kids are getting drugs anyway along with the societal problems of the drug industry which have become pervasive. The war on drugs is unwinable. The war on crime is unwinable. The war on terrorism is unwinable. Wars, the way we fight them, are unwinable. Let's abandon those efforts. We should also can all laws and the IRS code in favor of the ten commandments. Then we won't need no steeenkin lawyers no more. So big mouth, tell me what's so bad about pot? What justifies keeping it illegal beyond "because it is"? Drugs have made iSnotty the successful man he is today. What do you care, do you have something to add to the conversation or are you just trolling again Mr. Dr. Karen Grear of Catholic University of America? Do you sit there all day long just waiting for someone you hate to post so you can make a one line comment or insult them? Wow, great life you have there... Does Dr. Karen Grear of Catholic University of America, know you have spent the last ten years here insulting and trolling the group as HtheK, HKrause, HarryK, Paul, x-man, sometimes posting as many as 100 one line, insult/troll posts in one 24 hour period? Mr. Dr. Karen Grear of Catholic University of America, you seem a lowlife parasite who spends his days and nights sharing your hate and misery here an all over then net. Anybody who has five minutes to look back at your posts over the last ten years will see that. I feel sorry for you, get out of the house man, step away from the keyboard... Dr. Karen Grear of Catholic University of America Dr. Karen Grear of Catholic University of America Dr. Karen Grear of Catholic University of America Dr. Karen Grear of Catholic University of America Dr. Karen Grear of Catholic University of America |
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