Yep. Malpractice insurance is like $100,000. Ketamine is probably more expensive when it's used for humans than for animals. Why? Animals can't sue for malpractice.Turquoise wrote:
lawsuits
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Yep. Malpractice insurance is like $100,000. Ketamine is probably more expensive when it's used for humans than for animals. Why? Animals can't sue for malpractice.Turquoise wrote:
lawsuits
They also don't give just Ketamine by itself to humans (well, not any more, sadly )Hurricane2k9 wrote:
Yep. Malpractice insurance is like $100,000. Ketamine is probably more expensive when it's used for humans than for animals. Why? Animals can't sue for malpractice.Turquoise wrote:
lawsuits
In the UK, the tax on Alcohol and Tobacco generates more than enough revenue to cover what they cost the NHS.Dilbert_X wrote:
I thought you guys spent 20% of GDP on healthcare already, about 4 times higher than most other developed nations.
Letting people eat, drink and smoke their way to cancer, heart disease, obesity and diabetes doesn't seem a brilliant outcome for 'letting people make their own mistakes'.
Its too costly, nations can't afford to let their citizens do whatever feels good.
Last edited by Scorpion0x17 (2009-02-04 15:01:50)
In principle, I agree fully and completely with you. This is just one of these things in which I see the immense potential for harm grossly outweighing the leisurely benefits of the people who can control it. Realistically, no government can please everyone, and you sometimes need to take the sweet with the sour. It sucks, but we're in a world where not everyone can live up to the ideals that we seek to enforce.Turquoise wrote:
It's situational. There is no blanket rule for these things. However, the precedent of letting people make their own mistakes is usually better than one where the government makes decisions for you.mikkel wrote:
Even if it has consequences affecting other people?uevjHEYFFQ wrote:
Let the people decide what is best for them. Some will destroy their lives some won't. No person has any right to tell any other person what they can or cannot put into their own body.
OK.mikkel wrote:
In principle, I agree fully and completely with you. This is just one of these things in which I see the immense potential for harm grossly outweighing the leisurely benefits of the people who can control it. Realistically, no government can please everyone, and you sometimes need to take the sweet with the sour. It sucks, but we're in a world where not everyone can live up to the ideals that we seek to enforce.Turquoise wrote:
It's situational. There is no blanket rule for these things. However, the precedent of letting people make their own mistakes is usually better than one where the government makes decisions for you.mikkel wrote:
Even if it has consequences affecting other people?
It's sorta like making seatbelts mandatory to wear. You may never crash your car, but other people invariably will.
While we have differing beliefs on this, and while I know that you're never going to change your mind on it no matter how much evidence people will find you, as you'll always have opposing views to cite, I have witnessed many people who simply could not control their marijuana addictions, and threw their lives away as a consequence. Empirical evidence aside, the argument I have is more against the abolition of legislation against "what you can put into your body", as this extends far into some very bad places. As you can see from my posts, I have absolutely nothing against people smoking marijuana, providing that they can control the habit. The problem to me is that many people I have met simply can't.Scorpion0x17 wrote:
OK.mikkel wrote:
In principle, I agree fully and completely with you. This is just one of these things in which I see the immense potential for harm grossly outweighing the leisurely benefits of the people who can control it. Realistically, no government can please everyone, and you sometimes need to take the sweet with the sour. It sucks, but we're in a world where not everyone can live up to the ideals that we seek to enforce.Turquoise wrote:
It's situational. There is no blanket rule for these things. However, the precedent of letting people make their own mistakes is usually better than one where the government makes decisions for you.
It's sorta like making seatbelts mandatory to wear. You may never crash your car, but other people invariably will.
But, where is the evidence that marijuana users, comparatively, cause all that much harm?
Quick question, sorry if I missed it earlier in the thread kinda just jumped in. But have you ever smoked marijuana?mikkel wrote:
While we have differing beliefs on this, and while I know that you're never going to change your mind on it no matter how much evidence people will find you, as you'll always have opposing views to cite, I have witnessed many people who simply could not control their marijuana addictions, and threw their lives away as a consequence. Empirical evidence aside, the argument I have is more against the abolition of legislation against "what you can put into your body", as this extends far into some very bad places. As you can see from my posts, I have absolutely nothing against people smoking marijuana, providing that they can control the habit. The problem to me is that many people I have met simply can't.Scorpion0x17 wrote:
OK.mikkel wrote:
In principle, I agree fully and completely with you. This is just one of these things in which I see the immense potential for harm grossly outweighing the leisurely benefits of the people who can control it. Realistically, no government can please everyone, and you sometimes need to take the sweet with the sour. It sucks, but we're in a world where not everyone can live up to the ideals that we seek to enforce.
It's sorta like making seatbelts mandatory to wear. You may never crash your car, but other people invariably will.
But, where is the evidence that marijuana users, comparatively, cause all that much harm?
There are slippery slopes in both directions.
But Americans are generally a good deal sicker than a lot of other countries, can't be helping, and doesn't make much sense to give them a whole new way of 'letting people make their own mistakes'.Turquoise wrote:
The high cost of healthcare in America has less to do with our lifestyles and more to do with privatization and lawsuits.
Insert argument about how must people overact to a cold.Dilbert_X wrote:
But Americans are generally a good deal sicker than a lot of other countries, can't be helping, and doesn't make much sense to give them a whole new way of 'letting people make their own mistakes'.Turquoise wrote:
The high cost of healthcare in America has less to do with our lifestyles and more to do with privatization and lawsuits.
That statement is bandied around a lot, I find it hard to believe.In the UK, the tax on Alcohol and Tobacco generates more than enough revenue to cover what they cost the NHS.
Seatbelts also don't generate a massive illegal market for criminals.mikkel wrote:
In principle, I agree fully and completely with you. This is just one of these things in which I see the immense potential for harm grossly outweighing the leisurely benefits of the people who can control it. Realistically, no government can please everyone, and you sometimes need to take the sweet with the sour. It sucks, but we're in a world where not everyone can live up to the ideals that we seek to enforce.Turquoise wrote:
It's situational. There is no blanket rule for these things. However, the precedent of letting people make their own mistakes is usually better than one where the government makes decisions for you.mikkel wrote:
Even if it has consequences affecting other people?
It's sorta like making seatbelts mandatory to wear. You may never crash your car, but other people invariably will.
But with alcohol being legal and causing far more of that kind of trouble, it doesn't make sense to prosecute pot but not alcohol. And we already saw what an alcohol ban did to this country.mikkel wrote:
While we have differing beliefs on this, and while I know that you're never going to change your mind on it no matter how much evidence people will find you, as you'll always have opposing views to cite, I have witnessed many people who simply could not control their marijuana addictions, and threw their lives away as a consequence. Empirical evidence aside, the argument I have is more against the abolition of legislation against "what you can put into your body", as this extends far into some very bad places. As you can see from my posts, I have absolutely nothing against people smoking marijuana, providing that they can control the habit. The problem to me is that many people I have met simply can't.Scorpion0x17 wrote:
OK.mikkel wrote:
In principle, I agree fully and completely with you. This is just one of these things in which I see the immense potential for harm grossly outweighing the leisurely benefits of the people who can control it. Realistically, no government can please everyone, and you sometimes need to take the sweet with the sour. It sucks, but we're in a world where not everyone can live up to the ideals that we seek to enforce.
It's sorta like making seatbelts mandatory to wear. You may never crash your car, but other people invariably will.
But, where is the evidence that marijuana users, comparatively, cause all that much harm?
There are slippery slopes in both directions.
I totally fucking agree.uevjHEYFFQ wrote:
Insert argument about how must people overact to a cold.Dilbert_X wrote:
But Americans are generally a good deal sicker than a lot of other countries, can't be helping, and doesn't make much sense to give them a whole new way of 'letting people make their own mistakes'.Turquoise wrote:
The high cost of healthcare in America has less to do with our lifestyles and more to do with privatization and lawsuits.
Completely serious; I would rather watch all of society collapse at once then live under a government that regulates what should be going in my body.
Not legalizing it has consequences on other people.. Wasted police man hours, tax payer money.mikkel wrote:
Even if it has consequences affecting other people?uevjHEYFFQ wrote:
Let the people decide what is best for them. Some will destroy their lives some won't. No person has any right to tell any other person what they can or cannot put into their own body.mikkel wrote:
Oh, I am. Completely. I just have a difficult time coming to terms with the potential of unleashing something upon a society that might not be able to handle it. It's not at all a doubt about my belief in the ideals associated with broad personal freedoms, but a doubt over how the vulnerable elements of society will handle it. A case of ideals conflicting with reality, and determining which should prevail.
FDA is a waste of taxpayer money. Let the market decide.Kmarion wrote:
Not legalizing it has consequences on other people.. Wasted police man hours, tax payer money.mikkel wrote:
Even if it has consequences affecting other people?uevjHEYFFQ wrote:
Let the people decide what is best for them. Some will destroy their lives some won't. No person has any right to tell any other person what they can or cannot put into their own body.
In principle, the FDA makes sense.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
FDA is a waste of taxpayer money. Let the market decide.Kmarion wrote:
Not legalizing it has consequences on other people.. Wasted police man hours, tax payer money.mikkel wrote:
Even if it has consequences affecting other people?
Last edited by Turquoise (2009-02-04 19:24:37)
Dilbert_X wrote:
That statement is bandied around a lot, I find it hard to believe.In the UK, the tax on Alcohol and Tobacco generates more than enough revenue to cover what they cost the NHS.
Slightly out-of-date figures, but first reliable looking link I could find.Medical News Today wrote:
[url=http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/4812.php]ECONOMICS
The Government earned £9.6bn in tax revenue on tobacco in 2000. The cost to the NHS of smoking-related disease was £1.5bn and the amount spent on helping smokers to quit was £138m[/url]
If pragmatism is the concern, I would advise researching the costs of law enforcement involving pot and also the amount of money that criminals make from pot.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
In seriousness this issue is not important enough either way for it to be on the agenda. It will neither fix economic problems inherent to the system nor is it worth wasting time arguing against lifting the ban.
If it's not in the vicinity of 800 billion, there are more pressing matters.Turquoise wrote:
If pragmatism is the concern, I would advise researching the costs of law enforcement involving pot and also the amount of money that criminals make from pot.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
In seriousness this issue is not important enough either way for it to be on the agenda. It will neither fix economic problems inherent to the system nor is it worth wasting time arguing against lifting the ban.
The general idea is that banning something that is easy to produce and has a high demand is usually not worth banning.
heh heh... well, I don't only come here to debate how insane these bailouts are...Flaming_Maniac wrote:
If it's not in the vicinity of 800 billion, there are more pressing matters.Turquoise wrote:
If pragmatism is the concern, I would advise researching the costs of law enforcement involving pot and also the amount of money that criminals make from pot.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
In seriousness this issue is not important enough either way for it to be on the agenda. It will neither fix economic problems inherent to the system nor is it worth wasting time arguing against lifting the ban.
The general idea is that banning something that is easy to produce and has a high demand is usually not worth banning.
Creating criminality is srs biz. The harsher the punishment (for really stupid shit to begin with) the more desperate the criminal. I saw a trend that showed that each time the punishment was raised the more shadier the dealers became. In other words, instead of just having a middle man distributor they were getting all types of real nasty (violent) types. I believe it related to the cost going up.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
If it's not in the vicinity of 800 billion, there are more pressing matters.Turquoise wrote:
If pragmatism is the concern, I would advise researching the costs of law enforcement involving pot and also the amount of money that criminals make from pot.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
In seriousness this issue is not important enough either way for it to be on the agenda. It will neither fix economic problems inherent to the system nor is it worth wasting time arguing against lifting the ban.
The general idea is that banning something that is easy to produce and has a high demand is usually not worth banning.
Sure. The "entrepreneurial" skills of the suppliers are in greater demand when risk is high. You turn to the pros with your investments.Kmarion wrote:
Creating criminality is srs biz. The harsher the punishment (for really stupid shit to begin with) the more desperate the criminal. I saw a trend that showed that each time the punishment was raised the more shadier the dealers became. In other words, instead of just having a middle man distributor they were getting all types of real nasty (violent) types. I believe it related to the cost going up.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
If it's not in the vicinity of 800 billion, there are more pressing matters.Turquoise wrote:
If pragmatism is the concern, I would advise researching the costs of law enforcement involving pot and also the amount of money that criminals make from pot.
The general idea is that banning something that is easy to produce and has a high demand is usually not worth banning.
I forget, it was a long time ago. I hope that made sense..lol.
Pretty much... speaking of harsher penalties, a lot of the reason why murderers and rapists get shorter sentences now is because of mandatory drug sentencing. This extends beyond the topic of pot, but the idea is the same as you mentioned.Kmarion wrote:
Creating criminality is srs biz. The harsher the punishment (for really stupid shit to begin with) the more desperate the criminal. I saw a trend that showed that each time the punishment was raised the more shadier the dealers became. In other words, instead of just having a middle man distributor they were getting all types of real nasty (violent) types. I believe it related to the cost going up.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
If it's not in the vicinity of 800 billion, there are more pressing matters.Turquoise wrote:
If pragmatism is the concern, I would advise researching the costs of law enforcement involving pot and also the amount of money that criminals make from pot.
The general idea is that banning something that is easy to produce and has a high demand is usually not worth banning.
I forget, it was a long time ago. I hope that made sense..lol.
Last edited by Turquoise (2009-02-04 20:34:11)