B
BobObob
Guest
Part 4/4
Just like alcohol, keeping dangerous drugs like cocaine, crystal meth, and heroin illegal has had the immoral effects of making criminals rich by artificially raising the value of these on the black market, majorly hurt people economically by costing hundreds of billions of tax dollars, further hurt the economy by keeping millions of non-violent potential contributors to the economy in unnecessarily jail, and dangerously increasing governmental power.
I use prohibition as an example because it’s well known and has some very well known effects which are very immoral.
BTW, do you consider matters of an regions’s public security force to be in themselves (as opposed to relevant to) matters of faith, morals, or both?
What about the “war on drugs”, which is much like alcohol prohibition, but it has banned many drugs which are intrinsically wrong (since for some of these drugs any use is abuse)? Sure, using marijuana in moderation without smoking it is morally neutral just like alcohol, but some drugs that are illegal aren’t really possible to use without abuse.BobObob;7020668:
You’ve sought to get a lot of mileage out of this example, but the big problem with Prohibition is precisely that it banned something that is morally neutral, alcohol, rather than getting tough on the resultant problem, drunkenness. But pornographic materials, for example, are evil in themselves–there is no licit use for them.Using governmental power to stop what is objectively evil, specifically drunkenness, by prohibiting alcohol last century, which was a disaster.
Just like alcohol, keeping dangerous drugs like cocaine, crystal meth, and heroin illegal has had the immoral effects of making criminals rich by artificially raising the value of these on the black market, majorly hurt people economically by costing hundreds of billions of tax dollars, further hurt the economy by keeping millions of non-violent potential contributors to the economy in unnecessarily jail, and dangerously increasing governmental power.
I use prohibition as an example because it’s well known and has some very well known effects which are very immoral.
BTW, do you consider matters of an regions’s public security force to be in themselves (as opposed to relevant to) matters of faith, morals, or both?