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Outstanding Video on drug use
"Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 2/7/2014 10:48 PM, Califbill wrote: KC wrote: On 2/7/2014 2:49 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/7/2014 12:39 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Fri, 07 Feb 2014 11:19:50 -0600, Califbill wrote: Poco Loco wrote: On Fri, 07 Feb 2014 10:59:47 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 2/7/14, 10:50 AM, Tim wrote: On Friday, February 7, 2014 9:46:00 AM UTC-6, F.O.A.D. wrote: Yeah, what we have created in this country is a growth industry for the privatization of penal institutions. The corporations pressure the legislators to pass more laws and stiffer sentences so more people can be imprisoned for longer periods of time and so the private slams will be guaranteed more income. It's a wonderful system and requires a lot less brainpower than something that might actually work. What would you do to handle the drug problem? I don't claim to have *the* solution, but I do know that creating a growth industry in prisons for the private sector ain't it. I think decriminalizing simple possession for personal use would be a good starting point, though. I suppose that's for all the drugs up through heroin? I suppose you disagree with the idea of marijuana being a stepping stone to the 'better' stuff. So where would you draw the line? Heroin is actually not a really bad 'hard' drug. Lots of heroin addicts were functioning members of society. Lots turned to crime because of the costs to procure, but heroin may kill you in the end because of paranoia. Ray Charles was a heroin addict for years. Lots of other examples. There are drugs too nasty to legalize, but the country will not come to an end with most drugs available. Alcohol probably causes more deaths than hard drugs. Including the drug wars for sales territory. You have a friend, I think it was you, who is hooked on OxyContin. Is he still a functioning member of society? What the hell is accomplished by sending someone to prison for use? Puts their family in the welfare system, costs to incarcerate, and ruins any prospect for a decent job later. If they commit a crime to pay for the drugs, then jail them. But if costs are low enough, they will work and pay for the drug, just like alcohol. This was supposed to be a free country. We are being controlled more, and observed more than a lot of western countries these days. And it is both major parties responsible, not just one side or the other. I'm no expert on drugs, and don't have an oxycontin hooked friend, that I know of. I suppose the cost of incarceration are more than the costs for emergency OD care, so stopping the incarceration may be a good idea. It's obviously not much of a deterrent. I have a good friend who's daughter got hooked on oxycontin and then went to heroin because it's cheaper. I have a niece who has followed the same path. Both started as teenagers in high school. Both have been through rehab, one twice, the other three times. Both have stolen money, jewelry and other items from their parents, grandparents, other relatives and former friends to fund their addictions. Failed marriages, abortions, and heartbreak for the parents. My 61 year old sister-in-law (mother of the niece) is now in therapy and is taking anti-anxiety pills because she's coming apart emotionally due to her daughter's lifestyle. Anyone who tells me heroin is "not a really bad hard drug" has a lot of convincing to do to me. We are on the same page with that.... It is a bad drug, but an addict can still function. You already admit they can not kick the habit, so let them get a drug that will let them function, until they die. Sounds cruel, but why is it the rest of society's job to take care of them? We have spent trillions on the war on drugs. We lost the war. Let the wounded die. I'll go suggest that to my sister-in-law. I am sure it will bring her some solace and peace of mind. Do you have any kids? I have 2 daughters and 3 grandaughters. I would help them try to overcome addiction. Just as you would your kids. But is it society's place to rescue someone from bad lifestyle choice? |
Outstanding Video on drug use
On Saturday, 8 February 2014 14:53:02 UTC-4, John H. wrote:
On Sat, 08 Feb 2014 13:49:50 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 2/8/14, 1:10 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/8/2014 10:57 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 2/8/14, 10:52 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Sat, 08 Feb 2014 10:43:47 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 2/8/14, 10:23 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Sat, 08 Feb 2014 09:22:22 -0500, Wayne.B wrote: On Sat, 08 Feb 2014 08:02:34 -0500, Poco Loco wrote: We must be coming at it from different angles. I saw the abstinence being taught as the only 'foolproof' method of preventing pregnancies and STD's, which it is. === To me that's like saying that the only foolproof way of avoiding automobile accidents is to not get in a car. I agree. But if a kid thinks that rubbers, pills, IUDs, etc are the 'safe surefire way' to prevent STDs and/or pregnancies, then this might be a worthwhile bit of information. Condoms are an effective way to prevent the transmission of venereal diseases. The other methods you listed are not. Basing sex education classes on the "wonderfulness" of abstinence tells the students you are not taking the teaching of sex education seriously. Teaching students that they need to use a condom every time to prevent the transmission of disease and to prevent pregnancy while engaging in sex *is* taking the teaching of sex education seriously. No, the condoms are not 100% effective, but if used properly, they are damned close to it. Teenagers are going to engage in sexual activity. There's no question about that. The "science" on that is settled. What responsible adults need to do is make sure that the teens know to use a condom. Back when I was 16, one of my after school jobs was working at a small pharmacy in a pretty rough neighborhood. I was the combination soda jerk, delivery boy, and salesman of booze and condoms. The latter two activities were illegal for a kid my age, of course, but the pharmacist/owner said no one from the alcohol board had ever been in his store. Condoms were a grey area back then in Connecticut. They were kept behind the counter and when someone came in to buy some, I had to go fetch them. Some of the buyers were high school kids. That made the pharmacist smile because, he said, there would be fewer teen pregnancies in the neighborhood if the boys were "wearing a raincoat." I understand that many Americans have sexual hangups. I managed to grow up without them. Where did anyone say anything about *basing* sex education on 'abstinence', Harry? When you were 16, as now, you were perfect. Hardy, but no one taught or told me that "sex is dirty." Where and who in this discussion every said or suggested that "sex is dirty"? Freudian slip? I get the impression that John is somewhat repressive on the subject. I'll confess, I've not done the job, as well as some here, of describing my sexual prowess! (But, in Vietnam my First Sergeant made sure there was a box of condoms on his desk free for the taking- up to three a day.) Was their use restricted to the officer's showers? |
Outstanding Video on drug use
On Saturday, February 8, 2014 12:53:02 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
I'll confess, I've not done the job, as well as some here, of describing my sexual prowess! (But, in Vietnam my First Sergeant made sure there was a box of condoms on his desk free for the taking- up to three a day.) Those were great for stretching over an m-16 barrel to keep out water and dirt! |
Outstanding Video on drug use
On 2/8/14, 2:38 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sat, 08 Feb 2014 14:02:49 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 2/8/14, 1:29 PM, Poco Loco wrote: On Sat, 08 Feb 2014 13:10:12 -0500, Wayne.B wrote: On Sat, 08 Feb 2014 11:53:10 -0500, Poco Loco wrote: === I think most kids are well aware already. Preaching abstinence is mostly to make the parents feel good. The kids are under tremendous biological and social pressure and already know waaay more than we think they should. I would think some 4th or 5th graders might not be as 'well aware' as you suppose. === Perhaps but I think you'd be surprised. A lot of these kids ride the school bus and/or have older friends/cousins/brothers/sisters, etc. I still maintain that teaching "abstinence" is mostly a feel good thing for adults. Here they ride elementary school buses until middle school, then middle school buses, and then high school buses, for those few who don't have cars. In I think the "better times" when I was in public school, I walked three long blocks to elementary school, then four blocks to junior high. We had sidewalks! :) For high school, most of us took the buses, because the public high school that served our part of the city was about five miles away. But they weren't school buses...the board of education contracted with the local transit company, which provided regular "city buses." We'd buy a month's worth of bus tickets, which cost 7-/2 cents to ride each way, and the drivers were instructed to allow any kid on the bus, whether or not he or she had a bus ticket. There were "late buses" too, for kids involved in afterschool activities. Pretty decent school lunches in junior high for about a quarter. At high school, they were 35 cents but the quality went way way down. Never could figure out why. In our group, we had one guy walk off the high school campus every couple of days to pick up a bunch of Italian subs from a market about a block away. It was "strictly forbidden" to do that, but...the assistant principal, a Mr. Kennedy, who was responsible for school discipline, would often be at the grocery to buy his lunch. We'd all pretend we didn't see each other. Mr. Kennedy didn't like the cafeteria food very much, either. Oh, sex. In high school, everyone I knew practiced "safe" sex, and, as far as I know, there were no pregnancies among our graduating class. It's good to know that no one you knew practiced abstinence and were 100% lucky. Well, there might have been a few, male or female, who couldn't find a partner, but they didn't talk about that. Seriously, a lot of seniors in my graduating class became sexually active in the 9th and 10 grade. The ones I knew weren't dumb enough, male or female, to risk pregnancy. -- There’s no point crying over spilled 4-Methylcyclohexanemethanol. |
Outstanding Video on drug use
On Sat, 8 Feb 2014 11:52:26 -0800 (PST), True North wrote:
On Saturday, 8 February 2014 14:53:02 UTC-4, John H. wrote: On Sat, 08 Feb 2014 13:49:50 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 2/8/14, 1:10 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/8/2014 10:57 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 2/8/14, 10:52 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Sat, 08 Feb 2014 10:43:47 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 2/8/14, 10:23 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Sat, 08 Feb 2014 09:22:22 -0500, Wayne.B wrote: On Sat, 08 Feb 2014 08:02:34 -0500, Poco Loco wrote: We must be coming at it from different angles. I saw the abstinence being taught as the only 'foolproof' method of preventing pregnancies and STD's, which it is. === To me that's like saying that the only foolproof way of avoiding automobile accidents is to not get in a car. I agree. But if a kid thinks that rubbers, pills, IUDs, etc are the 'safe surefire way' to prevent STDs and/or pregnancies, then this might be a worthwhile bit of information. Condoms are an effective way to prevent the transmission of venereal diseases. The other methods you listed are not. Basing sex education classes on the "wonderfulness" of abstinence tells the students you are not taking the teaching of sex education seriously. Teaching students that they need to use a condom every time to prevent the transmission of disease and to prevent pregnancy while engaging in sex *is* taking the teaching of sex education seriously. No, the condoms are not 100% effective, but if used properly, they are damned close to it. Teenagers are going to engage in sexual activity. There's no question about that. The "science" on that is settled. What responsible adults need to do is make sure that the teens know to use a condom. Back when I was 16, one of my after school jobs was working at a small pharmacy in a pretty rough neighborhood. I was the combination soda jerk, delivery boy, and salesman of booze and condoms. The latter two activities were illegal for a kid my age, of course, but the pharmacist/owner said no one from the alcohol board had ever been in his store. Condoms were a grey area back then in Connecticut. They were kept behind the counter and when someone came in to buy some, I had to go fetch them. Some of the buyers were high school kids. That made the pharmacist smile because, he said, there would be fewer teen pregnancies in the neighborhood if the boys were "wearing a raincoat." I understand that many Americans have sexual hangups. I managed to grow up without them. Where did anyone say anything about *basing* sex education on 'abstinence', Harry? When you were 16, as now, you were perfect. Hardy, but no one taught or told me that "sex is dirty." Where and who in this discussion every said or suggested that "sex is dirty"? Freudian slip? I get the impression that John is somewhat repressive on the subject. I'll confess, I've not done the job, as well as some here, of describing my sexual prowess! (But, in Vietnam my First Sergeant made sure there was a box of condoms on his desk free for the taking- up to three a day.) Was ***their*** use restricted to the ***officer's*** showers? No Don, the officers didn't have their own showers, and there was no restriction on their use. (And, if you're going to make a smart-assed post, at least spell and punctuate properly. What initiated your smart-assed post, Don? Did I say something to you which you found bothersome?) |
Outstanding Video on drug use
There was nothing wrong with my post, Johnny.
I was just asking a simple question that you seem to be very uncomfortable with. |
Outstanding Video on drug use
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Outstanding Video on drug use
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Outstanding Video on drug use
On 2/8/2014 2:48 PM, Califbill wrote:
"Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 2/8/2014 10:27 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 2/8/14, 7:47 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Fri, 07 Feb 2014 19:56:36 -0500, KC wrote: On 2/7/2014 3:41 PM, wrote: On Fri, 07 Feb 2014 14:28:19 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: That's not the problem. The problem is with much more dangerous and addictive opiates. The most pervasive opiates these days come from doctors and drug companies They say you can get addicted by doing one oxy... I have seen it, it's a fact... That could be, if the person gets a little buzz, likes it, and keeps taking it. I've had both the oxy's contin and codone recently. If actually taken for the pain, there isn't a 'high' that goes along with it, just a reduction in pain. I think if a person is feeling a 'high', then either they don't need the pain killer, or they're taking more than necessary. It appears as if you are trying to extrapolate universal truths from your limited, individual experiences with painkillers. Perhaps *you* didn't feel a "high," or perhaps your "high" was masked by pain, or perhaps not. But for you to state that if a person is feeling a "high" from taking a pain killer, then they don't need the painkiller or that they are taking more than necessary, has little if any basis in science. I took one oxycontin pill following oral surgery. The next morning I flushed the rest of them down the toilet. I was in some degree of pain but I sure didn't like the spaced out feeling that one little pill gave me. I am not exactly a small person either. Do not flush drugs down the toilet! Take to the police station or other drug drop off points. Contaminates the water supply. How much of this girls having periods at 9 years old, or even the ADD from the estrogens and other crap in the water. Never thought of that. But I really wonder how much 9 pills flushed into a 2500 gallon holding tank and then eventually leached into a leaching field can contaminate the water supply. If it does, the whole concept of a septic system is questionable to start with. |
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