Originally Posted by
Redundant
People don't need to acknowledge anything.
A murderer does not need to acknowledge his actions as bad. Society does it for him.
We have a free will and we can choose to conform with some moral code or another, or none at all.
Your first 3 sentences support the legitimacy of laws punishing people who don't agree with them, but your last sentence says fuck all to moral codes, you have free will. You're playing both ends against the center until you pick an actual side.
Originally Posted by
Redundant
Trying to limit that freedom with preventive laws does not work very well, in my opinion.
Society already prohibits actions that harm other people, and rightly so because else society wouldn't exist. I see no point in prohibiting methods that could cause others harm, when those methods clearly have other primary functions other than hurting other people.
Driving drunk only has a chance to harm somebody, and the primary function is to travel to from point A to point B. According to your logic, drunk driving should be legal.
Originally Posted by
Redundant
People are able to argue that they were drunk when they did bad things because it is the truth. Why would you not want people to use the truth in a court?
Surely that does not mean that being drunk is an excuse to do bad things. It just means that their rationality was unable to function properly in that situation.
If being drunk cannot be used to evaluate how bad a crime is, then what can? Anger? Ice cold development of a strategy to harm someone? Not only the result of an action matters in a courtroom. How those actions came to be matters as well. It is a great difference if someone kills his wife during a fight or plans the murder for several weeks and executes it with a calm mind. Intoxication is also a factor that needs to be taken into consideration unless you think that being willfully ignorant is a good thing.
The truth or state of intoxication doesn't mean anything in this argument. Whether somebody says something truthful or not or is sober or not is irrelevant.
In fact, this entire paragraph was entirely off topic as to whether prohibition laws work or not.
Originally Posted by
Redundant
We could declare that the act of advertising drugs is immoral and proceed to ban pro drug ads. I see no problem with that, seeing as ads tend to be very manipulative and that drugs are viewed upon as negative thing in general. That does not limit a person's personal freedom to choose to do those drugs, nor does it heavily affect the economy. That would be a healthy way of going about this situation.
Again using your logic, the person advertising has the right to advertise drugs because it only has a chance to harm somebody, and the primary function is to increase the sales of a product, not to harm the person.
Do you see yet why that logic is flawed? It doesn't matter what primary intent is, the ability to do something doesn't matter, what matters is what is the outcome, and what is the morality of the actions leading to the outcome.
In fact, the reasoning you give specifically in this paragraph is at best convoluted, let alone logically sound. You claim advertising is bad because it's manipulative. You claim that drugs are viewed negatively. You claim that banning advertisements of drugs do not inhibit personal liberty and do not harm the economy. Then you conclude that banning drug advertisements would be morally right. One, your premises support your conclusion poorly at best, not at all at worst. The only premise you give that supports your conclusion would also support banning advertisements in general. Which would then invalidate one of your other premises, as it would destroy an entire section of the economy. And the claim that drugs are perceived negatively doesn't even have any relevance to the conclusion.
Seriously, it's a pain to argue with you because most of your arguments do not even follow the basic structure of an argument. Every claim should support your conclusion, every claim should be supported by facts. You frequently substitute anecdotes and opinions for facts, and you frequently make claims that are irrelevant to your conclusion. And in this case it leads to an argument that's not even relevant, as you just argued on the morality of advertising rather than the morality of drug laws.
Originally Posted by
Redundant
Compared to actual problems we have with drugs, that seems to be a rather minor one.
There are drug related problems that are far greater. Look at South America, for instance. Drug lords vs police.
Drugs are already banned there. The drugs that got prohibited gave those druglords the ability to gain insane amount of moneys by circumventing the laws. Those people have no interest in a change of those laws.
I dare to suggest that prohibiting things that are high in demand is the root of a lot of criminal acts all around the world. Gotta ask yourself what's worse: Legalized junkies or war on the streets. People who want to do illegal drugs can do illegal drugs already. They don't care about them being illegal. It's just insanely unsafe and many people suffer due to that.
Why not provide an environment where those people can do drugs safely in a way that does not endanger people as it does today?
Legalizing it does not mean condoning it, and you still can take measures to prevent people from taking those drugs, as long as those do not interfere with the freedom to choose.
Before they were drug lords, they were human traffickers, thugs, assassins, weapons dealers, robbers. Should we just legalize slavery, assault, murder, all firearms, robbery and drugs to take away how they sustain their criminal empires? Certainly not.
An assassin doesn't care that murder is illegal, he will do it anyways. Does that detract from the effectiveness and validity of making murder illegal? Certainly not.
And let's point out the hilarity of that last sentence.
Originally Posted by
Redundant
Legalizing it does not mean condoning it, and you still can take measures to prevent people from taking those drugs, as long as those do not interfere with the freedom to choose.
Using specifically the logic from this sentence (actually, from most of your paragraphs lauding the "freedom to choose"), the presence of laws is irrelevant because it does not interfere with your freedom to choose. Laws do not do anything to interfere with your ability to choose anything, they impose consequences on performing certain actions. You are still free to choose to break the law. You will just be punished for it. Taking this to the extreme, using this logic we could justify imposing laws on every possible action because they do not interfere with your ability to choose anything. They influence your decision making, but so does everything else in your life. Arguing that influencing anything is morally wrong is a tall order, but if you could adequately support it then using your perspective to argue laws are morally wrong would be acceptable. It would also advocate obliterating everything in existence, but that's a hurdle you can tackle should you reach it.
Originally Posted by
Redundant
We could also get a take on firearms as well, I guess, since this thread seems to be about everything now.
Banning firearms in a country where the general populace believes that the possession of guns is immoral is correct. If it is the consensus and generally agreed upon there is no problem with that.
The problem occurs once you try to ban firearms in a country where guns are an important part of the culture, and people own firearms traditionally as well as for safety reasons.
In those countries banning firearms would be immoral because people have a high demand for them, and taking away their rights to secure their own safety is not a very clever way to deal with a criminal environment. When a person feels the need to protect himself you should examine his situation closely and then form an opinion if his environment is, in fact, dangerous. Declaring right away that those firearms should be taken off the streets no matter what is a very ignorant way of dealing with the situation.
When there is a high demand for firearms there will be firearms, even if there is a ban. The only thing you are going to accomplish is that many more people will become criminal, some people will make a lot of money with being criminal, and in the end you caused more problems than you solved.
Of course that does not mean that firearms should go totally unchecked. There are certain ones that are more dangerous to your own safety than others. A grenade, for instance, has very little value in a street fight. You cannot defend yourself with it. It can only be used offensively. Therefore the access to grenades should be restricted, and I believe that most people all over the world would agree that the access to grenades should be restricted. The primary function of a grenade is causing a lot of destruction, which is a bad thing. So a ban would make sense here.
The primary function of a handgun, however, is not destruction. It's security. So saying that owning a handgun in general is a bad thing would be wrong.
And this is entirely off topic, make a new firearms thread if you want to open this Pandora's box again. I still get a laugh from people claiming that guns weren't designed to kill, so it will probably kill a few minutes of my boredom if you made one.
tl;dr: You spent a very long time stating an opinion on various on-or-off-topic subjects with either no arguments or bad arguments to support it.
tl;dr's tl;dr: Your arguments are bad.
Redundant Moderated Message: |
This is a post I enjoy and can get behind. I wish there were more people putting effort into discussion like Oracle. |
Last edited by Redundant; Mar 27, 2014 at 09:14 PM.