ScottaWhite wrote:And its mostly evil America's fault right? Bring on the assault weapons ban Dear Leader.
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ScottaWhite wrote:And its mostly evil America's fault right? Bring on the assault weapons ban Dear Leader.Partially, yes. We are importing the drugs they are killing over. If we'd just start legalizing the @!#$, some of these problems would go away, and we'd be able to go party south of the border again. It would also help cleanse the healthcare system of drug-seekers.
spoiler wrote:Close the border!!Right, because that would stop them
ScottaWhite wrote:If we must leave Iraq, then spend 10 billion per month lining the border with humvees, and, oh......about 10,000 armed troops.I'd prefer putting that towards the national deficit, or reforming some of the more screwy federal systems.
ScottaWhite wrote:And its mostly evil America's fault right? Bring on the assault weapons ban Dear Leader.Since you seem to pride yourself as being a living stereotype of Republicans, lets ask one of Washington's last true Conservatives(and one of the few still deserving of respect) - Ron Paul
bk3k wrote:Thank you Ron Paul -Quote:
Calling his efforts part of "two very popular marijuana films," Baldwin even acknowledged his filmography as a point of credibility to bolster his argument that "marijuana leads to doing worse things."
"That's just a fact," claimed Baldwin. "I don't care what anybody says. What the debate is. If you smoke marijuana at a young age, that'll usually lead to alcohol abuse and harder drugs."
Paul dismissed his concern as "silly."
"The most addictive drug in the country, in the world, is nicotine," he said. "Nobody talks about nicotine being a gateway drug, so there's no sense to that. And besides, [marijuana] is not nearly as addictive as alcohol. If you're a consistent person and you think the government should be regulating personal behavior, you should be in favor of prohibition of alcohol."
Attributing the earlier prohibition for the creation of "the Al Capone's," he drew a clear connection between current prohibition policies in the US and the escalating cartel war in Mexico.
"You know the people who benefit most by these laws?" he asked. "These are the drug cartels. They lobby to keep these laws in place because they can't exist without them."