Heroin should be legalized and sold in a similar fashion as alcohol and cannabis.
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 3 votes and with 15 points ahead, the winner is...
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My opponent strawmanned my argument very badly on his post. Which really allows me to side step the majority of his argument. I never said legalization would make all risks of drugs go away. I never said people would stop dying. I said it would lower the chances of people dying, because when drugs are illegal, they become contaminated with other drugs and that causes a dangerous situation to form. That situation is more dangerous than the drugs themselves.
His rant about alcohol doesn’t mean what he thinks it means. Alcohol is much, much more toxic than heroin. It is also much more disinhibiting, which can lead to drunk driving, and other dangerous activities. Heroin is rarely involved in fatal car accidents, it has happened, but not as often as alcohol. Usually because most heroin users (and alcohol users) don’t drive when high, or drunk. They tend to use their drug responsibly in their home. However, alcohol has a way of making the user not care too much about consequences when very intoxicated by the substance. Which is why you see more deaths. It is metabolized into a known carcinogen and neurotoxin called acetaldehyde. Alcohol is also very Un-potent. So the user must ingest an absurd amount of alcohol molecules for the user to feel the effect. That wouldn’t be a problem if every single one of those molecules weren’t metabolized into a neurotoxin. It is also immensely toxic to the liver when abused. Moderate amounts of alcohol are actually beneficial to the user, it prevents type 2 diabetes, it prevents strokes and other heart issues as well. Only once the person begins to abuse it do they run into issues. Also alcohol and other drugs that agonize the GABA(A) receptor are the only drugs in earth that can kill the user from withdrawal alone. So you picking this drug that has some legitimate toxicity concerns, that is already legal, as a way of saying a drug with less toxicity shouldn’t be legalized is odd to me.
However, his alcohol rant is further destroyed when we see the situation that arose during alcohol prohibition. 10s of thousands of people were dying from contaminated alcohol. Others were left blinded and maimed by the drug methanol being left in the final product. Why was this happening? There were no regulations on the quality of the product being sold to people. As well as the US government making bootleggers poison their alcohol.l with methanol. That lack of regulation and evil government action left people, blinded, maimed, and even dead. Once alcohol was legalized the problem of methanol contamination went away. He claimed that legalization will not save many lives by bringing up alcohol. Even though alcohol is literally the prime example of this taking place. Just arguing about something he doesn’t know anything about. Basically made my point for me without knowing. I am aware alcohol still kills people. However it is much less dangerous to purchase and use now, than it was during alcohol prohibition, for the reasons I just listed. The American government also attempted to poison cannabis users with a neurotoxin that causes the permanent onset of Parkinson’s syndrome under president Raegan. Keeping drugs illegal allows this to happen, is this why heroin has such a bad contamination issue now? Who knows.
I will ignore my opponent making axiomatic assumptions like calling drugs poison. No use in engaging with that.
Since he is talking about the government I will bring up my next point. He says remember “We the People” I ask him and the judges to remember that The American constitution has the “pursuit of happiness” clause, and describes it as an inalienable right. This mean that no government or person has the right to take away my pursuit of happiness as long as I am not hurting other people or preventing others from pursuing their happiness. Drug use should be covered by this clause. I have never used heroin, because I don’t trust it to buy of the street. However I have used very similar drugs that are essentially the same thing like oxycodone and hydrocodone. I am a big fan of opioids and have used them on many occasions. They make me a better person, they make me more empathetic, loving, happy, and grateful for my life and the people in it. They also help treat my severe back pain I endure due to three herniated discs. As a matter of fact in just a couple hours i will be taking an opioid called Mitragynine, for the reasons I just listed. That is me pursuing happiness. I should not have to run the risk of going to prison, losing my kids, losing my high paying job, or dying from contamination because I enjoy a drug other than alcohol or cannabis. We the people don’t get to take inalienable rights from the people. That’s not how our constitution is supposed to work. If you want to bank your argument on the constitution at least understand what it says in the context of this argument.
People who argue for drugs to be banned are arguing for the corruption of the pursuit of happiness. They are saying anyone who consumes these drugs must be thrown in a cage and locked away for years at a time in most cases. Unless, of course, the person is using the drugs alcohol or cannabis, then they are free to go. As i have said just because we legalize it, heroin will not be perfectly safe. Just like sky diving isn’t perfectly safe. Yet there are regulations in place and safety procedures and education to make the person engage with that activity as safe as possible.
His point about sex education makes no sense. People have sex, most of the time, not to make a baby, but to enjoy a few minutes with their partner. So it’s an enjoyment thing most of the time for most of the population of our country. It’s not like I’m sitting down with my girlfriend and saying “we must engage in this activity to keep our species alive” no we engage in sex because it is enjoyable. Just like engaging with heroin. It is enjoyable, but both are dangerous, so education needs to be good to help minimize the risks the activity. It has worked for sex, it has the potential to work for drugs.
My opponent also says that heroin would need to be distributed differently than alcohol or cannabis. Even though I pretty clearly outlined how it should be sold. He didn’t explain how he thinks it should be sold or why it should be sold differently so I will let him do that if he pleases. If he doesn’t, it’s a moot point. The reason it should be sold the way I’m claiming is simple. 1: giving people access to clean needles (if they chose to inject it) is good and will prevent the spread of STDs. 2: giving people a place to use heroin with other people around is good because in the unlikely event of an overdose people will notice. 3: everyone who is an adult should have the right to purchase the drug, just as they do with alcohol and cannabis. 4: concentrations of the drug need to be clearly marked so people know how much of the product to take. 5: quality control to prevent dangerous contamination.
He also says drugs have no nourishment (particularly illegal ones) it was him that made that distinction not me. So I must ask, what nourishment are you claiming tobacco has? Also what does nourishment even mean in this context? Because surely you could see how pain relieving, mood boosting, and cough suppressing qualities of heroin can certainly be beneficial.
He also says he needs to see an experiment of some sort to see whether or not this is true. We can take a look a Portugal. While they have not fully legalized drugs, they have decriminalized them, but also rolled out a wide reaching and effective program to provide testing equipment that is cheap and readily available to their population. Something that absolute must be done if the route of decriminalization is taken. If there is no testing equipment and drugs are decriminalized, it will make the problem of death by contamination worse. Portugal made this drug reform in 2001. For the first 5 years they saw an increase in drug use, that slowly began to drop. Today less people use drugs than pre reform. However not only do less people use drugs, far less people die from them. Per 1,000,000 people, only 6 sue in portugal. Compare that to the US, for that same statistic the US has 300 deaths. There is your experiment, and there is your answer. When people have the ability to test their drugs accurately, it saves lives. It also lands less people in jail which mean less lives are ruined by the government.
In the US it is currently illegal in the majority of states to posses a fentanyl test strip. It is considered drug paraphernalia and you can be arrested just for possessing that. This is a very important thing that just be legalized, even if heroin isn’t, because fentanyl is usually what leads people to dying because they are unaware they are taking it. fentanyl isn’t a bad drug, it’s actually a pretty miraculous drug in a lot of ways, but that’s not what we are talking about. When someone doesn’t know they’re taking the drug it can easily lead to their death. So not only is heroin illegal in our country, but people can’t even test their substances for it, in the majority of US states. Do you think that is appropriate?
“You went over a lot of drug information and what they amount to, composition and regulatory procedures. To get down to the meat and potatoes because that's what I do, I get right down to it in that your view is regulate just how you would for other things.”
You didn’t get down into anything besides ignorant takes and strawmans.
“But what you quite didn't bank on is that the death toll and adverse effects are present with current regulations and legal drug usage. Making similar regulations won't help your cause or your position.”
This doesn’t make any sense, alcohol kills people, yes. However, as I clearly pointed out, when it was illegal the harms of alcohol consumption were much higher than now.
Portugal Stats- https://transformdrugs.org/blog/drug-decriminalisation-in-portugal-setting-the-record-straight
Alcohol metabolism- https://www.niaaa.nih.gov/publications/alcohol-metabolism#:~:text=Most%20of%20the%20ethanol%20in,CH3CHO)%2C%20a%20known%20carcinogen.
Alcohol blindlings and death during prohibition- https://www.vox.com/platform/amp/2014/8/8/5975605/alcohol-prohibition-poison
US government attempting to poison cannabis- https://thoughtcatalog.com/jeremy-london/2018/08/paraquat-pot/
Benefits of moderate alcohol consumption- https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/news/features/moderate-alcohol-intake-may-decrease-mens-risk-for-type-2-diabetes/#:~:text=Like%20previous%20studies%20by%20others,protecting%20against%20type%202%20diabetes.
- When heroin is illegal contamination kills more people than the drug itself.
- The just say no campaigns are the reason drug education is so poor. If we fix drug education it can save lives
- The majority of heroin users are no addicts, so prison, drug charges, losing child custody, is more harmful than the drug itself
- Even the responsible heroin users face the same punishments as the abusive addicts, that’s absurd
- The police and government use the drug war to abuse people who possess and use heroin unfairly
- Passing regulations regarding quality control would dramatically decrease the amount of people dead
There really isn't much for me to say here. I've read through his arguments on similar debates before and there isn't much different here. He establishes that legalization improves outcomes for users by showing that the legal market would produce safer drugs, going through the chemical basis for the difference.
By contrast, Con's arguments focus entirely on a comparison to alcohol, which is notably not backed up by any sources. The case he's making has some potential merit: legal alcohol causes a lot of deaths, ergo legal heroin could also cause a lot of deaths. What's missing from this argument are the warrants for these points. It's not enough for Con to argue that legal alcohol causes deaths - if illegal alcohol caused greater numbers of deaths (Pro argues that prohibition had terrible effects resulting from contamination), then arguing that making it legal increased the damage alcohol causes is just wrong on its face. It's not enough to simply state that legal alcohol is dangerous; you have to compare the danger posed by illegal alcohol to that of legal alcohol. Pro is the only one I see doing that, and the case isn't favorable for Con. Similarly, it's not enough to argue that legalizing heroin is automatically going to cause a great deal of deaths simply because legalizing alcohol did. They're different drugs. Con had to establish the harms resulting from heroin, not merely coast on the known harms of alcohol. Finally, if you want to make the argument that the regulations that currently apply to alcohol and cannabis represent a unique harm when applied to heroin (which I believe is Con's point, if I'm reading him correctly), then that point needs to be warranted. What is it about existing regulations for these drugs that would make them more damaging when applied to heroin?
Con's case is a lot of suggestion and assertion, but lacks any meaningful support for his central claim, while Pro's case has a great deal of unaddressed material and support for his claims. As such, arguments and sources to Pro.
Pro makes arguments about the increased safety of allowing heroin, backed by several government studies. Con doesn't combat this directly and mainly talks about the dangers of alcohol, which aren't directly relevant to the resolution. Pro responds to the points Con raised about the constitution and alcohol. At this point, the debate starts getting off track, and I don't think most of the claims Pro made at the start were addressed by Con. Pro brings up arrests and more evidence. It didn't feel like Con had much of a constructive argument against heroin legalization; they seemed more interested in having a philosophical conversation about sex and alcohol. That didn't do them any favors when Pro was clearly well-prepared and used evidence to support their claims.
Sources to Pro since Con didn't provide any.
https://www.debateart.com/debates/4682/comments/55605
Cons assertions getting racist in the final round does not change the core of how much he lost by. Some reason for something to be illegal is needed beyond it merely being illegal; which is self evidently a circular argument, no better than defining something by itself.
Still let every man be persuaded in his own mind by the evidence they can see for themselves.
The minority here on the side of truth. We are few in number but we're in truth.
You believe that even if the belief in your mind is objectively wrong and isn’t supported by evidence? That’s usually the problem with religion in general.
I believe just like the scripture say. Let every man be persuaded in his own mind.
Mall, I didnt miss any of your points man. Ive heard them a thousand times, your points arent as good as you think they are. Most of them aren’t worth engaging with because you have proven to never be able to change your kind even if I replied to all of them and destroyed them with evidence.
So I kept my arguments thematic instead if quoting and responding because those arguments are annoying and hard to read.
Mall, I’m just curious. We’ve had two debates now. Have you learned anything at all about drugs in either of them? If so has it changed the way you view drugs at all?
If you haven’t learned anything, would you like to learn something? Ask some question and I’ll answer them. Another side is that if you haven’t learned anything, are you even trying to learn something and listen?
Not trying to be rude in any way just curious.
Thank you for your RFD.
---RFD---
Headings would help this debate a lot.
tiny.ccy/debateart
I like the focus on just one taboo drug.
Pro opens with strong warrants for the drug being comparatively safe. A lot of comparisons to another drug which is a controlled substance, so scope creep to that one is inevitable; oddly con complains about that, how pro's case could be applied to various other drugs, which pro was up front about his belief there.
Safety:
Pro argues the main side effect is constipation. With regulations side effects from other substances would disappear, etc.
Built into this point is far reaching problems with the current system of illegality, which results in poison being sold as heroin.
Alcohol:
Con argues alcohol is worse than heroin, therefore heroin should be illegal. Non-sequitur, or as pro puts it: "His rant about alcohol doesn’t mean what he thinks it means."
Con insists legalizing alcohol lead to more deaths but does not back it up with any evidence.
Sex:
Con argues that only things necessary for life should be legal, such as sex. Pro counters that sex is done for enjoyment.
Sources:
This goes to pro by a mile. Lots of .gov and .edu sources, to inform us how safe real heroin is; verses con telling us to go google some graphs he saw somewhere.
It’s better to just make the points and see how they can counter them with evidence and data, which he hasn’t done. So I hope my last two arguments aren’t lack luster I just had very little to work with .
> “ I am not going to get into a quote and response battle with Mall again in this debate. It’s generally pointless.”
Appreciated! I really hate sentence by sentence replies, instead of thematic ones.
I apologize for the very long threads I made the character limit 30,000 because 10,000 is never enough and I’m always having to shorten arguments where I don’t want to. Thanks for agreeing to judge this
Let’s get a quick response from you on this one. I’ve got 11 hours of work ahead of me I’d love to do another round tonight. My job is slow and I’ll have plenty of time.
Feel free to debate me on this topic when I’m done with this one.
We can pick pretty much any other drug for that matter. Want to have this discussion abojt Methamphetamine next? Legalize meth to be sold to adults to use?
Comments are for approaches that are way too valid to be invalid but if I accept the debate they will probably declare me an entire loss because I nitpicked.
Debates deserve a solid topic itself. Most topics are too full of holes(therefore too empty ironically). And debate topics are like a spherical bag of water, 1 hole is too many!
That’s way I said “similar fashion” I’ll be able to cover the differences and why they should take ideas from both distribution models.
Good catch, it should be "or"
“as alcohol and cannabis"
That is in of itself impossible. Let's just say, that a large portion of all bars, hotels, restaurants, etc. sell beer and wine but not weed.