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Drug sentencing is way way out of hand. Minimum mandatory sentencing laws are complete horse crap. This particular case is just total shit!
1 - We should legalize marijuana
2 - Drug sentencing for drugs still deemed by society too dangerous to be legalized should not be years it should be days/months. If not completely decriminalized or just a fine for just usage.
3 - Start treating drug addiction as a healthcare issue not a criminal issue.
Drug sentencing has destroyed lives. It has destroyed families. I think our inner cities would be in much much better shape if not for decades of the war on drugs breaking up and destroying families and ruining lives.
That and addressing teenage pregnancies which is another issue.
Meh. He shouldn't get life, but I'm not going to give two shits about a drug dealer on this third offense. Personally, there are injustices in this world for good people (especially children) that are far more deserving for our sympathy/empathy/call-to-action than a convicted drug dealer. Call me callous, call me insensitive, call me maybe, but that's how I feel personally.
Hard core drug use has destroyed many more lives and many more families than drug sentencing. I worked in the inner city for almost 20 years, and while the war on drugs was a political joke, the drug users and the actions of the drug users and drug dealers destroyed more families than the war on drugs did.
It's rather outrageous to make that assumption.
Meh. He shouldn't get life, but I'm not going to give two shits about a drug dealer on this third offense. Personally, there are injustices in this world for good people (especially children) that are far more deserving for our sympathy/empathy/call-to-action than a convicted drug dealer. Call me callous, call me insensitive, call me maybe, but that's how I feel personally.
Meh. He shouldn't get life, but I'm not going to give two shits about a drug dealer on this third offense. Personally, there are injustices in this world for good people (especially children) that are far more deserving for our sympathy/empathy/call-to-action than a convicted drug dealer. Call me callous, call me insensitive, call me maybe, but that's how I feel personally.
Hard core drug use has destroyed many more lives and many more families than drug sentencing. I worked in the inner city for almost 20 years, and while the war on drugs was a political joke, the drug users and the actions of the drug users and drug dealers destroyed more families than the war on drugs did.
Is there are limit on how much sympathy/empathy we can have?
But you don't think it's outrageous to bring some nebulous chart about the "harm" of different drugs, based on information from the U.K., to a discussion about drug issues in America. Oh, and keep in mind that there is absolutely NO way for anyone here to see what criteria were used, to develop this "harm" chart.
Lol, why is Gattaca's assumption outrageous or stupid?
This guy appears to be a small time dealer, i.e. a low income individual. Low income individuals typically receive far more in government benefits than they pay in taxes. So, although his assumption may ultimately be wrong, but it is a very fair assumption without knowing the particulars.
Does it conflict with your fantasies that small time dealers and users of hard drugs are just a bunch of wonderful, ordinary folks with good, steady jobs that, if not for the war on drugs, would all be model citizens?
You have your liberal opinion, I have mine.
Also, you misread my post (first comment you made) and made assumptions that I want to give every first time dealer 10 years. Take a chill pill (or whatever substance you feel necessary).
Those god damn English and their stupid drug research!!
Open up the ol' Google machine and see for yourself. The Swiss (Ew Europeans!) just concluded the first study of LSD in forty years, take a look.
I clearly stated 'personally'...twice.
If others want to have major sympathy towards him, have at it. I don't. I simply don't feel sorry for drug dealers....at all. They know the risks and they accept them. It's simply my own personal opinion.
Ok? Can we discuss our personal opinions though? It is a discussion board.
Re: your point about knowing the risks, my point was that this kid couldn't have known the risks. It's not fathomable for an average person, who's only been given probation twice, to think "I'm going to get put in jail for the rest of my life if I get caught again." It's an unreasonable sentence that no 20-year kid with no knowledge of the law would ever think would be placed upon him.
That's true as I comes. Would you put your child in timeout twice for something. Then kick the living shit out of him on the third go around? The progression of the punishment is silly. On top of that it's Lsd. COMEONMAN!Ok? Can we discuss our personal opinions though? It is a discussion board.
Re: your point about knowing the risks, my point was that this kid couldn't have known the risks. It's not fathomable for an average person, who's only been given probation twice, to think "I'm going to get put in jail for the rest of my life if I get caught again." It's an unreasonable sentence that no 20-year kid with no knowledge of the law would ever think would be placed upon him.
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LOCK HIM THE FUCK UP!
Or, use the information on how harmful drugs are to make a reasonable decision:
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Oh so it needs a label?
Two years then. Is that better? Take an 18-year old guy and throw him in prison for two years because he is the guy his college classmates get their weed from....how is his life changed, and how the hell does that obvious result benefit society?
I'm a detective in one of the worst, if not the worst, cities in the country. I don't know about the LSD guys case but I do know a lot about drug distributing organizations, sentencing, and what REALLY destroys families with drug addicts.
1. You're missing the totality of what you read when you see a individual sentenced to 15-20 years for distribution. (Which rarely happens btw most 1-2nd offenders get months). A heroin, cocaine, crack, meth...etc distribution ring (even marijuana) almost always has homicides and other forms of sickening violence associated with it. Territory is at a premium and a lot of people die for it. Now the hard part in investigating is pinning bodies on 1 person with full proof evidence to convict. So the state uses drug sentencing laws as a way to stop the reign of terror that comes down on communities from these organizations.
2. Min sentencing requirements offer crucial leverage to compel cooperation. Without it my job becomes much more difficult.
3. Drug sentencing does not destroy families of drug addicts. What destroys families is the stealing, lying, failing out of rehab, disappearing for weeks at a time with the family not knowing if their loved one is dead or alive, and the cost that bankrupts families trying to get the addict help over the countless times he quits rehab, stops taking his medicine, and relapses. In fact, from my experience, most families prefer their addicted love one in jail bc they know they're alive and (supposedly) clean. Addicts have to want to get clean and by want they have to do more than talk about it. There's countless low cost programs available for addicts to help them and they quit the program. Sadly, after these battles that last 5-10-15 years the families are actually relieved and at peace bc they can move forward with their lives.
I know my opinion is not politically correct but the academics who have been in college for 20+ years need to get into the gutter and really open their eyes to what the issues actually are. Stats can be quoted endlessly but everyday I see a reality that doesn't quite add up to what the studies, stats...etc would like you to believe . Btw when I respectfully present my experience to my graduate professors I'm told that I'm either not qualified to have an opinion bc I don't have a PhD or I'm just wrong and told that My experiences don't happen. Meanwhile the professor who has spent 20 years doin nothing but teaching at a cushy elite college campus is right?
Sorry for my rant but I believe that in order to fix the problem it has to be correctly understood
Speaking on the matter of cannabis, most of the good stuff is grown indoors in small amounts by people who learned how to do it via the internet...it's not always being shipped over the border from Mexican cartels armed with assault rifles.
It's simply my own personal opinion.
I'm a detective in one of the worst, if not the worst, cities in the country. I don't know about the LSD guys case but I do know a lot about drug distributing organizations, sentencing, and what REALLY destroys families with drug addicts.
1. You're missing the totality of what you read when you see a individual sentenced to 15-20 years for distribution. (Which rarely happens btw most 1-2nd offenders get months). A heroin, cocaine, crack, meth...etc distribution ring (even marijuana) almost always has homicides and other forms of sickening violence associated with it. Territory is at a premium and a lot of people die for it. Now the hard part in investigating is pinning bodies on 1 person with full proof evidence to convict. So the state uses drug sentencing laws as a way to stop the reign of terror that comes down on communities from these organizations.
2. Min sentencing requirements offer crucial leverage to compel cooperation. Without it my job becomes much more difficult.
3. Drug sentencing does not destroy families of drug addicts. What destroys families is the stealing, lying, failing out of rehab, disappearing for weeks at a time with the family not knowing if their loved one is dead or alive, and the cost that bankrupts families trying to get the addict help over the countless times he quits rehab, stops taking his medicine, and relapses. In fact, from my experience, most families prefer their addicted love one in jail bc they know they're alive and (supposedly) clean. Addicts have to want to get clean and by want they have to do more than talk about it. There's countless low cost programs available for addicts to help them and they quit the program. Sadly, after these battles that last 5-10-15 years the families are actually relieved and at peace bc they can move forward with their lives.
I know my opinion is not politically correct but the academics who have been in college for 20+ years need to get into the gutter and really open their eyes to what the issues actually are. Stats can be quoted endlessly but everyday I see a reality that doesn't quite add up to what the studies, stats...etc would like you to believe . Btw when I respectfully present my experience to my graduate professors I'm told that I'm either not qualified to have an opinion bc I don't have a PhD or I'm just wrong and told that My experiences don't happen. Meanwhile the professor who has spent 20 years doin nothing but teaching at a cushy elite college campus is right?
Sorry for my rant but I believe that in order to fix the problem it has to be correctly understood
Wait a minute. I've never been convicted of a crime or been on probation but it seems to me that the judge and/or his probation officer and/or his lawyer likely made it clear to him what the possible penalty for a 3rd offense would be. Why are you giving him the benefit of the doubt?
In my court room experience the judge at sentencing almost always warns the convicted of the consequences of his next offense.
I had to look up qat. Never heard of it before.
I find it unlikely that he was properly informed because the first two times he was dealing with a regular "court date" in-and-out judge who deals only with California state law. Same with his probation officer, who probably only advised him on ramifications of California state law. But when he got picked up for the third time, BANG, federal department of justice supersedes on the normal California criminal justice system. Now he's in front of a federal judge dealing with mandatory federal sentencing guidelines.
Ok? Can we discuss our personal opinions though? It is a discussion board.
I understand your POV. I'm just not personally a fan of giving anyone a pass based on ignorance (of the law).
For the record, I think these sentencing laws are stupid but I don't really feel that bad for him.