Seraph wrote:Exactly.Thinking Aloud wrote:There's a significant difference between guns and drugs. Who takes the consequences if you use drugs? You do. Who takes the consequences if you use a gun? Someone else.
Thus I can understand how people would support the legalisation of drugs (as taking drugs is something you consent to doing to yourself) but not the legalisation of guns (as the person you shoot has most likely not consented to you doing that).
I am not exactly in favour of legalising "hard" drugs, but I do advocate their decriminalisation. That would pull the carpet out from under organised crime and it would lower insurance rates by about 80%. That's approximately the proportion of burglaries, car thefts and robberies due to addicts financing their addiction.
As for guns, I am totally against them. While gun control legislation in Australia has not reduced the homicide rate, nor has it increased the rate of violent crime, so that is not a factor for my opinion. What I do fear about the free availability of firearms is that our local communists and crypto-communists will find it easy to arm themselves, overthrow our democratically elected government and impose the dictatorship of the proletariat.
Unless you advocate state supply of drugs, decriminalisation will achieve nothing. It is the illegality of the supply chain that creates the business opportunity for drug barons.