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From: Jim Henderson
Subject: Re: Transmogrify
Date: 30 Jul 2010 17:20:27
Message: <4c53421b$1@news.povray.org>
On Fri, 30 Jul 2010 13:39:44 -0700, Patrick Elliott wrote:

> On 7/29/2010 1:47 PM, Jim Henderson wrote:
>> On Thu, 29 Jul 2010 12:32:12 -0700, Patrick Elliott wrote:
>>
>>> On 7/28/2010 4:08 PM, Jim Henderson wrote:
>>>> PMFA, but where did you get your medical degree from?  If you're
>>>> going to make assertions like that, I'd like to see them backed up by
>>>> some sort of credentials that show you have some expertise in the
>>>> field. (And before you ask, no, I don't have such expertise).  Or a
>>>> cite from a reputable source would suffice as well.
>>>>
>>> You don't need a medical degree to read articles on the effects of
>>> these things, and no, I don't have, or remember, the specific
>>> magazines, or which issues.
>>
>> Fair enough, but are you certain you're not falling to confirmation
>> bias?
>>
> How is, "Taking there chemicals does X, and we can test people that take
> it and *show* that it does. Not to mention it never goes away, and every
> medical professional says that the people they treat never lose the
> addiction, they just learn to avoid every place, person, or thing that
> helped trigger it.", qualify as confirmation bias? 

Assumption:  You're only reading sources that agree with something you 
already think.  Again, just a question.

>>> I did say most. And, as I pointed out, it also depends on the person's
>>> own biology. Some people seem to be damn near completely immune to
>>> addiction. Others.. would be addicted by something as mild as
>>> caffeine.
>>
>> So basically, people need to be protected from themselves?  I don't buy
>> that.  Making mistakes is part of life, and not something people should
>> be insulated from.  Experience is one of the best teachers out there.
>>
> We protect people from themselves all the damn time. Everything from, "
> "Don't drive drunk, or we will arrest you.", 

That's protecting the public, not the individual.

> to, "You can't swim in the
> sewage pond, so we put big warning signs and a fence around it.", 

That's perhaps the best example.

> to,
> "You vehicle **must** have working turn signals.", 

That's about the public, not the individual.  My turn signal doesn't tell 
me anything, it's a way of telling others what you're about to do.

> etc., are all about
> protecting not just the rest of the people, but the moron doing it.

I disagree.

> Experience, **a lot of the time** won't teach you anything, because in
> most of those cases you will be either dead, or permanently disabled, by
> experiencing it. So, don't give me the whole, "We shouldn't protect
> people from themselves.", BS. This is only true for the things *you*
> think we shouldn't do that for. I am certain there are plenty of things
> that you do think we should, a whole host of laws and rules to do so,
> and like most people that want to treat drug use as a "special" category
> of, "Stupid things people do to themselves.", you just don't like *it*
> being in that category, for no reason that I, personal, can see as
> rational.

Sure, and if I drive my car into a tree and die as a result, that's my 
own fault (assuming I was in control at the time, of course).  When I 
broke my leg rollerblading, the other person was scared out of her mind 
that I was going to sue - so much so, that she sent a friend over to 
apologise to me.  I told her to tell her friend that while she was going 
the wrong way in the rink, it was my own fault because I shouldn't have 
been on a rink with *experienced* people (and designated as a "speed 
rink" my second time out on rollerblades.

Most people would've been looking for a lawyer.  I was injured, I had a 
broken leg.  It was my own damned fault and nobody else's.

It inconvenienced me and it inconvenienced my family.  That's the price 
we all paid.  <shrug>  That's life.

>>> Sound all well and good, but you are presuming that the criminal
>>> system always catches these people, and no one that is sitting at home
>>> doing that didn't do anything wrong to get their hit.
>>
>> I'm presuming nothing.  I meet about once a month with a representative
>> of the SLC police department, and he and I have very interesting chats
>> about how police work is actually done and how effective it is.
>>
>> One of the things I take away from the conversations time and again is
>> that if they didn't have to spend so much time dealing with non-violent
>> offenders, they might actually be able to catch more people committing
>> crimes against people&  property.
>>
> I don't dispute that, and have said so, but the problem is that you are
> classing people that are, "not in their right minds", by choice or
> otherwise, in the same category as, "non-violent", in some cases. We
> also prefer to arrest someone who is intentionally acting in a way that
> *could* cause someone else harm. As I said, people on certain drugs do
> not just all, "sit around at home, being stoned", they go places, they
> do it in public, they get into their heads, while in a state of mind
> where they *can't* make rational decisions, to do things that get
> themselves and others killed. 

And when they get dangerous, they should be stopped.

> By your logic, it would be perfectly fine
> to let mental patients out, even if classed as, "potentially dangerous",
> because that particular day they are not "acting" dangerous, never mind
> that they could turn at any moment, due to their condition.

Um, no, that's something different.  Someone who's schizophrenic is quite 
different from someone who *voluntarily* takes crack cocaine.  And now 
you'll argue that the addiction makes it a compulsion, not voluntary, but 
they voluntarily started taking it.

> As for effectiveness.. Watched something a while back on the subject of
> law enforcement and [...]

Interesting, but not really relevant to the discussion.

>>> Any other way of looking at it only appears *sane* if you assume
>>> neither you, nor anyone you know, will *ever* be the victim. Which one
>>> could argue is either arrogant, or stupid.
>>
>> Nobody every said life was safe.  Or fair.
>>
> No, but one of the functions of society is to make it safer, and at
> least try to make it fairer (even if some people still seem to want to
> make it as unfair as possible, but that is a whole other issue..)

There's safer and fairer when it's in the public interest, and then 
there's "safer and fairer" which removes all the risk from life entirely, 
and that latter removes the responsibility and consequences of actions 
from individuals and places it on society.  "It's not *my* fault I shot 
the store clerk, it's *society's* fault that they didn't protect the 
store clerk from me as effectively as they should have."

Jim


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From: Jim Henderson
Subject: Re: Transmogrify
Date: 30 Jul 2010 17:22:05
Message: <4c53427d$1@news.povray.org>
On Fri, 30 Jul 2010 14:10:39 -0700, Patrick Elliott wrote:

> Man are you clueless.

Nice way to carry on a conversation, Patrick - start with argumentum ad 
hominem.  I'm outta here.

Jim


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From: Stephen
Subject: Re: Transmogrify
Date: 30 Jul 2010 17:43:46
Message: <4c534792$1@news.povray.org>
On 30/07/2010 9:47 PM, Patrick Elliott wrote:
> Which makes a huge difference. Mind, one of the things that makes it
> easy to withdraw from **is** the fact that it doesn't have an effect so
> massive that it permanently changes brain chemistry. Maybe we need a
> different definition. Addictive means - you would have some level of
> withdrawal from it. ??? means - You can't ever completely withdraw from
> it at all, and your attempt to do so will be long, painful, and incomplete.
>

Is there anything that you can’t withdraw from> I know that if you take 
excess alcohol for a long enough period it does alter your brain and 
organs permanently.

> Part of the problem in many of these things is that we end up using the
> same word to describe things that, while they make work similarly, can
> have **drastically** different impacts. Its like someone with MS. I had
> a teacher with that, and up until a few months before it killed him, he
> *seemed* completely normal. There was a friend of the family who had a
> kid with it too, and he was semi-normal, up until about 10-12, then, by
> the time he was 15 or so he was in a wheel chair, barely able to speak,
> etc. Same condition, completely different results. Addiction is like
> that. All addiction works much the same, but *some* forms of it are
> severely debilitating, and leave lasting scares, which someone opting to
> drink soda pop, instead of taking crack, **doesn't have to worry
> about**, even if, in principle, the result uses the same word to
> describe it.

True and as you said earlier drugs have different effects on different 
people. I’m prescribed dihydrocodine which is addictive. But when I stop 
taking it the only effect I get is that my skin itches, which is quite 
easy for me to cope with. Other people get more severe symptoms. Having 
said that, I don’t know if it is because I have built up a tolerance to 
it. The first time I took 15 mg I was away with the fairies. Now I can 
take 60 mg and all I feel is a bit buzzy and I talk a lot. I’m certainly 
not dependant on it. Different strokes for different folks. :-D

-- 

Best Regards,
	Stephen


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From: Stephen
Subject: Re: Transmogrify
Date: 30 Jul 2010 17:47:32
Message: <4c534874@news.povray.org>
On 30/07/2010 9:53 PM, Darren New wrote:
> Me, I've never really figured out the difference between "addictive" and
> "habituating".
>

I think that we (in the UK) call it dependant. Not physically addicted 
but mentally requiring it. Addicted means your body requires it to 
function without withdrawal symptoms.

-- 

Best Regards,
	Stephen


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From: Darren New
Subject: Re: Transmogrify
Date: 30 Jul 2010 17:55:13
Message: <4c534a41$1@news.povray.org>
Stephen wrote:
> but mentally requiring it. 

And what does that *mean*?  How can you "mentally require it" without a 
physical change to your body?

-- 
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
    C# - a language whose greatest drawback
    is that its best implementation comes
    from a company that doesn't hate Microsoft.


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From: Stephen
Subject: Re: Transmogrify
Date: 30 Jul 2010 18:09:08
Message: <4c534d84$1@news.povray.org>
On 30/07/2010 10:55 PM, Darren New wrote:
> Stephen wrote:
>> but mentally requiring it.
>
> And what does that *mean*? How can you "mentally require it" without a
> physical change to your body?
>

My laymans definition is: You like the effects of the drug so much you 
want to keep taking it even if there are no physical withdrawal 
symptoms. For instance as with grass or pot, you don’t get the heebie 
jeebies when you stop taking it but some people can’t bring themselves 
to stop. Even if it is ruining their lives.

-- 

Best Regards,
	Stephen


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From: Jim Henderson
Subject: Re: Transmogrify
Date: 30 Jul 2010 18:13:13
Message: <4c534e79$1@news.povray.org>
On Fri, 30 Jul 2010 14:55:11 -0700, Darren New wrote:

> How can you "mentally require it" without a physical change to your
> body?

It's a habit, like some people who have a nervous twitch - they may not 
even be aware that they're doing it, because it's just part of their 
persona.

Jim


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From: Darren New
Subject: Re: Transmogrify
Date: 30 Jul 2010 18:37:06
Message: <4c535412$1@news.povray.org>
Stephen wrote:
> My laymans definition is: You like the effects of the drug so much you 
> want to keep taking it even if there are no physical withdrawal 
> symptoms. 

Yeah. I mean, I get that. I just don't know why there's a term for "good 
drugs" that makes it sound awful.  Why wouldn't you say anything you really 
really like is "habituating"?

-- 
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
    C# - a language whose greatest drawback
    is that its best implementation comes
    from a company that doesn't hate Microsoft.


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From: Stephen
Subject: Re: Transmogrify
Date: 31 Jul 2010 07:58:40
Message: <4c540ff0$1@news.povray.org>
On 30/07/2010 11:37 PM, Darren New wrote:
> Stephen wrote:
>> My laymans definition is: You like the effects of the drug so much you
>> want to keep taking it even if there are no physical withdrawal symptoms.
>
> Yeah. I mean, I get that. I just don't know why there's a term for "good
> drugs" that makes it sound awful. Why wouldn't you say anything you
> really really like is "habituating"?
>

You are speaking to the wrong person, here. "Habituating" is not a word 
in British English we use dependency (if I follow you correctly).
I’m also a bit wary of the term “good drugs” I know that it is popular 
to say things like good and bad bacteria but it is a bit misleading.

As an aside I was looking for a slang word for girls, polite you 
understand. It was to replace guys which in the UK means only men. I 
came across this site that may be amusing or as the case may be, not.
http://www.effingpot.com/slang.shtml


-- 

Best Regards,
	Stephen


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From: Darren New
Subject: Re: Transmogrify
Date: 31 Jul 2010 21:52:52
Message: <4c54d374@news.povray.org>
Stephen wrote:
> You are speaking to the wrong person, here. "Habituating" is not a word
 
> in British English we use dependency (if I follow you correctly).

I believe that's correct.

> I’m also a bit wary of the term “good drugs” I 
know that it is popular 
> to say things like good and bad bacteria but it is a bit misleading.

I mean "good" as in "you like it so much you want more."   I don't say th
at 
fat people have a dependency on Big Macs. I'm trying to figure out what t
he 
difference between (say) pot and something people get a dependency on, gi
ven 
that lots and lots of people here are in jail because they can't keep 
themselves from smoking pot in places they'll get caught. So why isn't th
at 
a dependency?

-- 
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
    C# - a language whose greatest drawback
    is that its best implementation comes
    from a company that doesn't hate Microsoft.


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