The Drug Questions
January 7, 2011 at 2:33 pm
(This post was last modified: January 7, 2011 at 2:36 pm by thesummerqueen.)
I apologize if some of this has been addressed elsewhere - I skimmed through recent threads but didn't see anything that would satisfy my curiosity.
Yesterday at work I was jokingly accused by a coworker that the only reason I didn't grow pot was because it was illegal. Since she's 55 and QUITE experienced from her youth in all manner of substances, it made me laugh and of course I agreed. After all, I have no problem with weed or those who smoke it.
However, a nearby coworker, who resembles nothing so much as a dark haired Barbie in looks and brains, got extremely offended and a conversation/discussion/argument-inappropriate-for-the-office ensued in which I had to defend those who enjoy partaking in marijuana, those who enjoy drinking, and those who wish to own guns. She is the reason I asked about the "loaded question fallacy", and the argument soon revealed that she gets ALL of her news from Fox and E! so it's not worth detailing. But it did get me wondering a few things throughout the rest of the night thanks to a few comments she made.
First, what EXACTLY do people object to when it comes to substance use, and why do we differentiate between them as far as which are acceptable or not? I'll take any sort of answer - philosophical, historical, etc. I've seen the run-of-the-mill documentaries and tv shows on drugs and no one seems to be able to give me a satisfactory answer on why they have a problem with allowing OTHER people to use drugs (assuming they decide they personally don't want to). And by using, I'm assuming in a safe responsible manner where they aren't putting someone else in harm. Additionally, why do we decide that some substances are legal even if they're extremely harmful (I can grow all the monkshood I want in my garden, despite how poisonous it is, or I could smoke cigarettes until I riddle my lungs with holes, but weed puts people in prison)?
Second, I am pretty sure that if I could get a really wide audience, inevitably some of the answers would come back that there were religious objections to substance use - I've heard as much in real life. I'm pretty sure it was in Michael Pollan's book "The Botany of Desire" that I read the suggestion that monotheistic religions specifically have problems with it because they want to have a monopoly on the feelings associated with divinity, which drugs can sometimes produce. Anyone care to elaborate on this? Any of the theists on here want to add what their religion dictates on substance use? I'm actually going to have to dig around in my library and the 'net for Jewish opinions, as never once were we given a drug lecture in a synagogue. It just seems to me that if you wanted to keep people experiencing the divine in some fashion, allowing a little drug use here or there, particularly the way pagan religions and native americans did, would be the way to go.
The discussion I described above produced a vehement reaction from Barbie, who despite conceding that pot has medical benefits continued to decry it as an evil to society. I'm sure part of it is Fox brainwashing, but I could not understand the psychology behind it all.
Yesterday at work I was jokingly accused by a coworker that the only reason I didn't grow pot was because it was illegal. Since she's 55 and QUITE experienced from her youth in all manner of substances, it made me laugh and of course I agreed. After all, I have no problem with weed or those who smoke it.
However, a nearby coworker, who resembles nothing so much as a dark haired Barbie in looks and brains, got extremely offended and a conversation/discussion/argument-inappropriate-for-the-office ensued in which I had to defend those who enjoy partaking in marijuana, those who enjoy drinking, and those who wish to own guns. She is the reason I asked about the "loaded question fallacy", and the argument soon revealed that she gets ALL of her news from Fox and E! so it's not worth detailing. But it did get me wondering a few things throughout the rest of the night thanks to a few comments she made.
First, what EXACTLY do people object to when it comes to substance use, and why do we differentiate between them as far as which are acceptable or not? I'll take any sort of answer - philosophical, historical, etc. I've seen the run-of-the-mill documentaries and tv shows on drugs and no one seems to be able to give me a satisfactory answer on why they have a problem with allowing OTHER people to use drugs (assuming they decide they personally don't want to). And by using, I'm assuming in a safe responsible manner where they aren't putting someone else in harm. Additionally, why do we decide that some substances are legal even if they're extremely harmful (I can grow all the monkshood I want in my garden, despite how poisonous it is, or I could smoke cigarettes until I riddle my lungs with holes, but weed puts people in prison)?
Second, I am pretty sure that if I could get a really wide audience, inevitably some of the answers would come back that there were religious objections to substance use - I've heard as much in real life. I'm pretty sure it was in Michael Pollan's book "The Botany of Desire" that I read the suggestion that monotheistic religions specifically have problems with it because they want to have a monopoly on the feelings associated with divinity, which drugs can sometimes produce. Anyone care to elaborate on this? Any of the theists on here want to add what their religion dictates on substance use? I'm actually going to have to dig around in my library and the 'net for Jewish opinions, as never once were we given a drug lecture in a synagogue. It just seems to me that if you wanted to keep people experiencing the divine in some fashion, allowing a little drug use here or there, particularly the way pagan religions and native americans did, would be the way to go.
The discussion I described above produced a vehement reaction from Barbie, who despite conceding that pot has medical benefits continued to decry it as an evil to society. I'm sure part of it is Fox brainwashing, but I could not understand the psychology behind it all.