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5 Grand;c-10067259 said:I'm trying to think of a way to encourage people to seek higher education.
Drugs have devastated the Black community. People drop out, don't work, get mixed up with drugs and end up in prison. And when they get out of prison they have no diploma or skills so they go back to their old habits.
If you were trying to break the cycle how would you do it?
Maywood;c-10067273 said:Cats Actually Responding.....
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Maywood;c-10067273 said:Cats Actually Responding.....
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Madame_CJSkywalker;c-10067314 said:5 Grand;c-10067259 said:I'm trying to think of a way to encourage people to seek higher education.
Drugs have devastated the Black community. People drop out, don't work, get mixed up with drugs and end up in prison. And when they get out of prison they have no diploma or skills so they go back to their old habits.
If you were trying to break the cycle how would you do it?
The criminalization and war on drugs which fuels violence and taken thousands of blk men away from their families is what has exacerbated the subjugation of the blk community
Take chicago for ex. A lot of violence is fueled by the illegal drug trade. The chicago area is also ranked number one in the nation for emergency room visits related to heroin use
So like i said if a person doesnt want to go to highschool or college and wants to do drugs there is always going to be ppl there to sale them drugs at a premium
We decriminalize drugs the illegal drug trade would become less attractive and violence /arrests would plummet
So with ur idea we'd still be dealing with the same ol
You want more blk ppl to graduate high school and go on to college we need to things like disrupt the craddle to prison pipeline. Investing in more diversion programs is one idea. In some places they have been experimenting with paying low income students a wage if they are on time and they have to stay out of trouble
https://www.google.com/amp/amp.ketv...d-to-attend-class-stay-out-of-trouble/7155076
https://wamu.org/story/15/09/29/paying_at_risk_youth_DC_mcduffie
We need to hire more blk teachers and school administrators, especially blk men. I think like 80% of teachers are non blk. Why does that matter? The data strongly suggest blk children do better with blk teachers
But yea that would require more programs that encourage and support more blk ppl going into teaching
The way public schools are funded needs to be addressed as well
We need to hire more blk teachers and school administrators, especially blk men. I think like 80% of teachers are non blk. Why does that matter? The data strongly suggest blk children do better with blk teachers
anduin;c-10066553 said:It should all be decriminalized. If it's an issue, it's a health issue. Not a legal one.
5 Grand;c-10065694 said:Lou_Cypher;c-10065256 said:5 Grand;c-10065124 said:thegreatunknown;c-10065000 said:Okay, so let me get this straight. When I graduate with my JD in May and then pass the bar in July, I can sell weed, coke and heroin? And to do so, I have to go to a police precinct? Last thing the legal field needs is more access to drugs, there's already high levels alcoholism, drug abuse and depression in the field as is. Not sure why education level alone should give you access to legalized drugs...
But yeah its a not a good idea...
@ the bolded. Exactly. When you reach a certain level of education (military experience or 5 years in a union) you can sell drugs legally. By doing this we eliminate the drug dealers that dropped out of high school. Dropping out of high school and selling drugs will no longer be an option. The dropouts will be forced to go back to school.
Lou_Cypher;c-10065029 said:Of course everyone does drugs. Yes rich people do drugs and can be functioning addicts, but rich people that do drugs aren't a problem because THEY CAN AFFORD DRUGS. Poorer drug addicts cause the most problems because they have to hustle to get their drugs and will do many things to do so. Stealing, selling drugs, prostitution, etc. Locking those people up costs a lot of money. A lot of these states don't have the money to lock them up.
You're solution isn't a solution at all. You cant give certain people access to drugs. At this moment nobody is technically supposed to have access to drugs, but guess what? Everyone finds a way to access it if they look hard enough. Those well educated people you speak of probably have jobs and skills that will keep them employed and well paid. Unless their habit is out of control, they won't need to steal or do anything illegal for their habit.
Your first paragraph that I highlighted proves my point. I agree with that first paragraph. Rich educated people can afford to do drugs. Its the poor drug users that are the problem. So to solve the problem we legalize drugs for rich educated people and make it illegal for poor uneducated people. If poor uneducated people can't get access to drugs they will either turn around and go back to school or stop using drugs because they can't get it.
The underlying solution is basically to trick a person that would have otherwise dropped out to go to college.
That's dumb. That is so stupid I am flabbergasted.
playmaker88;c-10065322 said:Most stupid shit is not this well thought out..
i think you just broke new ground
OK, if my idea is so bad, let me hear you guys suggestion on how to solve the drug problem.
If its not going to be by education level then how would you legalize it?
Because you can't have people dropping out of high school to smoke weed, which is why a lot of people drop out.
bkkbully;c-10067706 said:How are you gonna have a thread about making drugs legal through education, when you yourself aren't truly educated about drugs? You're using stereotypes as fact.
Stop locking up non-violent drug offenders and actually, you know - rehabilitate them. Legalize drugs (and for the hard drugs) have them sold at low dosages. Put money, programs, and actual scientific research and education towards drug and rehab centers. America's entire drug and prison infrastructure is archaic, and with your new rules, you're basically equating higher education (which in The US means privilege & class) to drugs, which is ALREADY being done and has been done.
5 Grand;c-10067784 said:bkkbully;c-10067706 said:How are you gonna have a thread about making drugs legal through education, when you yourself aren't truly educated about drugs? You're using stereotypes as fact.
Stop locking up non-violent drug offenders and actually, you know - rehabilitate them. Legalize drugs (and for the hard drugs) have them sold at low dosages. Put money, programs, and actual scientific research and education towards drug and rehab centers. America's entire drug and prison infrastructure is archaic, and with your new rules, you're basically equating higher education (which in The US means privilege & class) to drugs, which is ALREADY being done and has been done.
Thanks for the response.
Lets see if we can keep this thread going without name calling and ad hominem attacks.
I've had this discussion before.
1. I don't see the problem with requiring somebody to have a high school diploma or G.E.D. to buy weed.
2. The people I spoke to seem to think its a good idea that if you want to buy hard drugs (coke and heroin) you should have to pay with a debit card. If you get declined then that means you can't afford it and shouldn't be buying it.
3. Higher education leads to a superior way of life. You can get a better job with benefits, earn more money and make an impact on society rather than flipping burgers or pushing a broom. With higher education you can move out of the ghetto and buy a home rather than renting from a slumlord. With higher education you can understand legal concepts, finance concepts and medical concepts that high school dropouts can't comprehend. I know this because I didn't go to college directly from high school and when I finally did go to college I realized what I had missed out on.
As it stands, people who have more money can afford lawyers to defend them when and if they get caught with drugs. I don't have to tell you what happens when you use a public defendant.
Lastly, people say, "stop locking up non-violent drug offenders". Yeah they need treatment rather than prison but to what end? Are we going to legalize drugs and every time somebody is going through withdrawal send them to a rehab for 30 days, and then when they get out they still can't find a job because they dropped out of high school?
Are we going to keep sending high school dropouts back and forth to rehab? They'll never get their lives straightened out until they get at least an associate's degree, or military experience or join a union.
Legalizing all drugs and giving high school dropouts access to hard drugs is a blueprint for failure.
5 Grand;c-10066746 said:anduin;c-10066553 said:It should all be decriminalized. If it's an issue, it's a health issue. Not a legal one.
The problem is that some people can handle drugs and some people can't.
I've worked at an investment banking firm with stockbrokers and lawyers. They all arrive at work at 9:30am and go home at 4:00pm. They go home and get fucked up and come back to work the next day. Those people are functioning drug addicts and would be able to handle coke and heroin if it was decriminalized.
But think of the wino on the corner. He's laid out on the sidewalk and can't get up because he's downed a whole bottle of liquor. I don't think he should have access to hard drugs, in fact hard drugs are what put him on the corner in the first place.
My point is that some people can handle coke and heroin and some people can't. The same can be said about alcohol, some people can drink socially but they know their limit. Other people get DUIs and let alcohol ruin their lives.
freethewave;c-10068658 said:Ok by that logic they should lock people up for alcohol because some people can't handle it. If you can't handle it don't it. If you still do it thats on you and no one else's business.