U
User_95916
Unconfirmed
Ape shall not kill Ape
There's laws where it's illegal for men to be clean shaven in the winter months. A lot of laws aren't ever removed from the books if they never come up, which sure is bad practice since they could still use them, but the likelihood they will be called up and prosecuted is slim to none. Look at the obscenity laws in places like Oklahoma, it's illegal to have any material that depicts the unnatural death of a character in them. So a copy of Lord of the Rings because Sean Bean getting riddled by arrows violates these laws. Most states it's actually illegal for minors to possess permanent markers and paint, but how often do you see those enforced?There are still a couple of states where it is technically illegal to cohabitate, under laws from the 1800s when the US was going after the mormons out in utah territory. Most have either dropped the laws or had them ruled unconstitutional at this point, though often much later than one would expect.
Still pretty dystopian. Of course if they could be deported (as citizens) to a more civilized country, that would be a good thing.A little bit yes but you just have to work… maybe better solution would be something like if you dont work and u are able to you get no help no free money or you get thrown out of the country
You're wrong, take Marijuana as the case study.Wrong. The top crimes when it comes to drugs are:
On the producer side: Production, keeping workers in check, removing illoyal workers, paying/corrupting/removing law enforcers - all of those will be gone if it becomes legal.
On the dealer side: Transport and sell drugs, "earning" respect/fear, defending their stock, make sure the consuments pay, keeping the small-dealer-network in check, removing illoyal/stupid/useless small dealers from the network, paying/corrupting/removing law enforcers - all of those will be gone if it becomes legal.
On the consuments side: Buying, owning and using drugs, some ways of getting the money, some (side)effects caused by using some drugs evading/removing law enforcers - the first half of those will be gone if it becomes legal, the second half could be reduced with stable product quality and prizes + all the cops currently hunting/observing producers and dealers would be free to do their job: Protecting people and hunting other criminals
Then we have the common side crimes around guns and their usage, turning illegal money into legal money, and so on - also be gone if it becomes legal.
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Its a sensible thing to reduce costs for peaople who share their space & money. But why should this be restricted to two people? If 3 people share their space & money and only 2 get benefits from its pure discrimination. If they fear people would just marry to reduce taxes they should enable their brains because living together and sharing the money/costs would be a fucking high price for so little benefits.
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Never heard of any case like yours, but i'm also not in amiland so maybe such a thing is possible where you life, but here kids are by law mostly considered the property of their parents, only teens can get something like jail light for minors. Everything a child does here can hit the parents (violating/ignoring parental responsibility)
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In a growing number of countries loli gets bundled with real ** by law because those who like fictional content must also like real content...
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Your examples dont work. There would be no dealers at schools anymore, drugs are legal, remember? Forcing anyone to anything is harm and will always be harm. And flashing/public nudity/public sex are bound by public morals, if people dont care there is no harm done and no law needed, but when people care its harm, for some low level, for some traumatic, so it needs to be prevented or punished by laws.
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While i agree and some drivers end up with a trauma after some suicider jumped before their vehicle, it will be hard to punish the dead for choosing their reckless way of ending their life.
P.S:
Ignore grammar, spelling errors and the like, my brain is occupied by workrelated stuff, just tried and failed to make a break.
States that legalized marijuana have had an influx of people from other states who want to be able to smoke it, which is likely a group of people with higher than average criminality (since it was illegal to use), an effect which would be mitigated by national legalization. I'd also suggest that some kind of conclusive statistic would need to show that crimes tied to marijuana increased, not just crimes in general.You're wrong, take Marijuana as the case study.You must be registered to see links
"As it shows, recreational marijuana legalization in OR has led to significant increases in the rates of not only property crime overall (p = .021), but also subtypes of crimes such as burglary (p = .020) and motor vehicle theft (p = .000) in the state, relative to the non-legalized states following legalization in OR."
Legalizing it allows you to regulate a substance and tax it which can help the governments when dealing with it, but it increases crime.
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It's not pure discrimination. When I said it was about taxes it's specifically about joint filing with your spouse which doesn't really give you a tax break in and of itself. When a couple files separately if they have joint deductions only one of them can file that deduction so it's typically easier to file joint taxes for ease of use. At some point it becomes an issue of complexity and certain deductions would reduce joint taxes which is the misconception that it's inherently beneficial to file jointly when in and of itself it actually isn't. It also creates a messy situation should the household have a falling out. It's not discrimination it's merely clerical as to the reason, but that's up to debate whether it should matter or not when you could just opt to live with multiple "spouses" in all but name anyway. Heck adultery isn't illegal so if you want to sleep with the entire local football team each night nothing is stopping you from doing so.
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Those who are willing to break the law will simply break the law regardless and the states where there's legal recreational use tend to be blue states that are soft on crime to begin with. (and also descending into anarchy prompting even some deep blue areas to start voting for more conservative candidates if not republicans outright like in Oregon) You're always going to have some ambiguity, but there's the evidence that shows more gun availability reduces gun violence and people still want to say guns are the problem in spite of that evidence. The people who smoke weed are more prone to be criminals because they likely started smoking before it was legal which would firmly put them in the criminal category as such you can assume they're more prone to turn to other crimes to fund their habit because they already have a criminal mentality.States that legalized marijuana have had an influx of people from other states who want to be able to smoke it, which is likely a group of people with higher than average criminality (since it was illegal to use), an effect which would be mitigated by national legalization. I'd also suggest that some kind of conclusive statistic would need to show that crimes tied to marijuana increased, not just crimes in general.
Marriage has benefits other than economic, for example a spouse may be presumed to be a person's next of kin for healthcare and inheritance purposes. The father on a birth certificate for children born to a married women may be presumed to be her husband. Legal peculiarities like this can be figured out though. I'd just suggest the government stops doing marriages entirely and removes itself from relationships.
Better yet, just make all government officials live by the laws and rules they set for others. It's easy to talk about not building border walls and banning guns when you live in Martha's Vineyard in an $8,000,000 home surrounded by a 10-foot wall protected by armed security guards 24 hours a day. It's quite a different thing to have to live by those rules in a Texas border town or be a single mother in a bad neighborhood filled with drug addicts and gang bangers.The people who make the laws have to live at the lowest lv in society for the rest of there life . If you want to run the gov you need to be doing it to make life better for everyone not just you and yours
Sorry but I'm confused. Are you for or against holding government officials accountable. Most of your statement reads like you're agreeing with me. But I don't understand that last part.Better yet, just make all government officials live by the laws and rules they set for others. It's easy to talk about not building border walls and banning guns when you live in Martha's Vineyard in an $8,000,000 home surrounded by a 10-foot wall protected by armed security guards 24 hours a day. It's quite a different thing to have to live by those rules in a Texas border town or be a single mother in a bad neighborhood filled with drug addicts and gang bangers.
If you want to limit those people's rights, then you ought to go live as they live, and see how long you stick to your dearly-held principles.
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