Hitchins is a knob but these kind of clips always annoy me. BBC wheels him on to have an argument with a popular celebrity on an issue that they know will make him look like a dinosaur, but both Russell Brand and now Matthew Perry failed to contribute anything worthwhile to put him right. Best bit of the clip is Hitchins asking Perry to provide objective evidence, Perry's response...'myself.'
I think Hitchins point has always been that making punishments for drug charges far more severe would act as a deterrent. Whether that is right or wrong (I somewhat doubt it), it is never adequately proved to be so by a celebrity who has had a relatively easy route out of their problem and is now willing to share their own experiences as representative of the normal drug addict. I'm sure Perry's addiction is as real as any other, but I don't doubt that his recovery is made easier by the millions in the bank, the limitless free time, and the many interested parties who have presumably helped to get him here.
I'm a recovering addict and can assure Hitchins ( the pale and wretched shadow of his brother, a fact that will make his life a misery unto the grave)
I'm a recovering addict and can assure Hitchins ( the pale and wretched shadow of his brother, a fact that will make his life a misery unto the grave) that whilst heavier sentencing may affect the moderate or social user it would have had absolutely no deterrent effect on me whatsoever. And that is a huge part of what defines an addict.
Are there any casual heroin users ? I know a few heroin users, none of them casual , they may start that way , but it doesnt last, they either end up as functioning addicts with a poor quality of life , or the wretched individuals who's life is one never ending search for the next fix, quite why ANYONE , with the level of information that is available would take heroin i dont know, that is why i have very little sympathy for heroin addicts ,its a choice to start, do they REALLY think they will be the one person to not end up as a filthy, skanky skaghead ?This was also Russell Brand's point. An addict doesn't care whether the drug their body craves is legal or not. One way or another they will find a way to get it, to feed the cravings. Hitchens is an absolutely vile man who, like Katie Hopkins, only exists and has any publicity by making incendiary remarks like this. He makes no differentiation between the addict and the casual drug user. I would have some level of agreement with his point if he were advocating harsher penalties for drug dealers rather than users, but to deny the existence of the concept of addiction is a transparent attempt to maintain his reputation as a professional wind-up merchant. Inevitably, some equally vile DM-types will pipe up in agreement with him.
What chance does this country have when our government sacks its top drug advisor and expert because it doesn't adhere to the position adopted by that same said government. Why ask for advice from an expert in the first place. David Nutt knows more about these matters than twats like Hitchens so why are the BBC inviting him on to spew out his usual vile drivel instead of people who know what they are talking about.
The more you criminalise as Hitchens seems to prefer the more you create a climate akin to the USA's prohibition era with everything that entailed. All the serious studies around the world are slowly indicating that the addictions can be treated as a medical matter and that in itself helps both with recovery and later with the reductions in crime that addicts contribute to.
I'm a recovering addict and can assure Hitchins ( the pale and wretched shadow of his brother, a fact that will make his life a misery unto the grave) that whilst heavier sentencing may affect the moderate or social user it would have had absolutely no deterrent effect on me whatsoever. And that is a huge part of what defines an addict.
Hitchens is nearly as vile as Will Self