Hitchens is nearly as vile as Will Self
That's a very sweeping statement. Care to provide a couple of well supported reasons?
Hitchens is nearly as vile as Will Self
It says much about the nature of celebrity that Newsnight decide that the best person to debate a serious point with Hitchens is a third rate actor and ex addict (who seems to still think he is Chandler) rather than a possibly less glitzy expert in the field of addiction. Like you say why should Perry be held up as a representative for all addicts and an expert on all addiction just because he has suffered with it. From the preamble though it seems he was there to talk about his work with the drug courts and not the nature of addiction it's self which Hitchens turn the discussion to rather expertly.
Surely heavy sentencing would stop people taking drugs in prison and give them a chance to get clean.
Oh do leave off, no-one chooses to be an addict my arse, take skag, and you WILL end up an addict , no-one can be unaware of this fact with the amount of info around these days, so by definition it's a choice.Sorry but prison is definitely not the answer.
No one chooses to be an addict.
Are you suggesting that being an alcoholic or addicted to prescription drugs should carry a prison sentance?
I guess it would get rid of all the smokers aswell!
Oh do leave off, no-one chooses to be an addict my arse, take skag, and you WILL end up an addict , no-one can be unaware of this fact with the amount of info around these days, so by definition it's a choice.
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 ?
Are there any casual heroin users ? I
Surely heavy sentencing would stop people taking drugs in prison and give them a chance to get clean.
Sorry but prison is definitely not the answer.
No one chooses to be an addict.
Are you suggesting that being an alcoholic or addicted to prescription drugs should carry a prison sentance?
I guess it would get rid of all the smokers aswell!
I hate defending Hitchins but this is missing the point. You can't become an addict to something until you've taken it. You wouldn't know you were an addict until you've taken something for the first time. Hitchins' idea is that if you make sentencing much tougher it would deter people from trying it in the first place. He also argues that, even if it becomes something other than free will when taking a lot of drugs, the initial point of becoming addicted was a decision made by the user.
I'm not sure I'm comfortable with the idea that some people are able to extricate themselves of all free will by suggesting that they had a pre-disposition to become addicted. I'm also not sure that Hitchins claim that tougher sentencing would deter drugs is correct.
If Hitchens wants to make sentencing harder on drug takers so they wont end up with bad habits, what's his idea for alcoholics and gambling addicts?
The majority of the uk's addicts are addicted to alcohol. I'd be interested to know what sort of punishments he would want on alcoholics?
I hate defending Hitchins but this is missing the point. You can't become an addict to something until you've taken it. You wouldn't know you were an addict until you've taken something for the first time. Hitchins' idea is that if you make sentencing much tougher it would deter people from trying it in the first place. He also argues that, even if it becomes something other than free will when taking a lot of drugs, the initial point of becoming addicted was a decision made by the user.
I'm not sure I'm comfortable with the idea that some people are able to extricate themselves of all free will by suggesting that they had a pre-disposition to become addicted. I'm also not sure that Hitchins claim that tougher sentencing would deter drugs is correct.
Hitchens isn't saying that all addicts should be punished, he is just saying that they had the choice at the beginning and that it is not a disease. Any more than being a Brighton fan is a disease or having a favourite colour is a disease.