MmeGigs
Posts: 706
Joined: 1/26/2008 Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: OrionTheWolf One I hate during allergy season is the one where Claritin-D is kept at the pharmacy, you have to show a valid ID, fill out an information card, and then have your name entered into the computer. This was supposed to curb meth production, but just like any good chemist, they just found alternatives to use. Most of the ephedrine type products that the meth labs used were being ordered on-line, wholesale, out the back door, etc. anyway. I couldn't disagree with you more about this being a "feel good" law. We've sure noticed the positive effects of these laws around here. Feds score against homegrown meth "Two years ago, Minnesota began restricting sales of cold medicines. The year before, police seized 212 meth labs in the state. In 2006, the number of seized labs plunged to 59 — a 72% reduction. Meth-related emergency room visits in Minnesota fell by two-thirds to 480," I don't know that the laws have done much to decrease the amount of meth out there, but shutting down the home-cookers was about a lot more than that. Those home labs are dangerous - literally bombs just waiting to explode. The places where this stuff has been cooked are coated floor-to-ceiling with seriously toxic crap - they need hazmat teams to come clean them up. These laws have saved loads of tax $ and a not inconsiderable number of lives. quote:
So what are some more feel good laws, and your thoughts on them? I believe it waste the time of a legislators, and just done to make the less knowledgeable feel good, as if something is really being done. The various anti-gay marriage laws and amendments are kind of the ultimate in feel-good legislative time-wasters. They're pretty much trying to hold back the tide. I agree that instituting a death penalty is feel-good legislation. It's not a deterent to crime, it's incredibly expensive to taxpayers, and whether or not one will get a death sentence has much less to do with the nature of the crime one committed than it does with whether one has the money to afford a decent attorney. If those things aren't enough, there's the fact that we've executed some folks and found out later that they weren't guilty of the crime we killed them for. It's kind of hard to undo stuff like that.
|