on DNA formation on cells of vital organs to the induction by THC of .
cellular apoptosis. Apoptosis is the key mechanism programmed by the .
genetic code, which regulates the life of a cell as well as its subsequent .
death. Apoptosis has been described as the programmed cell death, or .
suicide, of all mammalian cells." (Paragraph 3-4) then he ads: "Alcohol does .
not produce apoptosis, neither does nicotine" (Paragraph 6).
Legalizing drug followers argue that taking drugs is an individual .
choice, and one is only harming him self, no one else. I read in an article .
once about flashbacks from LSD, LSD can cause flashbacks years after .
taking the drug, at any time. What if the person that took this LSD drug is .
Tom, Tom is driving a bus full of kids to school, no Tom is a pilot flying a .
plane full of passengers, and no Tom is a doctor performing a surgery. What .
tom was before taking LSD does not matter any more, because from that .
minute on he is unpredictable and unreliable. One owes his country too .
much, it is a debt that can never be repaid, just like mothers and fathers to a .
child, a country is to a citizen. .
People argue that legalizing drugs will lead to less government, but .
they miss the point that drugs will be regulated by the government people .
themselves, if drugs are ever to be legalized.
Others argue that the drug on war is not working and that we need to .
try something else. Well I think that Ron M. Lewenberg said it all when she .
wrote: "The drug war is long and difficult and sometimes seems hopeless .
but we shouldn't just give up. As William Bennet, a strong fighter in the .
drug war states, "Imagine if, in the darkest days of 1940, Winston Churchill .
had rallied the West by saying, 'This war looks hopeless, and besides, it .
costs too much. Hitler can't be THAT bad. Let's surrender and see what .
happens.'" This is essentially what legalizers suggest. With all the other .
problems we face, it seems absurd to legalize something that in turn could .