|
|
|
|
|
by pandaman
3214 days ago
|
|
Drug use is not a crime in general (there could be some circumstances making it one, I am not a lawyer, but let's take some legal drugs, like alcohol). Rehab is a health institution, people go there voluntarily and on their own dime all the time. In the USSR people suffering from alcoholism (a health condition, addiction to alcohol) were sent to rehab involuntarily. Do you think this is possible only under a dictature and the people of the US won't ever support such a measure? Before you reply, I'd like you to consider that people of the US had banned alcohol in the Constitution at one point, not so far in the past. |
|
Yes and dissenters were sent to labor camps involuntarily... I don't know why we are talking about a communist dictatorship here when we are discussing what would/can take place in a liberal democracy. The difference between a liberal democracy and a state that isn't, is that all measures that limit personal freedoms (such as mandatory basic education or whatever it might be) is subject to a democratic process.
> I'd like you to consider that people of the US had banned alcohol in the Constitution at one point, not so far in the past.
I don't consider it impossible that alcohol would be considered illegal in 50 or 100 years in the US. But I do find it very unlikely that some kind of forced treatment would be imposed on someone for an addiction that is not illegal in, in any country that is supposedly a liberal democracy. In fact - I'd probably hesitate to even consider that state a liberal democracy then, and the whole issue disappears (because as I explained above - we are only talking about liberal democracies here, and a US where people are sent to forced rehab without doing something illegal would not be a liberal democracy anymore)
So to be very clear: please don't go to the slipperly slope argument to suggest that public and universal healthcare in a democracy somehow ends up in involuntary treatment of law abiding citizens (Again vaccination possibly excepted).