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by carlosjobim
1160 days ago
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I think the most sensible comparison is with damaging drugs that are addictive and the drug dealers. These drugs exist and cannot be unmade. Things such as crack cocaine, heroin, fentanyl, or worse drugs. That doesn't mean we should accept or applaud the drug dealers pushing these drugs onto people. Because they are systematically seeking out young people from broken homes, people lacking in self control, or people who are in other ways weak and easy prey for these life-destroying substances. The software made by OP might be inevitable, but compiling and publishing it to an app store and making it easy for people to use is extremely unethical. In OPs case, this is a business (worth a couple million dollars right now) that is looking to prey on lonely and socially isolated people. I find it completely despicable to exploit your fellow human beings in this manner. |
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Having experienced family members heavily under the influence of these destructive forces has led me to the believe (biased, as my belief is) that the drugs are medication for users seeking help. Clearly a bad form of medication, but nonetheless the abuse is self medicated in my view. So my view of solutions here is not about prohibition, because my family still acquired them, but that of robust solutions to what put people in the state to self medicate to begin with.
Likewise i wonder if people are so easily wrecked by a bot that is merely nice, is there something better we should be doing than prohibition? Is this a form of self medication to our modern lifestyle?
The best answers are of course complex. But my family was destroyed so i'm biased in believing that prohibition is not doing nearly enough. Especially when it feels like with prohibition in place we seem to rely entirely on prohibition.
I get that your argument is not about prohibition, but rather weaponizing distribution. A comparison could be the difference between legalizing these drugs vs putting them in the checkout aisle of supermarkets. I get that. However i'm clearly biased against believing that slowing down the access is not an answer. Facing the problem and the doing all we can to seek out the root cause for why medication is taking place is all i seem capable of agreeing with. As difficult as that may be.