I'll make it really simple again.
You make absolutely no sense here. This is babble from an angry man (boy?). The line of questioning by the D-VA senator was clearly a red herring attempt to put a band aid on the President for saying stupid shit. He knew full well he was sound biting based on specific legal interpretations. You are niave.
The only thing that will break your love affair with the WOD, other than demographic change, would of course be assett Forfeiture, may it continue until sense finally reigns. 800K arrest a year for something less harmful by an order of magnitude than alcohol.
Here try this on your attempted thesis, it is what your President really thinks:
An ONDCP analysis of 2009 data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA) Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS) census, which shows that roughly one in four (23 percent) of fatally injured drivers who tested positive for drugs were under the age of 25. Additionally, based on data from 2005 to 2009, almost half (42 percent) of fatally injured drivers who tested positive for marijuana were under the age of 25.
The Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS), a census of fatal motor vehicle traffic crashes in the United States, contains a number of variables to describe drug involvement for those in fatal crashes. Overall, 3,952 fatally injured drivers tested positive for drug involvement in 2009.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/ondcp/drugged-driving
Data for 2011 show that alcohol-impaired driving fatalities (fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a blood alcohol concentration of .08 grams per deciliter or greater) declined 2.5% from 10,136 alcohol-impaired driving deaths in 2010 to 9,878 such deaths in 2011. Alcohol-impaired fatalities represented 31% of the total driving fatalities in 2011 (2011 Motor Vehicle Crashes: Overview, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 2013). Data from 2009 show that 3,952 fatally injured drivers tested positive for drug involvement. This number represents 18% of all fatally injured drivers and 33% of those with known drug test results in 2009. Note: interpretation of these data must be done with caution (Drug Involvement of Fatally Injured Drivers, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 2011).
https://www.ncjrs.gov/impaireddriving/
You are throwing random stones hoping to hit something.
Here is my SIMPLE list again, as it seems you have missed it over and over and over and...
1. I do not support police states.
2. I do not like the "WOD". But I do not currently have or see a better answer.
3. I think drugs are bad. Some will kill you , some will just ruin your life. All at the expense of others (which is a crime, just like stealing)
4. Our society can not afford more government spending to support life dodger's attempts to exist without contributing. Legalizing drugs would open up another layer of expense and resource expenditures to the contributors, and in addition the extreme potential for increasing expense and resource costs as time goes on and drug use becomes "acceptable" instead of now where it resides, "unacceptable".
By the way, if you bother to look it up (which I doubt), you would find the drug related traffic incidents are on the rise. The reason being two fold, one they are now tracking it, two it is becoming more acceptable in the minds of the young as they buy into pro-drug campaigning. It would be fair to atrribute each of these fatalities that had pot involved as a pot related death. But you don't want to do that because it goes against the 'narrative' you have bought into. Pot is safe, drugs are safe, nobody dies, victimless crime...
When your family gets wiped out by a high driver, are you going to change your opinion?
After alcohol, THC (delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol), the active ingredient in marijuana, is the substance most commonly found in the blood of impaired drivers, fatally injured drivers, and motor vehicle crash victims. Studies in several localities have found that approximately 4 to 14 percent of drivers who sustained injury or died in traffic accidents tested positive for THC.
A study of over 3,000 fatally injured drivers in Australia showed that when THC was present in the blood of the driver, he or she was much more likely to be at fault for the accident. Additionally, the higher the THC concentration, the more likely the driver was to be culpable.
Other drugs commonly implicated in accidents include opiates, amphetamines, benzodiazepines, and cocaine. For instance, in a 2003 study of seriously injured drivers admitted to a Maryland shock trauma center, drugs other than alcohol were present in more than half of the cases. These included marijuana (26.9 percent), cocaine (11.6 percent), benzodiazepines (11.2 percent), and opiates and other prescription drugs (10.2 percent). A quarter of the cases involved both alcohol and other drugs.
http://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/d ... ed-driving
The development of atomic power, though it could confer unimaginable blessings on mankind, is something that is dreaded by the owners of coal mines and oil wells. (Hazlitt)
What I want to do is to look up C. . . . I call him the Forgotten Man. (Sumner)