• tiredcapillary@iusearchlinux.fyi
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    9 months ago

    I bring up homelessness because its relatable to what ive seen personally and can see where rehabilitation can do the most good. To me, they arent too far from each other. It sucks seeing communities struggling with suffering, needles all over the place and what amounts to people looking like zombies in the street. It’s sad and ruins communities. In the link I attached there is a correlation between homelessness and drug use. Without proper treatment and intervention many will OD and their issues will go unresolved. I don’t understand what you mean by casual relationship. There clearly is a correlation from what I’ve read. Do you have any data to prove otherwise?

    I guess the crux of the issue is I just simply don’t think full legalization of all drugs is a good idea. Hard drugs are bad for the community at large you can take a look at these studies https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2018/05/30/as-fatal-overdoses-rise-many-americans-see-drug-addiction-as-a-major-problem-in-their-community/ If you have some links to studies I’ll gladly take a look at them that say otherwise.

    I like the idea of harm reduction but I think that’s one step of the larger approach of dealing with drug addiction.

    • 𝕯𝖎𝖕𝖘𝖍𝖎𝖙@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I bring up homelessness because its relatable to what ive seen personally and can see where rehabilitation can do the most good. To me, they arent too far from each other.

      These are your personal biases I’m talking about. If we’re going to take your own personal experience as a scientific study, it’s likely to have issues with selection bias and low sample size. You didn’t meet all the homeless people in these cities, and you were probably limited to seeing only only the homeless people in the areas where you live and / or work.

      It sucks seeing communities struggling with suffering, needles all over the place and what amounts to people looking like zombies in the street. It’s sad and ruins communities. In the link I attached there is a correlation between homelessness and drug use. Without proper treatment and intervention many will OD and their issues will go unresolved. I don’t understand what you mean by casual relationship.

      Causal, not casual. It refers to causation instead of correlation.

      When we look at two sets of data (e.g., homeless population over time and drug use over time) we can lay them over one another on a graph and if the lines somewhat match up, we can say they have a correlation with one another. The problem here is that simply having a correlation does not imply that one of those things caused the other thing to happen, that is, they do not nessecarily have a causal relationship to one another. I can take any two seemingly unrelated things and find they have a causal relationship (e.g., (off top of my head as an example, not saying these actually correlate): number of penguins and the number of mcdonalds in europe over time. To say that “we have more mcdonalds in europe because there are more penguins in the world” wouldn’t make much sense, but then you look on the graph and say “well, there is a correlation” yeah, but it doesn’t mean anything. I assume you are aruging this in good-faith but I’ll just say that bad-faith actors can take any two closely related things and also find correlations, and this trick works on people who don’t understand causation != correlation.

      10 real examples: https://science.howstuffworks.com/innovation/science-questions/10-correlations-that-are-not-causations.htm

      There clearly is a correlation from what I’ve read. Do you have any data to prove otherwise?

      There might be, but it doesn’t matter. Unless you can find a causal relationship between the two, we can’t say that one causes the other. At best we can say the numbers correlated with one another. There are many reasons for this - what else correlates? GDP? Unemployment? Mass layoffs? etc… One of those things might be causal, but we won’t know just by looking at how they correlate.

      As a reminder, the onus is on you to prove your claims. Correlation isn’t proof, for reasons I mentioned, and I can’t have to prove a negative just to make your lack of proof invalid. That which can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed.

      I guess the crux of the issue is I just simply don’t think full legalization of all drugs is a good idea. Hard drugs are bad for the community at large you can take a look at these studies

      What are hard drugs vs soft drugs?

      Are soft drugs legal and ones that do no harm? Drugs like alcohol which can kill you if you stop cold-turkey? Drugs like cigarettes which are proven to cause lung cancer?

      What makes a drug “hard”? When we’re talking about heroin, what is it about pure heroin that makes it “hard”? What about pure cocaine, which they used to put in sodapop? Are pure psychedelics which have no harm on the body “hard” drugs?

      I’ll tell you what makes a drug “hard”: it being illegal. Once again with correlation vs causation, these drugs are illegal because they are made illegal by congress not because they are more harmful to the user. Great example of this is cannabis being scheduled as a “hard” drug in there with heroin (the “classic” “hard” drug, from what hear non-drug users saying all the time). These drugs can cause massive harm because they are not pure and because garry down the street making who knows what in his bathtub doesn’t have a legal requirement to try to not kill you. The government doesn’t know garry makes these drugs, and can’t inspect how he makes them to ensure he’s making them pure.

      When weed became legal, many laws were focused on making sure that the consumers were getting pure weed, from cannabis plants, harvested and packaged in child-safe containers, with information tracking from seed to sale so that the supply chain can be inspected. This alone has done a lot to make pot healthier than whatever moldy product might be sold at whatever street corner on the underground market. The same goes for all other drugs.

      If you have some links to studies I’ll gladly take a look at them that say otherwise.

      I’m not going to read that study because it’s offtopic and I can gleam as much as I need to from the url alone. Most americans feel … implies a survey and ok let’s just give them the benefit of the doubt and say 100% of americans feel that homelessness causes drug use and drug use causes homelessness and everything. Great! 100% of americans polled can still be wrong on any given topic. I don’t think living next to a homeless person makes you an expert on homelessness in the same way as seeing a needle (or needles) on the street makes you an expert on drug use or econonmic policy.

      Is it hard to accept that most americans don’t want to be homeless but are forced to when they are pushed out of their home due to rising rents and lack of money to buy a home? That it’s a temporary enough condition sometimes that they just need a place until they can get back on their feet? That you live as a second class citizen as a homeless person because you can’t get access to things like a bank account due to not having a home address, so you get robbed, or you get raided by police in the night with your belongings left behind or trashed? That after days, weeks, months and years of trying to get back on your feet, maybe due to not being able to afford the medication that you need because you can’t afford COBRA because you lost your job caused you to try to self-medicate with meth just to try to deal with disability that you can’t even begin to ask the government for help for because you don’t have a mailing address.

      And then some guy walks in and starts talking about how big of a problem the homeless are. My guy, the homeless aren’t the problem. The homeless are a symptom of a problem.

      • tiredcapillary@iusearchlinux.fyi
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        9 months ago

        I think you’re misconstruing what I’m trying to say, however I think at this point the conversation isn’t getting anywhere.

        If you don’t want to take a look at any of the links ive given or provide decent studies to prove your point then I don’t think there’s a conversation to be had here. You clearly have your own biases that you don’t want to address. Agree to disagree.

        Ps: Here’s my first link if you change your mind. https://americanaddictioncenters.org/rehab-guide/homeless

        • 𝕯𝖎𝖕𝖘𝖍𝖎𝖙@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          I think you’re misconstruing what I’m trying to say, however I think at this point the conversation isn’t getting anywhere.

          I’m not misconstruing what you’re trying to say and I don’t appreciate the insuation that I am acting in bad-faith (by misconstruing something). If the conversation at this point isn’t getting anywhere, that’s a question you’ve got to first ask yourself, and secondly ask me if there’s anything I can clarify.

          Now, can we get back to the topic of decriminalizing / legalizing drugs? I don’t know why you keep talking about homelessness, unless you have nothing to say regarding the decriminalization of drugs. Again, you will need to prove that there’s a causal relationship between the two - something you won’t be able to do, because one doesn’t exist.

          If you don’t want to take a look at any of the links ive given or provide decent studies to prove your point then I don’t think there’s a conversation to be had here. You clearly have your own biases that you don’t want to address. Agree to disagree.

          The links you have provided are off-topic and while they may back up your own thoughts, that’s fine because your thoughts on this topic are wrong. Facts don’t care about your feelings, and right now, you got no facts to prove your case.

          Your first link is a biased resource from a drug rehabilitation facility. They are going to be pro-rehabilitation. This is akin to sending me a brochure and saying that it contains facts. If these are true facts, you wouldn’t need to resort to a link from americanaddictioncenters.org. Just like how you would be right to not view a link that I sent from a drug company about drug facts, or a study funded primarily by drug companies. It’s not that I’m not open to new ideas or challenging my ideas, I truly am and it’s very easy to change my mind on any given topic. But you must come correct with a decent resource.

          Your second link was from a reputable source but it was based on a survey on the opinions of people who’s only experience is living within proximity to homelessness. Can you see how that’s a problem just by itself? I mean, I’m assuming that propublican isn’t burying the lede here and would instead come right out and say “x causes y” if they knew it. But that’s not the scope of this study (as we can tell from the title alone). Who cares what these people think when it comes to the subject of if we should decriminalize drugs? They weren’t asked that, they were asked about their feelings about living next to users who were irresponsible with their parapenalia. It’s off topic to this discussion at best and intentional bad-faith arguing on your part at worst. I’m giving you the benefit of the doubt here, though. I assume you are acting in good faith.

          It’s also telling if you can only just send the same 2 links back at me, after I’ve told you that they are off-topic. There is so much more data out there. I’m at work right now so I’m not spending a lot of time to respond. I’m not not sending you links to support my argument because they don’t exist. If that’s what you truly want, give me some time and I’ll give you a reading list.

          This all comes down to you and your motivations. Want to understand more about how to actually help these people while avoiding paying high taxes on a program which doesn’t work? Let’s keep talking. If on the other hand you only want to try to disprove what I’m saying, well… let’s keep talking but you need to give me some better sources - ones which are at least relevant to what we are discussing.