tweakabelle
Posts: 7522
Joined: 10/16/2007 From: Sydney Australia Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Politesub53 quote:
ORIGINAL: tweakabelle After over half a century of the war on drugs, illegal drugs are more freely available, more popular and cheaper than ever. The numbers of addicts seems to be increasing slowly while the number of deaths due to the illegal nature of the business is far higher than ever. And 'victory' in the war on drugs (whatever that might be) is as elusive and distant as ever. So please tell me what the many billions expended, the lives wasted, the tens of thousands imprisoned in the futile war on drugs have achieved, apart from enriching the gangsters who run the cartels. The answer appears to be nothing at all. So are you suggesting all drugs should be legal ? I see that as the road to misery. It seems to me that prohibition is most of the problem, just as it was with alcohol in the US when Prohibition was enforced there. There is a variety of alternative models ranging from medically supervised distribution to complete deregulation. It ought to be clear by now that treating drug use as a legal issue, a law enforcement issue produces negative outcomes. At a very minimum, we ought to regard drug use and addiction as health issues, not moral or legal issues. There is simply no reason to assume that decriminalisation is a "road to misery". If you study the results of the Portuguese decriminalisation strategy, you will find that your fears are without a basis in reality. The road to misery is the status quo, which is a complete failure as a deterrent strategy, merely serving to enrich the gangsters who control the cartels, at an enormous cost in human life, money and misery.
< Message edited by tweakabelle -- 5/4/2015 2:10:49 AM >
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