I posted this as part of another thread but thought it deserved one of its own.
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People using these substances are ADDICTS not criminals.
Continuing to lock them in prison does not fix the problem. It is both costly AND totally ineffective as a means to combat consumption of these drugs.
If we were to legalize these now prohibited substances and make it available with a doctor's prescription (with an eye to getting them off) it would go a long way to reorienting our society's paradigm toward the addiction as a disease model and away from addict as weak, immoral, criminal.
Keeping these substances illegal does three things:
1) It creates the previously mentioned black market which drives international crime.
2) It drives the cost of the drug up for people with addictive disease. That drives street level crime (violent and property). Addicts will steal, murder etc, to get what their body demands. They are not in control of these behaviors.
and
3)It forces addicts to seek drugs on the street of questionable source and quality contributing to overdose deaths.
Continued prohibition has proven totally ineffective at curbing the consumption of these substances, it has merely changes the economics of the situation. Prohibition makes a regulate-able and taxable social problem into an out of control bonanza for the "evil doers". It threatens at the individual level (drug crime) and the macro level(terrorism, international drug smuggling).
Legalization would allow government control of the production of these sources. It could be taxed to support drug treatment. And it immediately takes the black incentives out of the situation that fuel our worst enemies from street gangs (recently highlighted by Bush in the SOTU) to Pablo Escobar to Bin Laden. We can end the importation of these substances overnight.
Prohibition has never worked it takes a bad problem and makes it worse. That is why we need to legalize.
That being said do you have a good reason why they SHOULD be treated as contraband?
DA
http://www.seedsofdoubt.com/distressedamerican/main.htm