tommyIRISH23
Well-known member
- Messages
- 1,629
- Reaction score
- 156
I appreciate your perspective and thank you for a reasoned counterpoint. Sadly these discussions usually quickly devolve. As to your points one and three, don't you think that many of the factors that drive these issues have actually been created by the War on Drugs?
As to point one, if drugs were legalized they would be taken out of the black market and distributed by a legitimate store/entity. Violence created over corners would be pointless, at least in regards to drug turf. Turf wars would thus be more akin to CVS vs. Duane Reed.
As to point three, I think that a system that devoted its resources towards education and rehabilitation would be more successful than punitive measures, in particular with respect to drug users. I think that locking up drug users is probably counter-productive in that it criminalizes a serious health issue, which is of course on them...It is their fault that they went down that road. Nonetheless, just locking up a drug addict merely puts them into an environment that is not at all conducive to their recovery from addiction.
No problem. I appreciate the civil discussion. To your point about these issues being created by the war on drugs. First, the inner city violence May or may not decline. Probably would in my opinion. But the drug dealers would just move on to the next racket. Where's there's poverty there will be violence. Now, legalizing drugs (not marijuana) like heroin would not stop the cursed course these poor souls and their families go through. Look at the cause/effect of legalizing heroin and cocaine. Opiates in particular are highly addictive. If heroin were available at cvs and accessible; the addictive nature of the drug would take harmless adolescent experimentation and turn it into a life destroying "illness". Heroin addicts can't hold jobs not bc the drugs illegal but bc of what the drug does to someone. An example is prescription painkiller which are supposedly "regulated" and legal. Prescription painkillers have caused an explosion in heroin addiction spanning to socioeconomic spectrum. No moral person who understands heroin addiction from experience can argue that it should be legal. Trying it 2-3-4 times will ruin your life.
Your last point about the system. I can't really comment on any state outside of mine but the new trend in nj where I live is rehab for addicts. They'll get a few chances to voluntarily go or go on court order while still living in the community but when they screw up they'll get incarceration where they'll be medicated, counseled, and hopefully recovered. Everyone says "treat it" or medicalize drug addiction but the problem is that most ppl don't understand is that there's no cure. There's no sure-fire way to treat addiction and some ppl just can't overcome the need to use. It's not as simple as throwing money and research at the problem and trusting everything will be ok. Some say addiction is a disease and it should be treated that way....we'll cancer patients don't steal from their families, neglect their kids and rob ppl to go buy more cancer to inject into their bodies. It's a total different anima. Ask any heroin addict or their family about how much resources have been expensed on their recovery only to fail. It's not lack of resources but rather lack of science.