| > 'altering your conciousness' can directly harm the people around you and they have the right to not be harmed by your personal choices. I stated clearly "As long as it(drug use) does not hurt others through the production or the consumption or harm the environment". > However, there needs to be limits. I should be able to fire someone that is high on the job, for instance. Driving a motor vehicle while under the influence should also be illegal. If you are the employer, you should absolutely have the right to fire someone for being under the influence during their hours of employment. Driving is the same -- you're putting other people at risk. Not acceptable. > Should the government continue to pour tons of money into allowing you to kill yourself with drugs? The government pours tons of money into fighting the wrong fight at the moment, they're treating the symptom, not the problem. They're inflating law enforcement budgets and eroding our rights every which way to "fight" this battle. I say if they could take that exact same amount of money they're using to "fight" this battle and put it towards healthcare and treatment, then yeah, they should pour tons of money into it. Our current solution isn't working. > You never mention firearms, which is another primary business on the dark web. Are you also fine with anyone being able to buy a weapon at any time? I'm not talking at all about firearms. I'm naive in the sense that I dream about a world without them but I recognize they can be useful tools in certain situations. |
But... It does. We know that it does. There are classes of drugs which don't lend themselves to responsible use. That problem will remain, and you'll still have the junkies stealing to get high, regardless of where they spend that money. These drugs have a negative societal impact, of course exacerbated by the fact that using them turns you into a criminal.
I don't know that e.g. unfettered access to heroin is a good thing. I do know that treatment instead of jail is a good thing.