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by mheiler
4249 days ago
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Making drugs legally available in pharmacies would lead to:
(1) organised crime looses a large chunk of its business,
(2) no need for dealers to advertise to new users, they won't get the business anyways,
(3) drugs would have medical-grade quality control and likely be cheaper than on the black market,
(4) drugs can be taxed and this money can go into prevention and medical care,
(5) users are less likely to need to commit crimes to support their habit,
(6) resources in law enforcement get freed for other things. The ethical question is if drug use would go up and thus a legalise-drugs policy would be guilty of leading people down a bad and potentially deadly path. If the article is right that won't be so. |
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Historically it's worth remembering that governments are notorious for drug dealing.
Iran-Contra is the poster-child in the US (see also Gary Webb) but I'm not sure how many people know that the British Empire had significant funding from state-sanctioned narco-terrorism. See the history of the opium wars for details.
Some people claim the links are still there today. It may or may not be a coincidence that imports of Afghan opium increased after the US/UK invasion. The usual justification is that local warlords make most of their money from opium sales, and the West has to accept that if it wants to keep them on as mercenaries and political allies.
Bottom line is that prohibition doesn't seem to be applied consistently at nation-state level.
Meanwhile at US state level, prohibition brings obvious financial benefits to owners of privatised jails.
So given the history, I find it difficult to be anything but cynical about the supposedly moral basis for prohibition.
Clearly psychoactives are far less corrosive socially than - say - alcohol. But recommendations for rational scientific management of addictions are routinely ignored in favour of juvenile rhetoric about 'tough' action in public, and - not impossibly - profit in private.