Last time I'll get on my hobby horse for this one, I promise
Scarfman said:
It only ruins your life if it is already in ruins.
Zigackly. Drugs don't alter your personality, even if they temporarily alter your mind. There are many, MANY people in leading professional careers who are regular or casual users of marijuana, ectasy, heroin, and cocaine. I've got friends who do E regularly and they're perfectly "normal" on the street. There are other types who will find a way to fuck themselves up no matter what poison is available - watch the junkies trying to get clean on methadone (contradiction in terms if ever there was one) at your local clinic; my wife worked at Prince of Wales here in Sydney and there were a lot of very wound up people coming back regularly for methadone and some of them simply never want to recover. Some of them jones to the point of violence long before they get their regulated hit.
The most common type of addict is the one who wants to be a victim all their life and have something or someone else to blame except themselves (a trait also very common in alcoholics).
rugbywhisperer said:
So for heron to not affect anyone, lets ask those whose homes are burgled in order for the junkie to maintain the habit, the petty crime that goes into fundig the whole thing.
...
I have however had 2 cars stolen by drugies, my son had an attempted car jackng by a druggie, my home was burgled twice by junkies so really I do NOT see the harmless face of it.
All those cases come back to the price of drugs - if the government flooded the market which cheap, clean drugs that put the criminals out of business, people could afford to get a reasonably priced high on a substance that is less likely to kill them or the people around them. We hear about the stories of 14yo girls collapsing at parties because they got some dirty E - if that girl had gotten a regulated dose of the drug, she'd be far less at risk.
Its the criminal supply chain that is the real damaging force here - they try to maximise profits and don't care whose life they put at risk. When I was working in health about 10 years ago, several trials in Europe (including moderate supply plans and shooting galleries) provided positive evidence that decriminalising certain hard drugs increased survival and decreased criminal activity associated with addiction. It also lowered the cost of social work associated with drugs and the huge cost of policing drugs. Other crimes got more police time and as a result the community was actually a better place to live.
Sometimes we just concentrate on the wrong things and lose sight of the big picture - people will find a way to do the shit they want so you might as well let them. As the Alcohol Prohibition in North America during the early 20th century showed, all you do is drive it underground, make it more expensive, and spend a shitload of money trying to stop it that could go elsewhere.