dcbwhaley wrote:
Mad Moggie wrote:
dcbwhaley wrote:
But a shame to loose one of the few senior police officers who has a sensible attitude to recreational drugs.

Since when has heroin .. cocaine.. smack.. cannabis been "recreational"?
Since man first experimented with them. But whatever your view on these drugs the fact is that making them illegal has had disastrous consequences for law and order. When people want something badly enough they will get it and if they cannot get it legally criminals will meet the lack. Much of the crime in this country is down to drugs.
Swiss legalised them.. even Wildy voted "yes" on the basis that only registered addicts would be prescribed and gradually weaned off.
This does not mean crimes do not occur as the barons and crooks will still use the drugs to lure the kids into being their "stooges" or "go-fors"
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Legalising the sale of recreational drugs, through government controlled outlets would wipe out all that crime; it would be a useful source of taxation; and it would ensure that drugs were not adulterated.
Not happened in Switzerland - check out Google News on arrests for pushing/traficking. Despite it being legal so long as as Swiss national and a registered addict.

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The Volstead act in 1930's USA should be a sufficient lesson of the perils of trying to prohibit drugs.
Life;s criminals will find another crime.. they already have by all accounts

from reading the papers ..
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They do not add much to life's experience other than ultimately destroy lives as much if not more than a car crash does.
It is quite possible to use drugs such as cannabis, ecstasy and cocaine responsibly with no more harm than that of moderate alcohol consumption.
No it is not and why the U-turn on cannabis in particular.
These drugs have a greater pull than moderate alcohol consumption. Alcoholism is a different issue. We have one adopted child who originally came to us a foster baby.
He was born addicted to heroin. We spent more sleepless nights with him than with the twins who fall asleep around 11 pm and sleep through till 6 -9 am dependent on "mood.".
Wildy herself became way too dependent on some very strong morphine based pain killers after the serious accident. Weaning her off them was pure hell to go through.
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And it is equally easy to destroy ones life with the injudicious use of alcohol. But whether one takes that risk should be for the individual adult to decide.
No. We have recommended higher taxes etc on booze and even upping age of imbibing to age 21 .. along with better education - stating that getting so drunk you cannot recall living the "high life" is "zero life experience". High life jinx mean Living with full speedy memorable zest as well as pith
Personally . our own have grown up seeing wine drunk with Sunday Roast. They see it as "normal to have one glass with a meal".
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To paraphrase one of our antipodean posters - "prohibition should be prohibited"

Depends on the prohibition. Swiss appear to have it about right.. legal if registered addict and offered on prescription only to these users. You cannot go to the GP and ask to try it . as that is prohibited. But it does not cut the crime all the same. Swiss are finding that those they are weaning off with turn to crime to get the increased dose to top up prescibed and controlled dose all the same.. per some press articles Wildy has been spitting her milk and cookies over.
PS yimitier . I think we already chatted about this before in Chat. Cannot recall the poster concerned .. but we got along fine and he saw things from my side as a medic and father trying to steer his kids away from drugs and excess drinking habits (appear to be successul with the eldest three so far .. but we have younger ones to educate to similar ethic.) I would not like to see my kids revolve their lives around cravings.. (cars are different of course

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