CarlP wrote:
I would just like to add my support to Rioman's view here. Prohibition doesn't work. It has been proven not to work, and we have all sorts of case studies that show it doesn't work, yet we still insist on pushing ahead with that when it comes to certain narcotics.
Taking drugs is a consensual act - there should be no consensual crimes, they just aren't the sort of thing anyone interested in Human Rights should be pushing for. Outlawing drugs is as ridiculous as outlawing gambling, because it has a seedier underside.
Carl - the problem lies in fact that these drugs alter the mind - and you get addicted very, very quickly.
We can legalise - but all colours of government will hike up the tax on the substances to deter use. They do it with our derv and petrol to try to curb useage. Does not work in this case as most of us rely on cars for a practical purpose. Drug taking is not really for a practical purpose...is it?
I do not need to take drugs to get a life or a high or "escape" from a hum drum life. Guess I am lucky in that respect... always been assertive and confident enough not to have to rely on a substance to induce this in me.
Realise this insecurity and feeling of "unwantedness" may be an underlying reason for some to dabble. Some just may wish to experience the general high elan they perceive it to give.... and perhaps it gives an ephemeral blast which they wish to experience again. But this is really short lived - isn't it? As the body changes with the addiction - it spirals downwards into depression - and they overdose at this point in all probability.
Much more to this than "nannying" or "personal freedom". What personal freedom? They appear to be imprisoning themselves in a viscious circle of fix, high, low, fix.... Carl.. that's not really living a life.. surely...
Carl wrote:
The reason most drugs are so dangerous and surrounded by a crime culture is because of prohibition, not in spite of it. Just look at the US when alcohol was outlawed; organised crime went through the roof, and many thousands of people dropped dead or were permanently afflicted thanks to bootleg liquor. The parallel is clear, yet often ignored.
Alcohol in excess can be just as deadly as a Class A drug - and it can drastically change a personality. I got the bruises to prove it ... on endless weekends in the past. If they are high on other substances as well - they are completely out of their minds - and totally out of control. I got the scars from these in the past....
The guy who pulled knife on me on a routine pull some years ago... drug dealer.
But ... we legalise - tax high ... these thugs will undercut and sell cheap and still retain profit margin as result. Difference being - more customers as it's legal.
We could -as mentioned - prescribe on NHS...but even then...supplies would be limited and an addict's appetite will grow. Where wil they get fresh supplies from ... black market dealers... who will charge same high prices and crimes will still be committed to fund.
Carl - that's the real picture and what I will be expected to deal with and protect public from.
I hate some of the laws I am forced by nature of my job to enforce - but drugs ones - I have no qualms about. Saw what those pain killers did to Wildy that time and am more than aware of their problem with the adopted child - if he's ill - they have a problem with how he can be treated. Fortunately - she's a drugs specialist...
Carl wrote:
There have even been social experiments in the UK where drugs were legalised with spectacularly good results, but these trials were then canned, mostly because of deeply entrenched views, as seen in this thread:
Quote:
There are equally impressive results from similar projects in Holland and Luxembourg and Naples and, also, in Britain. In Liverpool, during the early 1990s, Dr John Marks used a special Home Office licence to prescribe heroin to addicts. Police reported a 96% reduction in acquisitive crime among a group of addict patients. Deaths from locally acquired HIV infection and drug-related overdoses fell to zero. But, under intense pressure from the government, the project was closed down. In its 10 years' work, not one of its patients had died. In the first two years after it was closed, 41 died.
From:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/drugs/Story/0 ... 59,00.htmlSwiss have a Needle Park in Zurich, Bern, Basel. They found crime dropped initially - but it's back up again. They still have to buy the drugs.
But it depends on how much we can afford to prescribe. NHS budgets - like police and education budgets - are tight. People will rightly wish to know why heroin is offered on prescription. The addiction is of their own making. People of Liverpool probably objected - especially when they found they were denied other medicines for non-self-inflicted ailments.
Carl - that's the way of the world. People objected because they saw this heroin prescription as being reason why they were denied precriptive drugs for genuine ailments.
But perhaps .. towards the end crime was creeping up because more wants more and what do you do if you used up your prescribed entitlement? Suspect this was the case looking back at Merseyside's actual crime figures as recorded in Police Data files - raw, rough and ready horse'mouth sources....
Carl wrote:
I'm surprised at the views of some people in this thread, especially considering their stance on other matters. We should be pushing for education about drug use,
Exactly - but some of our teachers do not know enough themselves and there are very few caring Swiss felines around

who will offer expert knowledge to schools in locality
Carl wrote:
and looking at supplying clean supplies to those who most need it, instead of pushing them down dark alleys to deal with people who care not a jot about the users health,
Not really worked in Switzerland. Once they use up clean stuff - they seek more at high price. More will induce craving for more.
Carl wrote:
and far more about what crap they can cut their gear with to make the most profit. No-one is suggesting that cocaine is available from your local newsagents, but those who want to take it, will take it, so providing a clean, controlled supply seems to make perfect sense to me.
But.. as said...we still have problem as to what they will do once they have used up their allowance of clean substance. And do no deceive yourself that a government will not tax high. They will to cover potential NHS costs treating the overdoses and neurological diseases which would follow.
Either that - or we all get lumbered with a tax hike to cover this potential minefield of spiralling health costs.
Keeping it illegal with threat and stigma of criminal record can deter a good many from temptation.
Carl wrote:
I strongly recommend reading the Guardian article I linked to though, it's pretty much in line with my stance and makes its point far more eloquantly than I ever could.

Lentils.....
It needs a lot of thinking through and risk assessments so far point to this being

on costs and other ensuing dangers as mentioned above.
Carl wrote:
Oh, and I'm not someone who comes from a background of having tried anything and everything - I smoke the odd joint socially, and have tried mushrooms (which are completely legal at present, and sold all over the shop, yet despite what is implied in this thread, we don't have a nation of insane lunatics running around commiting their crimes whilst off their head on them), but outside of that, I'm not bothered. I'm just very much of the opinion that you should be able to do whatever you want to your own body, should you so choose.
Carl... you are not a BiB. You do not know what I really deal with here.
It is not a question of "it's my body and I can do what I like to it". It's a question of how that substance affects that person and ultimately his immediate society and environment. I have seen results of addict "going off on one" when he cannot get a fix.
Legalisation could lead to more trying out these drugs. Prescriptions would be limited and they would turn to dealers to get more just the same.
Agree - we need beter education as to the dangers and we need to find out why these people turn to taking these substances so that we can at least help persuade them not to try it out in the first place.
It really is a miserable life and a form of imprisonment to be dependent and addicted to these drugs.