I agree that drugs should be at least decriminalized, if not legalized.
Which
drugs?
Cocaine is legal, in limited cases, when a doctor perscribes it, eh?
I am tired of the imprecision in this element of the public discussion. (Not your fault at all, ELGS, but your post is what got me triggered). I note that you jumped to pot almosts immediately. The environment for this dialogue is, IMO, toxic, and loaded with both memes and assumptions that detract from rational input to policy change.
The number of recreational and abused drugs is long and distinguished. Some are prescription drugs that aren't per se illegal, but ought to be limited in application under a doctor's orders. Others, like acid or ecstasy, have little to no medical application. Ice has no medical application.
"Drugs" isn't pot, yet funnily enough, any and all other drugs are offered the fig leaf of innocence that pot presents when a conversational leap like the one you made is taken. (NOt your fault, this is a pattern I've noticed for decades).
This line of thinking is either deliberately dishonest, or just a bit careless, but IMO is a weak approach to take. It is bad enough that the "War on Drugs" uses such imprecision as its flawed premise. The forces for policy change ought not be so careless, nor so imprecise.
Crack, meth, ice, cocaine, speed, ludes: each is far different in influence and side effect than pot. Heroin as well. Let's not lump pot in with cocaine, for example. There is a kinetic reasoning behind my rant here: a stoner tends to be low energy with a bit more dope, whereas a coke snorter tends to become more energized, albeit in random directions. Each presents a different risk to fellow citizens, if any. The risk mitigation strategy, or policy, needs to take that into account.
LSD, DMT, ecstasy.
Again, different effects and different side effects.
I thus ask, vainly no doubt, for a bit more precision in framing the discussion.
Drugs does not equal pot. Pot is a very small subset of drugs. That pot is used, over used, and abused as a
symbol of what is wrong with drug laws is itself what is wrong with the attempts to deal with, and change, the flawed policy of "War On Drugs."
ETA: also, what quarky said. (Missed it the first time through page 2).
DR