RJM62
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2007
- Messages
- 13,157
- Location
- Upstate New York
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Geek on the Hill
No Joy, just to clarify...
I often agree with you, although I think you're a wee bit dogmatic and strident in your positions. But on this issue... I've just seen too much drug-related suffering, despite a century of the approach you advocate, to believe it's anything but a colossal failure that has exacerbated the very problem it sought to address.
Strengthening and toughening a failed approach isn't the answer, in my opinion. Getting the cops and the DEA out of the system altogether and allowing a more enlightened, compassionate approach would be much better. I would feel better with doctors and pharmacists running the show. Done properly, such a system could actually reduce drug abuse.
Let's suppose, for example, that as a provision of obtaining a weekly or monthly prescription for a fix (consisting of sequential doses to be dispensed daily), an addict were required to consult with a CASAC. The decision would still be the addict's, but at least they would have to have contact with someone who specializes in getting people off drugs. Maybe most would decline the opportunity, but surely some would accept it.
In the meantime, even for those who decline treatment, at least what they'd be using would be known-quality, unadulterated, uncontaminated product. They also wouldn't have to whore themselves or commit violent crimes to obtain their fixes because the actual cost of most drugs of abuse are trivial once the inflation due to illegality is removed from the equation.
What you advocate is more of the same approach that's failed for a whole century. Please explain to me why a more intensified application of a failed policy should work any better than it has for the past hundred years, because every previous attempt to toughen up the Harrison Act has resulted in a new period of prosperity for the illegal drug industry.
Thanks.
-Rich
I often agree with you, although I think you're a wee bit dogmatic and strident in your positions. But on this issue... I've just seen too much drug-related suffering, despite a century of the approach you advocate, to believe it's anything but a colossal failure that has exacerbated the very problem it sought to address.
Strengthening and toughening a failed approach isn't the answer, in my opinion. Getting the cops and the DEA out of the system altogether and allowing a more enlightened, compassionate approach would be much better. I would feel better with doctors and pharmacists running the show. Done properly, such a system could actually reduce drug abuse.
Let's suppose, for example, that as a provision of obtaining a weekly or monthly prescription for a fix (consisting of sequential doses to be dispensed daily), an addict were required to consult with a CASAC. The decision would still be the addict's, but at least they would have to have contact with someone who specializes in getting people off drugs. Maybe most would decline the opportunity, but surely some would accept it.
In the meantime, even for those who decline treatment, at least what they'd be using would be known-quality, unadulterated, uncontaminated product. They also wouldn't have to whore themselves or commit violent crimes to obtain their fixes because the actual cost of most drugs of abuse are trivial once the inflation due to illegality is removed from the equation.
What you advocate is more of the same approach that's failed for a whole century. Please explain to me why a more intensified application of a failed policy should work any better than it has for the past hundred years, because every previous attempt to toughen up the Harrison Act has resulted in a new period of prosperity for the illegal drug industry.
Thanks.
-Rich