I'm jumping in here because I've had many of the same thoughts Mastiff has. I too am unsure and skeptical of "End the War on Drugs" policy.
Okay, so many of you have said that it will now be the States function.
Scenario 1:
I don't see many States legalizing cocaine and meth. So how will this change who is criminalized? And how will it change the blackmarket dealers? There wouldn't be much change would there?
Scenario 2:
Let's say that the States do legalize all drug use and leave it up to individuals. What will that society be like? Hard and harmful drugs will still be in demand. Who will supply them? Will it be like cigarrettes in that you have to be over 18 to purchase cocaine at Walgreens?
Do you think drug abuse and deaths would go up or down?
What do you think will be the impact on overall use and consequences?
I DO think that the "illegality" of drug use is a deterrent for some, not all, but some. If it was now "legal", would more kids be in danger?
Forgive Mastiff and I here. We are so far from a pure "free" society, that it is a hard concept to put your head around. Please paint a complete picture for us.
(I’m going to try to keep this short, but I probably won’t succeed--hopefully I’ll at least be kinda clear...I have to type fast because I have to go to class soon.)
I really think that
hard drugs would be less of a problem if it weren’t for the federal war on drugs.
The government's anti-drug propaganda has tried to convince us that marijuana is a "gate-way" drug. That people who smoke weed will soon want "something stronger," so they move to shrooms or acid, then to coke and pills, then they start injecting coke and heroin. --That's the evolution of the drug user.
But that's completely misleading.
I know from experience that the "gateway drug" myth is false (if anything, it's a self-fulfilling prophesy). The reason people "want to try something stronger" is because they're often exposed to hard drugs as a direct result of the drug war.
The problem is that we have to get cannabis from "drug dealers." Usually dealers just start out selling weed, too, but larger profits are big temptations, and once you've started doing one illegal thing, it's easier to do more of the same. So the incentive is high for drug dealers to sell multiple drugs (marijuana, then some pills, then they get a hook-up for Lucy or mushrooms, then better pills, then maybe a little coke here-and-there, then a little more, etc. etc.). Often the dealers themselves start struggling with addictions, and end up dealing just to keep up their habits.
It's a horrible, tragic scenario, and it happens far too often (especially in "cool," "tough guy," college kids who get a little too carried away).
So what often ends up happening is that the dealer has access to really good, reasonably priced weed, and he has and attracts a lot of customers who are only interested in that. But more and more people start hanging out with the main dealer because he's "fun" and likes to "party and have a good time" (so basically, the dealer no longer has any, or at least many,
real friends, because everyone just basically uses him).
So when he sells weed to the nice, friendly, "cool" cannabis smokers, he tries to get them to "hang out and have a good time--just relax."
And if the guys who just want to buy weed and get out decide to be polite and hang-out for a little while, they usually end up being exposed to things they wouldn't necessarily want to be around. But the dealer seems nice enough...etc....
Of course, people are different. Some just want to smoke a little weed and that's it. Some just wanna "get fucked up."
It's the latter type of person who gets into trouble, because they feel like they've walked into a buffet of different ways to "get fucked up." (It's a really horrible mentality, in my opinion--and it's often just a form of rebellion.)
So to sum-up what I'm trying to say: Hard drugs are a problem because all drugs are illegal, so you have to get
everything from drug dealers.
If plants were at least legal, I really do not believe there would be such a drug problem (which has evolved into include horrible, evil drugs like meth).
Not to mention the fact that
most drug dealers make the vast majority of their money from selling cannabis. If it were legalized there would be
far fewer dealers, and far more honest, law-abiding citizens who no longer feel as if they have to live in the shadows because they smoke cannabis.
Most of the violence surrounding drugs is the direct result of illegality and paranoia. The level of paranoia associated with drug use is a direct effect of the war on drugs. People are fearful and sometimes do
really stupid things because of it.
There are always going to be addicts. We've proven that we can't get rid of it (without resorting to extreme measures), so why continue to fight them? Don't you think that the real drug-related problems (like violence) would be nearly reversed if their addictions didn't make them criminals?
It seems to me that much of the social problems surrounding drugs and drug abuse is the direct result of something like what Sartre refers to as "bad faith" (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bad_faith_(existentialism) ). Drug users are "criminals" under our current system, and I do believe that when most people are labeled as such, they will act as such (again, a sort of self-fulfilling prophecy).
We have to better understand psychology (especially social psychology and the like) to really understand why people act the way they do, and why the "war on drugs" is really a "war on the people."
When we look at the reality of our American society, it's no wonder we're so damn angry and discontent--the government is making our lives
suck.
They need to just get the hell out of our lives. When they can't even manage their own lives, how in the hell are they supposed to effective manage ours?
We're ruining everything because we keep letting the
government get in our way. If widespread government intervention/meddling makes people feel safer and more secure, then they deserve the hell they are inviting upon themselves.
Most all of the major problems we have are the direct result of centralized government.
If the American people don't really start waking up soon
en masse, then I’m just going to assume that they haven’t "evolved" ones--they people who are still the same as the people a thousand years ago.
If they don't see
Freedom in their future, then they have no future.
The Freedom Movement is the future.
We have to stop telling everyone else what to do and how to live, and we need to start focusing on ourselves. Lord knows out-of-control government sure has made it difficult for the New Generation to realize their full potential.
It assures me to know that
we are the creators, and
they are the destroyers.
They're cancer. They'll destroy themselves.
(I hope what I said is clear enough--I have a feeling I made something simple too complicated/convoluted. I don't want to sound too far
out there or anything. I'm just trying to get my perspective across, and unfortunately I don't have time to edit right now.)