Pappa wrote:The consequences are hardly unforeseen. Portugal has seen a very positive response since they legalised drugs and the Netherlands has seen a gradual decline in use since they decriminalised.
Based on the evidence, legalisation is a win-win. Drugs get taken out of the hands of criminals and become safer in a variety of ways. Use doesn't seem to rise, quite the contrary. Meanwhile, the State can focus on treating drug use as a public health issue and stop subsidising criminals via the War on Drugs.
Well people always present the best evidence (well you haven't actually) that supports their case. The best that can be said about the decriminalisation of drugs in Portugal (they have not legalised them) is that the problem is no worse. (there's an evaluation here http://www.spiegel.de/international/eur ... 060-2.html). It is at best inconclusive though there appear to have been some benefits in terms of people seeking help for addiction. Also at best this is a means of avoiding the 'war on drugs' approach and not a liberalisation with a capital 'L'.
Holland may have decriminalised cannabis but it isn't meant to be a free for all or a liberalisation with that same capital 'L' but to 'reduce the demand for drugs, the supply of drugs and the risks to drug users, their immediate surroundings and society'.
There is a danger in my view that people will see decriminalisation as permission. The cases of Holland and Portugal may well not apply across the board (they are different from each other in any case) and I would hate to see this neck of the woods experimented upon to see if it did work.
My own experience incidentally has a large impact on my views about drugs. I was mentally incapacitated in my mid 20s as a result of using too much LSD and dope and I have a few old mates who never really got to grips with the so called real world after messing a bit too freely with psychedelics.