As a biomed student lemme let you in on a fact.CrystalViolet said:So why make that a criminal offence? It's possible to use even addictive drugs without becoming addicted as long as there are services available, the correct purity controls etc. There are plenty of people who choose to drink alcohol.
It's MONSTROUSLY hard for people to escape some addictions, particularly meth. Like almost impossibly hard. Here in the UK the NHS would pay for such a service, and honestly knowing the chemical basis of how this shit gets inside you and how difficult it is to escape I definitely think that even with legalisation there should be exceptions or extra rules. Simply seeing the depravity some people are sucked into just to get the next fix turns my stomach.
If you choose to use and you understand it all and you like it thats fine, and actually when i become a doctor I intend going to be fairly vocal on the legalisation of lower class drugs but drug or no I believe any product that chemically forces the user to crave more against their will or otherwise is something terrifying that a corporation shouldnt be able to have as a cash cow. After all, just tempt a user into the first few hits and you have a forced customer for life, the only other option being months of painful agonising detox and withdrawal.
I dont get on board the moral brigade, but I dislike big Pharma as it is, HEAVILY dislike to be frank. And to let them wield this much power scares me. I dont want a company to be able to get customers for life using addiction as a tool. Its bad enough in America that companies milk cancer patients for life saving drugs, this is arguably just as bad.
Obviously this varies by drug but when you see the success stats for quitting meth you realise that in some categories there really isnt any choice. Once youre fucked youre almost certainly fucked for good. An unwilling customer for as long as you live. No organisation should have such a slavish hold on anyone. Obviously as someone with medical knowledge I know marijuana has a range of uses for therapies and isnt addictive, so in my opinion thats the obvious drug to have legalised first.
I cant argue against the legalisation of highly addictive substances on a crime basis, as portugal will demonstrate crime will probably decrease. However handing that power over to a company that will continue to sink chemical hooks into people isnt that much better, and frankly they have more funding to get better at doing it. Much better. It needs to be HIGHLY discouraged but I wouldnt know how, thats a legal issue rather than a medical issue.