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They’ll blame pro-life laws for it. As dumb as it is, there are people blaming drug prohibition for overdoses.
Those people are entirely correct. ODing from a surprising dose of Fentanyl mixed in with other drugs wouldn't happen if drugs were distributed by pharmaceutical companies rather than Mexican cartels.
The ultimate effect of drug bans are that society is awash in illegal drugs and the kinds of people who make illegal drugs have poor quality control.
I was thinking recently that this type of reasoning leads to some pretty hilarious conclusions. The splashy one is that every single pro-legalization advocate should be bowing down to the Sackler family and protesting against the cruel use of law against them, which, after all, only hurts drug users. Rather than being in any way related to increased drug usage (that's magically impossible), all they were doing was producing a perfectly safe pharmaceutical product which, as a matter of pure logic, necessarily saves lives. Will you join in erecting a statue in their honor? Maybe we can place it next to St. George Floyd's statue.
I'm not planning on erecting statues or bowing to them. But they didn't spike all sorts of drugs with surprise fentanyl, so they're better than the cartel alternative.
Boo. Boo on this kind of snark. We should be better. You have an actual point here, but your need to get in cheap snarky jabs is obscuring it.
Would you like to put in some reasoning for why this magic is actually reality? Or just boo anything you disagree with? (I stand by that it's positing magic to make ridiculous claims that violate the basic laws of supply and demand in economics.)
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I see no point in "bowing down" to the Sackler family, but I do believe their prosecution is unjust.
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No, they are not. Eradicating drug use is entirely possible- there are societies which have done so on a practical level- and people overdose on regular opiates too. Illegal drugs are because of non-enforcement of drug laws. California has a black market for dope with full legalization, for crying out loud.
It’s technically true that the fastest way to get rid of illegal drugs is to legalize them. But this doesn’t solve the problem drug laws are intended to address.
California has a a black market for weed because the "legalize and tax it" people set the taxes way too high. So cannabis enjoyers compare price and quality and make an informed choice to get the illegal stuff. No doubt encouraged by the extreme lack of enforcement.
Those other societies are other societies. We do not have a nation almost entirely composed of Japanese people. And with the enormous amounts of money involved and the mass desire for drug use, I don't think merely trying to enforce the laws harder will help. I think our collective non-compliance is so great compared to our government's law enforcement capacity that we can't eradicate drug use. But we could work around the margins to discourage it a bit more.
On an unrelated point I do wish they'd enforce the laws against open air drug markets and open use in certain major cities. But that's a quality of life complaint from me.
Bullshit. The US having a mandatory death penalty for drug dealers is exactly as likely as a national abortion ban- they have the same precondition(total red tribe political victory). Lax enforcement leads to meaningfully more drug use. California set the taxes way too high, but there's black market cigarettes literally everywhere, and California also has a large pre-existing problem with just not enforcing the law. It's not like cracking down on the illegal sellers wouldn't drive people back to paying taxes on the shit.
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