Can we sharply reduce the drug supply though (is it possible)? If the current cost of the drug war is in tens of billions each year, and it is really only scraping up the surface, we simply cannot allocate enough capital to enable the government to institute the necessary measures to basically invade the privacy of every single citizen in the country (arresting roughly 10% of the US population or 35 million people would cost tax coffers an average of $6,245 per arrest) in an effort to stamp out illegal drugs, because that is really what it would take, and I am not sure if even that would be enough.
I think it's possible. Look at the difference in drug dealing between the US and Mexico. We have a far better police system, and we have far fewer drug lords (per capita).
By the way, I don't think that's the only way to reduce drug use. Other things, such as better education (including education about the legal consequences), can lower it as well.
If it's not working...use more of it!
I agree! Prison time is a good deterrent. If the prison time for **** was only one month, I bet a lot more men would commit the crime, and men who had already committed the crime would commit it more often.
It also follows that demand will go up, and emotional investments to obtain the product will go through the roof. This is why people kill for drugs. If all it took was a casual stroll down the block to get a kilo of blow, don't you think drug-related casualties would go down? You wouldn't need drug mules (who often die horrible deaths) you wouldn't need showdowns, money-laundering schemes, cop shootouts, betrayals, associated crimes, crimes of passion, etc.
Seems kind of unrealistic that every single drug user will do these things, doesn't it? Sure,
some people might go to those extreme measures, but do you really think every high school or middle school kid smoking marijuana is going to shoot a cop to get it? Moreover, if gang-related activities were legal, you wouldn't have as many cop shootouts, money laundering schemes, betrayals, associated crimes, crimes of passion, etc either, but does that mean that society would benefit?
Such is the case when we go to the liquor store. Nothing happens!
True, but alcohol is much more available, much more used, and causes much more DUI deaths, not to mention other things such as domestic abuse and bar fights.
prohibition is just as relevant as it is today;
I just wrote an entire paragraph explaining why prohibition does not relate to illegal drugs today, and you completely ignored it.
EDIT: If you would like to respond to that paragraph, here is the post:
http://www.smashboards.com/showpost.php?p=11198632&postcount=105
removals of drug stigmas could help raise awareness of when to stop, when too much is too much,
Oh please. They know the problems associated with taking drugs. They just don't care. (Manhunter agrees with me on these points as well, if I recall correctly.)
EDIT: Here's his response earlier in the thread when I made the point that most people already know about the danger of drugs and use them anyway: "A good point, in fact its social conditions that tend to drive people to drugs in the first place, poverty is one for certain."
and a less stressful / less judgmental environment.
Boo hoo. I really feel horrible for these people who only want to take drugs regardless of the health and safety of those around them. /sarcasm
Everyone wants their environment to be less stressful and judgmental. Even serial killers. So I'm sorry if catching people who commit a crime makes their life stressful, but they have to pay for their actions.
And let's be honest, I'd rather have cops busting real criminals than someone who wants to feel happy. I think the real crime is telling someone that they aren't allowed to do something because of social ideologies.
Social ideologies such as... don't do something stupid that risks the lives of people around you? I think people who "just want to be happy" and will do anything to reach that goal regardless of the health and safety of others is a real criminal. Rapists "just want to be happy"! Why does everyone think drug users are such great people? Since when has the term "alcoholic" had a positive connotation? You people are the ones admitting drug users commit "showdowns, money-laundering schemes, cop shootouts, betrayals, associated crimes, crimes of passion, etc.", but you keep acting like they're these innocent people who have never done anything wrong! Do you see the contradiction here?
PS, I haven't even gone into taxation benefits, where the revenue generated could inject some steroids into your laughable health care system, possibly eliminate some deficit, create jobs, save lives, save time, etc, etc, etc.
I don't think money should ever be valued over the safety of the public. Many things that are economically viable shouldn't be legal. It would also be economically viable to capture the 5 richest men in america, take all their money (probably around $100 billion), and throw it into the health care system.