I fully agree.Member 7167 wrote:It is time for a new approach in respect o the war on drugs. .I have no idea what the solution is.
We can start by reducing the attack window - i.e., by removing known low-harm drugs from the illicit drug stable. The obvious and by far the most important one is cannabis. That does little harm - vastly less than tobacco or alcohol even though it is used by millions of Australians - and any fool knows it is pretty much harmless. For millions of Australians there is no compelling reason not to use cannabis. For many, the only real and lasting effect of cannabis is that it demonstrates that our drug laws are hopelessly out-of-date and downright stupid. So far as it goes, that is fine. Alas, the next logical step is to say "OK, cannabis is clearly harmless and they lied to me about that, so it must be OK to use speed and scag and coke and all that other stuff too. Hey - they are just illegal drugs that I get from a guy I know, what's the difference?" You have already taken the step of going outside the law; you have already taken the step of ingesting something unknown on the assumption that it is probably what the dealer said it was; this last step - taking one of the dangerous illegal drugs - is a very small one.
In short, cut out the huge free advertisement and harmless sampler programme for illegal drugs that cannabis amounts to, and you have cut out half the problem,.
Alas, the other half of the problem remains, and here, like Member, I am not sure what can be done.