It is a tough decision to make. Trillions of dollars have been spent over the years in the "war on drugs". Countless numbers have died in violent attack and counterattack between rival drug gangs, and law enforcement officers and gangs. Countless thousands have died through drug overdoses, or contaminants in drugs, or through a lack of understanding of drugs.
Despite all the moneys poured into the war - despite all the government warnings and crackdowns, despite all the educational campaigns around the globe, drug use remains stubbornly refractory. The reason is simply that it appeals to one of the basic human needs, as atavistic as the sex drive, or the need for food and shelter - the need to get high. A proportion of the population, especially the young generation, will always have the desire, the need, to experiment.
Some drugs are so addictive, so harming to your well being and ability to function that they should certainly remain a banned substance. Others though- the so- called recreational drugs, even marijuana, possibly even cocaine, should be legalised. Legalising such drugs would have a number of immediate benefits - A better guarantee as to product safety and purity; a new revenue stream into government coffers; a means of controlling the price of such drugs; a reduction in crimes associated with funding a drug habit;a reduction in young people criminalised because of possession for personal use;the facility for the police to reallocate resources from a stretche budget to more frontline community protection programmes.
Control their use in much the same way we control the use of alcohol, with screening tests, and fines for operating equipment under the influence. Given that alcohol and cigarettes are still currently legal, it seems odd to me that ecstacy for example is not.......