Thank you
endlessness for the heads up and for the post
The best compilation of drug war information I am aware of, besides all the specific entries in drug-related communities such as MAPS or Erowid, is
this one.
I will send today a thorough response to the questionnaire. And I don't think I have to mask my IP when submitting this. We should send realistic replies, not radical wide all-drug legalization requests, if we really intend to be taken into consideration at all. Not that I am very confident in changing significantly the outcome of the debate through our suggestions, but if we mean to influence any policy, we have to make something else than strong points - we need to send comments that can be taken seriously and implemented. And considering the current state of things, that implies moderation imho. Also, bringing up economics.
Some of the points that could be made are:
- The huge proliferation of new, potentially dangerous RCs is direct consequence of the draconian limitations placed upon known, traditional, safe substances (cannabis, psilocybin, MDMA or LSD, for instance). In that sense, chemical engineering will always find a workaround to bypass current legality, not only bringing further legal pressure into failure, but also putting europeans health at risks that could be easily avoided by making safer, traditional alternatives available.
- For the mentioned reason, increase of legal pressure upon new chemicals is only, at best, encouraging further development of new RCs that will progressively become more unsafe. Lots of examples around the world back this up (meth in northern america, krokodil in Russia, etc.)
- In the actual critical financial context, the funds allocated in drug war policies should be decreased, not increased. The cost-effectiveness of law enforcement so far has proven to be a disaster. Productive, long term effective measures should be taken.
- Allowing and encouraging clinical research with plants and active ingredients that do have therapeutic applications and are extremely unlikely to pose any real threat for public health is the way to go. That will not only fight effectively a potentially harmful, absurdly diversified RC black market, but soon deliver important research results and significantly contribute to the european welfare.
There's probably many more. What do you guys think?
"The Menu is Not The Meal." - Alan Watts