Laz and Culero,
Thanks much for the discussion. I mean it.
Laz,
I have to bow to your experience here as you have it first hand. My experience was from dealing with those who were usually at the end or bottom of their addiction when they became real problems and could not be ignored. The others who rarely were a problem since the tribe was closed mouth about it, were the herion addicts in the Pascua Yaqui reservation that is actually in the city limits of Tucson. They were about as laid back as you could get but they lived in squalor because they had zero ambition other than putting a needle in their arm.
Im not sure I would want one working on my car or doing anything particularly technical. I certainly dont want someone under the influence driving.
Culero,
I'd be very happy if we could reduce the size of the drug black market by about the same percentage we reduced the alcohol black market after repealing prohibition.
I agree that this would be a good thing. Im not sure it would work as well as all that is concerned but I agree it would be interesting to find out.
Bad choice of words on my part. But, for example, I would like to see someone who's sentenced to 30 years for murder serve the whole 30 years, and certainly emptying half of our current cells would allow that.
I have to disagree with you here again because its the sentencing guidelines as well as good time vs nad time that determines the length of stay for an inmate. Youd still require a rewrite of the penal code and have serious constitutional issue, like we already have with mandatory sentencing.
New recruits to drug use due to easier access - I agree this is a danger. However, my instinct is that most folks who want to do this kind of stuff now already do. In any case, I'd like to see taxes paid by suppliers and users pay for the abatement campaigns to dissuade people from becoming users, instead of you and I paying for that.
This hits on one of the things that I feel would be a major problem here. There is a significant amount of binge drinking going on near the University and the same frame of mind that pulls folks into doing that kind of behavior may bring them into using the newly legal substances, creating a new surge in addiction. Like anything else thats new, there will be quite a few folks who just HAVE to try it. If they had Marines concept to get it from they wouldnt have to go far to get the substances and start using them, just like alcohol. Id be happy to be wrong there but I dont believe I am.
I dont have the answers I just have questions and Im really not sure I want to see the experiment in action.