Presumably the drugs, once legalized, will be distributed just like tobacco is. The warning on cigarette packs seems to be working well enough, is it not? Very few people smoke without knowing the harm. I’m not sure why this is such a big deal.
Depends on how you set it up. If distribution is made the domain of the pharmacies, I could see this working. If it’s a more street-level operation, it won’t.
Indeed, most people today know what drugs will do, so this is even less of a concern. There will not need to be extreme measures taken to ensure this.
Misinformation is still rampant. DARE is still around – that program isn’t designed to inform, it’s designed to
scare. And it all-too-frequently does so by lying. So people get out of the program, and find out the principal or whoever lied about one thing – that doesn’t mean they find out the
truth! And then, as often happens, they figure ‘well, I was lied to on that… why should I trust them on anything else?’ and end up in
way over their heads, entirely ignorant.
In a bizarre, twisted way, DARE et al make the ludicrous ‘gateway drug’ accusation leveled at marijuana a self-fulfilling prophecy.
I defer to your knowledge on this. It seems that this property of heroin makes it worthwhile to treat it separately from alcohol, although if my proposed policy is followed, it will not make a difference. My point, as I’m sure you recall, is that the Church would be justified in stating that more regulation is needed for these harder drugs.
And I agree with it. Heroin should be well behind the counter. Codeine cough syrup and Tylenol-3 (acetominophen/codeine pain reliever) I could see making generally available with ID, but the stronger opiates – no. Too dangerous: somebody who knows what’s what needs to dose it out.
This can’t be true, people on mind altering drugs are capable of violence and crime. The Church even gives this as a reason for condemning use of these drugs. I’ve heard plenty of anecdotal evidence for this, too. If you think there’s enough evidence to assume that drugs do not cause violence, then we can do that, but I don’t think it’s very accurate.
Abuse of drugs like cocaine and PCP can lead to violence, yeah – they’re stimulants. Straight-up depressants like opiates produce a sense of calm and peace of mind in addition to the euphoria. Some people get mean when they get drunk, but I’ve
never heard of anyone getting mean on smack. I’m much less familiar with the category of hallucinogens (marijuana is a very mild example), but consider that people now at least generally know better than to hold
Reefer Madness to be gospel truth, and the pothead as popularly imagined is a person only Doritos need fear violence from.
Junkie crime comes from desperation as dopesickness sets in: not from the
use of the drug but from its sudden withdrawal. I’d actually support clinics
giving the stuff away to people on skid row, with a heavy focus toward getting them free of it and back in the workforce.
Well using mind-altering drugs is considered a sin, I believe. Medicinal use, I don’t know, my guess is that it wouldn’t be. The sinful nature of drugs is not in whether it breaks the law of man, but that it disposes the person to committing crime.
Catechism 2290-2291 is the relevant part:
*2290 The virtue of temperance disposes us to avoid every kind of excess: the abuse of food, alcohol, tobacco, or medicine. Those incur grave guilt who, by drunkenness or a love of speed, endanger their own and others’ safety on the road, at sea, or in the air.
2291 The use of drugs inflicts very grave damage on human health and life. Their use, except on strictly therapeutic grounds, is a grave offense. Clandestine production of and trafficking in drugs are scandalous practices. They constitute direct co-operation in evil, since they encourage people to practices gravely contrary to the moral law.*
Firstly, at least three of the four things mentioned in 2290
are drugs, whether the writers had that in mind or not. So we can see that it is not a psychoactive nature that makes cautiously moderated use of a substance immoral.
Secondly, the
use of drugs, again as opposed to
abuse, does little, if any, damage to health and life. You might get cancer (but
everything causes cancer), you might get scars over your veins – but all in all, you could still live a long, full, happy, righteous life in all respects.
Thirdly, the objection of the Catechism to drugs regarding acts associated with them is not in how they predispose a person (if so, alcohol would be on the Naughty list) but in how they lead to the production and consumption of the substance. As I mentioned above, a very large fraction of the world’s heroin funds terrorist organizations, most of its cocaine fuels groups of Not Very Nice people in Central and South America.
This is the problem, not ‘ganja makes you an unstoppable killing machine’. If it’s resolved, which is certainly possible, this objection would disappear.
One thing I would like to note: if a welfare state is maintained, then the government has a right and indeed a substantive interest to keep people off of hard drugs. After all, it (taxpayers, specifically) pays for the mistakes of others. If a libertarian drug policy is put in place, then there can be no use of taxpayer money to subsidize the care of drug users. This is the meaning of personal responsibility, as I’m sure you’ll agree.
I am neither a nanny-stater nor a libertarian, so
I don’t have a problem with it.
Clearly, this policy cannot be put into place without significant changes in other areas.
Definitely.