Playing the devil's advocate, how do you write the law in for the newly legalized substances? Can anyone sell them? Only pharmaceutical companies? Is their production regulated? Do we require documentation of their safety and efficacy before allowing them to be sold? Do we add a health hazard warning? Minimize damage of legalization by providing public education on proper snorting technique (Fairly to do so leads to nose necrosis)? Do you train health inspectors to regularly test the quality of the substances being sold, or do you just rely on the consumer to buy their own test kits and leave it to the free market to work out? Are police officers trained to recognize the signs of drivers intoxicated on these substances? Do you treat the currently illicit drugs the same way the other drugs on the market are already regulated? Why or why not?
I support all your suggestions on making drug use safer. Drug use should be viewed from a health standpoint not a criminal standpoint. I could be sold like cannabis is already being sold legally in a lot of places. And lots of public education is required, just like on alcohol and cigarettes. Will drug use rise after legalization? Yes, but not very much. After legalizing pot there was hardly any increase in pot smokers. But a lot less drug related crime. In a broader perspective I believe that all acts that cause more harm because they are considered to be criminal should be legalized. Think of abortion, euthanasia, pornography, homosexuality, free press, free speech, free thinking.
Citations? I hadn't seen any facts for or against either of these questions thus far (At least in the United States).Will drug use rise after legalization? Yes, but not very much. After legalizing pot there was hardly any increase in pot smokers. But a lot less drug related crime.
I couldn't find any english citations because most of this research is dutch. But here's the wikipedia entry on our drug policy: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_policy_of_the_Netherlands Late new developments enforced by a right wing government have backfired.
I was mostly curious with regards to the US. Drug culture is highly variable across countries and continents. Extremely strict gun and drug laws have been successful at reducing crime and addiction in small Asian countries like Korea and Japan, but that approach hasn't shown much promise in the US. I'm aware of Portugal's example, too, but your comment made me curious if there had been further studies within the US with regards to recent laws decriminalizing / legalizing cannabis in various states.