Back

British Columbia to recriminalize use of drugs in public spaces

239 points7 dayscbc.ca
soupbowl7 days ago

I lived in BC for 40 years and this policy affected me negatively it turned my neighborhood from a clean safe place to a nightmare. This always turns Into a flamewar online, I will keep it at this. I am happy they are finally changing something, whatever they were doing was terrible but I hope whatever they do now, a better solution is found, whatever that means.

bluefirebrand7 days ago

I grew up in BC, lived there almost 30 years before I moved away.

I loved in Downtown Victoria for most of the 2010s and I got to watch streets turn from being nice to being sketchy and the sketchy ones became downright dangerous

A mcdonalds near where I lived went from being a place that a bunch of older folks would get coffee and do a crossword in the mornings, to a place where you might sometimes find human feces on the floor. No exaggeration.

It was really sad to watch

vexna7 days ago

Guessing you mean the McDonalds on Pandora? I remember going there a lot during high school and walked by it again recently while visiting the city for the the first time since 2009. Sketchy doesn't begin to describe it. Was really sad to see what happened to the city I grew up in.

wincy7 days ago

Ironic that the street is named Pandora, as it seems BC opened just that box.

bluefirebrand6 days ago

Yep. I used to live just up the street on Pandora, on the edge of Fernwood

Apparently I got out before it got really bad, too

noufalibrahim7 days ago

I'm not really aware of the measures that were taken but the situation you originally described seemed wonderful. What were the problems solved by the legalization?

wk_end7 days ago

Let's be clear here: the decriminalization may have made things worse, but the problems were there well before.

That particular McDonald's was ruined mostly because a shelter and various other supports opened up down the block, and kind of turned the area into a mini-Skid Row. Victoria has the best year-round weather in the country: it tends to attract people who are living on the street, and there's big intersections there between that group and the mentally unwell, anti-social, and/or drug addicted.

As for why the mentally unwell, anti-social, and/or drug addicted have become a bigger problem in recent years, well, take your pick: laxer drug laws and/or enforcement, laxer enforcement of laws in general, safe injection sites, housing crisis, cost-of-living crisis, Fent and/or "super meth", cuts to mental health care programs, lack of God, you name it.

+2
NoobSaibot1356 days ago
+1
ornornor6 days ago
+7
waihtis7 days ago
afavour7 days ago

As I understand it the intention behind decriminalization was to accept the reality of the situation that addicts aren’t likely to be dissuaded from taking drugs simply because it’s illegal. Rather than push them to the fringes of society (where they’ll likely spiral into deeper and deeper depths) you should try to keep them closer than help them out of the addiction.

Obviously this didn’t work. I have sympathy with the viewpoint though. Far too often when we’re faced with difficult situations like this our instinct is to throw someone in jail. It doesn’t help them and it doesn’t really help us in the long term, it just lets us put it out of sight and out of mind in the short term.

(as someone who spent some time in Vancouver long before decriminalization… there were areas incredibly rough with homeless and drug use back then too. It didn’t magically arrive when decriminalization was passed, I doubt it’ll disappear with recriminalization)

porknubbins7 days ago

It was easy to think, because of movies or pop culture, that cops are a bunch of mean uptight jerks throwing harmless kids in jail for “smoking the reefer”. But that view was a little naive.

It now seems that everyone from citizens who call the cops to judges and parole boards are not just arbitrarily cruel but have a pretty fine tuned sense of “this person is harmless” or “this person is an antisocial menace and needs to be off the street”.

At least this has become my view after working with prisons. We were doing an ok job and have changed in the name of progress.

+2
pigpang6 days ago
+2
deanCommie6 days ago
iraqmtpizza7 days ago

Letting people shoot up on your porch was the only thing they could think of to keep housing prices in check

cjk27 days ago

That's pretty funny but sad. I'm not even in BC or the US but I had to remove the light bulb from my porch to stop people shooting up in there and poking the syringes in my plants. I still have "HIV yucca" as it's known now. It's totally illegal here but it didn't stop people doing it.

Want to fix this? Start with the problems in society that lead to it.

tomp7 days ago

What “problems in society” lead to this?

Humans are infinitely adaptable and we live on a hedonic treadmill. Regardless of material and/or social circumstances, there’s gonna be a subset of people who will continue to find existence a terrifying suffering, and will seek escape, including drugs.

No society in history has fixed the first problem. But we can keep negative externalities minimal by outlawing public use of drugs.

+2
tonyarkles6 days ago
+1
cjk27 days ago
iraqmtpizza6 days ago

that which led to it. meaning the lack of purpose, employment, community, moral expectations, religion, and connection with their ancestors and nature

coffeebeqn6 days ago

If only. West coast housing prices have been on a tear for the last 20 years at least

lo_zamoyski7 days ago

I believe it. Drug liberalization advocacy suffers from at least two flaws: the failure to understand the instructive dimension of law, and naïveté concerning the harm drugs cause and the power of personal responsibility when drugs enter the mix in light of human frailty.

In the first case, one end of the law is to teach good behavior by punishing what is bad, and perhaps incentivizing what is good. Drugs are opposed to the objective human good, and gravely so, for one, because they cripple the effective exercise of reason. Any attack on reason of this kind is gravely immoral, and constitutes a direct assault on human flourishing and what is most essential to human beings. The result is the degradation of the human person and the degeneration of society. The common good suffers greatly, as you have described, and since the primary purpose of law and the governments that make law is to guard the common good, it falls to governments to criminalize and regulate drug availability and use.

In the second case, ask yourself why anyone takes drugs. Unhealthy curiosity. Boredom. Escapism. Mental illness. There is no legitimate reason for drug liberalization as there is no legitimate reason to take hard narcotics recreationally (I emphasize that word because there is a place for regulated use in the context of medicine under the principle of double effect). Liberalization lowers the barrier of entry by signaling that using narcotics is no big deal. And yet it is a big deal. The instructive dimension of the law, by penalizing use, helps counteract the foolishness and frailty of human beings that would bring ruin to such people and those around them. Libertarian anthropology does not stand a chance in the face of reality.

(Obviously, plenty of substances are psychoactive, and I do not propose a categorical ban on everything from cough medicine to cigars to Merlot to coffee. I am no teetotaler. We know what kind of drug use is problematic when we say “doing drugs”. Prudent regulation that takes into account a number of factors like the severity and nature of chronic and acute harm, how addictive something is and its potential for abuse, dosage, etc. It’s one thing to chew on a coca leaf, another to snort 30 mg of powder.)

int_19h6 days ago

You know what cripples the effective exercise of reason more than any drug? Living in a society that is organized in extremely unreasonable ways, yet one has to accept and actively participate in it because that's the only way to keep on living. Perhaps start there when considering the reasons for drug use...

surfingdino6 days ago

Alternative societies are available worldwide, so... maybe try them?

+1
int_19h6 days ago
nextaccountic7 days ago

> Drugs are opposed to the objective human good, and gravely so, for one, because they cripple the effective exercise of reason.

This blanket statement heavily depends on which specific drug we are talking about.

Or rather, do you feel the same way about alcohol and nicotine?

edgyquant7 days ago

Yes obviously, for alcohol at least.

temporarely7 days ago

Regrettable that you are not being engaged in a verbalized discussion. I appreciate your thoughtful comments, as someone who habitually uses pot and tobacco and recognizes the harmful effects of these substances. At least society is now fully onboard in recognizing the harm of habitual tobacco use. Pot is a mixed bag, there is some good in it but it is possible that its harm exceeds its benefits. It is certainly addictive, in my experience. It is not easy at all to stop. That said, I've always found the punitive legal measures against pot to have been highly excessive and possibly motivated by considerations other than public health, as its roots have clear racist ('Reefer madness') dimensions. These days however I am rather alarmed at the promotion of pot as a benign substance. I have seriously wondered if its liberalization is a means at social pacification (ala Victory Gin of 1984) given the grave distortions that have manifested in Western society, specially in the economic dimension. There is money to be made and the plebes now have a outlet that keeps them content.

It is not clear to me if law in fact incentivizes good behavior. In general my view on these matters -- social architecture -- is that form can not engender meaning. Meaning needs to be project into form, in the sense of it being an expression of collective understanding. This brings up the matter of pedagogical aspect of social order, to wit, your views would be entirely orthodox in a strict patriarchal societal order. And our society is no longer that, as you must know.

~

"The most important things about beliefs are whether they are true. The most important thing about motives is whether they are good."

I saw this on your profile page. What is necessary is that actions are timely and true. As to "good", I hope we agree that what is true is by definition good (if timely) and what is good can not possibly be false or untimely. So in my opinion, it suffices to say "Be timely, be true".

aunty_helen7 days ago

I saw this first hand from the locals too in Lisbon. I was up the hill looking over a wall to get a photo of the bay from down a side street. I noticed there was bits of broken bottle cemented into the top Of the wall as a kind of razor wire. When I looked closely and slightly over the wall I found syringes with remnants of brown tar leaking of of them.

Less than the time it took me to realize a window in the house opened and someone was clearly going to give me a good yelling at but when she saw we were just tourists in the alley closed the window mumbling something and left us alone.

So yea, what it does to communities is bad but the solution isn’t to look back at old ways hoping things will change if we try again. As you’ve mentioned, a better solution needs to be found, but it’s a difficult problem, and there aren’t many great ideas going around

SECProto7 days ago

> I noticed there was bits of broken bottle cemented into the top Of the wall as a kind of razor wire.

That has nothing to do with drug policy, and is common in many places around the world.

https://www.reddit.com/r/asklatinamerica/comments/ifbvbh/is_...

https://www.reddit.com/r/HostileArchitecture/comments/eh9fz4...

Affric7 days ago

Drugs are criminalised here and it still happens. Safe injecting room actually means less of this stuff on the streets round my house.

+1
throwaway2906 days ago
aunty_helen6 days ago

This is correct, I mentioned it more as a scene setting mechanism. A quiet alleyway with a wall you can’t climb over at the end. Seems like a nice quiet place to shoot up.

foldr7 days ago

This doesn't seem like a particularly good example of the negative effects on communities. Fundamentally, your story is that you looked over a wall and then someone opened a window and didn't shout at you.

aunty_helen6 days ago

The lady was obviously conditioned to think noises in the alley meant people shooting up heroin. Sorry your weren’t there to see it but the discarded drug paraphernalia and then scowl on her face which subsided when she realized we were taking photos and not horse really was the important aspects of the story

pedrogpimenta7 days ago

But you have no idea how it was before, do you?

ranguna6 days ago

You should've seen what it was before. Read up on Portuguese drug history before you speak please. Decriminalising drug usage was a good move by the Portuguese government and it improved the population's wellbeing significantly by introducing rehab instead of imprisonment.

Also, you'll find things like that on every capital of the world, no exceptions. Maybe you'll notice it a little less in Singapore, where drug consumption can lead to the death sentence.

aunty_helen5 days ago

I’m aware of Portuguese drug policy as I would say most people here. There’s a 6 monthly refresher article on the front page.

Decriminalization and the rehabilitation focus that followed has been a huge success for Portugal’s drug taking population.

I was excited to see it in action when I was there but what I found and what I mentioned earlier wasn’t all positives.

For example, everywhere outside at night in Lisbon you’re going to have people trying to sell you coke. A guy from the tour group I was in was getting free samples poured into his hand. The level of pushy these sellers are too, I had a guy follow me into a _bank_ offering me his mothers home phone number that I could call if the coke he was trying to sell me was shit quality.

The discussion though is the impacts of this policy on local communities. I’ll defer to my last paragraph on this from my previous post.

Lastly, I’ve never been chased or offered a free sample in any other European capital, even the party ones. Once in South America though.

ashconnor7 days ago

There was a great docu-drama on the BBC a long time ago called something alone the lines of "If Drugs Were Legal" [0]. They had a not-very-interesting drama alongside a list of experts such as Prof David Nutt discussing the potential legal framework.

What I found fascinating about the documentary is the vision of what a complete overhaul would look like. Not half-measures like they've done in BC & Portugal.

The thing that annoys the public the most is the crime. We need to bankrupt dealers, purify supply and then we can focus on getting people off the streets when using.

None of this can happen until we shake off the current policies rooted in puritanicalism.

[0] - https://topdocumentaryfilms.com/if-drugs-were-legal/

[1] - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC539406/

vishalontheline7 days ago

> and then we can

Step 1: Purify the supply.

Step 2: Give it away for free in order to put the dealers out of business? What about the producers - does the government get into the business of making drugs as well? Would they need labs to ensure purity? And, hire government workers - arguably, with distribution experience - to give away the good stuff?

Okay, so let's say they succeeded. The dealers are bankrupt. Well, not really - they're now all government workers. But, anyway, they are out of the business of dealing illegally.

Step 3: Rehabilitation. Why would the new bureaucracy want to end addiction when its continued growth and existence depends on it?

vidarh7 days ago

Consider heroin as an example.

Step 1 is already done. UK hospitals, for example, uses heroin - under its generic name diamorphine - for pain relief instead of morphine for some patients because it's often less problematic.

Step 2 then is easy: The NHS has suppliers of medical grade heroin. Some people already have been getting it prescribed.

Step 3 is also then far less problematic than you make it out because there's not even any organisational link between the producers (private pharma companies), distributors (private pharmacies), and anyone who'd be involved in rehabilitation.

But even without the rehabilitation step, you've reduced the cost, and the harm.

We know that, because prescribing heroin to heroin addicts has been tried.

EDIT: Here is the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) page for heroin, btw. (NICE set prescription guidance for the NHS):

https://bnf.nice.org.uk/drugs/diamorphine-hydrochloride/

dr_dshiv7 days ago

Don’t we need better drugs? Like, people have a natural desire for what drugs do. Can’t we satisfy that in a way that is more positive?

Some of that is surely cultural. So ideally, you combine a growing and vibrant positive drug culture with good drugs.

The Netherlands has essentially done this. There are basically soft-legal dealers (via WhatsApp) that widely sell most illegal drugs at high purity — but you won’t ever find opiates on the menu. So then people are happy getting their ketamine and mdma and coke and ghb and lsd and 2cb etc — and the police are surely monitoring to make sure that the dealers don’t cause problems. That means they allow the good dealers and shut down the dealers that cause problems (sell bad drugs or sell to people who cause problems).

This is combined with a positive drug culture that shuns opiates but embraces party drugs and music culture.

+1
alephnerd7 days ago
+1
vidarh7 days ago
+4
lo_zamoyski7 days ago
K0balt7 days ago

This is as good a solution as is likely to be found, but it hardly exists in a vacuum. The culture in which this fragile status quo is imbedded ensures its relative success.

Try to transplant it into other cultures, and the myriad potential perverse incentives would turn it into just plain old police running the drugs business, with murders and all the other fun stuff that comes along with that.

Some cultures are able to maintain fragile systems such as this because civic responsibility and collective good are strongly valued. Unfortunately, most cultures are not that responsible.

vishalontheline6 days ago

I did not know about this, yet it's been in place for a long time!

Yes, it addresses #1 and #2. #3 is not as problematic as I thought either.

It isn't all smooth, but if it is working and there's less violence and societal breakdown, then I think it's a step in the right direction.

Thanks!

seanmcdirmid7 days ago

What’s the point of investing in drug treatment when it’s super easy to get and get hooked on drugs? On the one hand, we are saying the drugs are not harmful enough to criminalize, let people take personal responsibility for their drug use choices, but then on the other hand, we are saying society should also be on the hook for reforming bad personal choices? Decriminalize and invest billions in drug rehabilitation! It doesn’t make sense to me.

vishalontheline7 days ago

Canada has free public healthcare for all. Alcohol rehabilitation is government funded. So is chemo for various cancers attributed to smoke inhalation and tobacco use. So are appetite reduction operations for very obese people.

Why should heroin rehabilitation be any different?

Some people would then argue that some drugs are significantly worse than others - that they are significantly more costly to rehabilitate, that their consumption causes more harm etc. Should the costs be calculated average or total?

Let's say that the consumption and / or distribution should be penalized.

What should the punishments be for consumption? How harsh should the punishments be for distribution? Jailing people costs a lot of money too.

How do we create a society where people don't become so easily addicted?

+2
anon2917 days ago
dghughes7 days ago

What I don't get is the attitude of:

Gambling is terrible look at the harm it does it should be banned.

Alcohol is terrible look at the harm it does it should be banned.

Hard drugs - it's their choice leave the users alone, actually open up a place so they can take drugs.

seanmcdirmid6 days ago

To their credit, many places ban alcohol and even gambling as social negatives. I’m ok with socially funded drug treatment for something that is illegal, because at least we are trying to make sure the problem doesn’t keep growing when we are trying to fix it. I don’t like a plan that has us throw money at an avoidable problem forever.

penjelly7 days ago

> On the one hand, we are saying the drugs are not harmful enough to criminalize

i dont think thats it. one of the main arguments is that people will do the drugs anyway legal or no. But if they get/do them illegally they'll be afraid to seek help when ODing or trying to quit, and they have nowhere safe to do them so they do them anywhere and everywhere. This explains why we both decriminalize and rehab

seanmcdirmid6 days ago

You see much better results in Asia where drug laws are harsh and you or your family are on their own for rehab: people simply can’t afford to take the risk anymore because they understand very well their life and a probably ruined if they try. But then we have to consider literal survival bias: maybe you just don’t see many drug addicts in Asia because they die quickly.

KaiserPro7 days ago

> What’s the point of investing in drug treatment when it’s super easy to get and get hooked on drugs?

We let people mainline sugar to the point where they get diabetes[1], but we spend lots of money on holistic treatment to make sure that its manageable is as little medical intervention as possible (continuous blood sugar monitoring is awesome)

Substance abuse is more often than not a symptom of other things.

> On the one hand, we are saying the drugs are not harmful enough to criminalize

I would say that mischaracterises the issue. I would suggest that its a case of lesser of two evils. An entire shadow economy worth billions, with no regulation and no qualms about killing people for profit, and is the cause of most petty crime, or cutting out a money supply to crime, but you need to change the way you spend on support and care of addicts.

[1] its mot complex than that, and also depending on what type you have.

dukeyukey7 days ago

We don't need nationalised alcohol, tobacco, or paracetamol production to ensure safety, so why would we need the production of other drugs nationalised?

eru7 days ago

> Step 2: Give it away for free in order to put the dealers out of business?

Why do you need to give it away for free?

You just need to make it so that normal businesses with normal procedures produce the supply and distribute it.

Compare bathtub gin to any modern factory made liquor.

Normal companies can produce the stuff, and normal companies can distribute it. Walmart and co are enormously efficient at the latter, and still provide clean and safe products. No need to give anything away for free, you just need to make it legal for normal, formal companies to compete.

129078352027 days ago

One of the reasons to give it away is to stop it being cut. If it costs $50 someone will buy it for $50, cut it and sell it to a friend for $30, a homeless person with little money will opt for the $30 rather than the $50 and then be stuck with all the adulterants, while the first person will have got high for $20 and only need to make another $20 to do the cycle again rather than the whole $50.

Amounts just a simple example and not accurate.

One thing that alot of people miss is that it's not just drug dealers cutting, it's the drug users themselves. I don't think the same can be said for other common drugs like cocaine, mdma etc

eru6 days ago

Eh, cutting and (re-)selling takes time and effort. People don't work for free; there's always opportunity costs.

bluescrn7 days ago

But instead, in the UK we're going for outright bans on tobacco. Even introducing a new form of discrimination to do so, where one person will be able to smoke, but a person born one day later will never in their lifetime be permitted to buy tobacco.

(Just wait until they apply a birth-date cut-off like that to owning ICE cars, then manual driving of any powered vehicle...)

mtlmtlmtlmtl7 days ago

Who said anything about giving it away for free? That's frankly a ridiculous idea.

happymellon7 days ago

It was a stupid statement and distracts from the rest which was a valid question.

ashconnor7 days ago

This reads like an anti-government rant.

Why you would think drug production and distribution would be vastly different than the current pharmaceutical system I don't know.

vishalontheline7 days ago

Oh, it isn't anti-government at all. It's a question of what and how much you the citizen would like to pay your government to do.

Alcohol / marijuana systems may be a better comparison since, despite alcohol being so cheap, there are still people who produce and distribute unverified products.

Since the use is recreational, people will often pay for the cheapest version of the same high.

dukeyukey7 days ago

> there are still people who produce and distribute unverified products

Sure, but that's more people getting into homebrew as a hobby, not people trying to undercut supermarkets. Unless you tax the bejeesus out of it, no-one's home-grown op is gonna be price-competitive with industrial scale production.

jlawson7 days ago

Always terrifying when a utopian and deadly policy is enacted, and leads to more horror and death, and its proponents just insist that we didn't enact it hard enough and demand to go even deeper.

There's mountains of skulls that way. It's been done, so many times. Please stop pushing us towards hell.

creato7 days ago

It’s amazing that I literally can’t tell if you think legalization or prohibition is the utopian and deadly policy based on your post.

asynchronous7 days ago

The goal posts move at a rate that would make spaceships shameful.

all27 days ago

> None of this can happen until we shake off the current policies rooted in puritanicalism.

Arguably an extreme in either direction would be relatively effective. Where we sit now is not effective because it doesn't embrace actual justice, nor does it embrace actual recovery. In Seattle, for instance, the policy is to distribute drugs and needles to users, but not offer effective recovery options. Nor is there social pressure to not use drugs. Nor is there actual justice for those who prey on people who are too weak to escape.

I think a combination of both approaches could be good; target the dealers, the movers, and the makers; allow users who want rehab to undergo rehab without facing charges (make no charges contingent on the absence of crime other than possession and use).

quasse7 days ago

> In Seattle, for instance, the policy is to distribute drugs and needles to users

Please cite your sources if you are going to make ridiculous claims. The city of Seattle does not have a municipal policy to distribute drugs to drug users at the syringe exchanges.

throwup2387 days ago

The charitable interpretation is methadone but that's neither new nor unique to Seattle.

Der_Einzige7 days ago

If they did, it would be illegal federally and all involved would be jailed.

+1
jrockway7 days ago
all27 days ago

Curious. I must be misremembering.

rayiner7 days ago

> Arguably an extreme in either direction would be relatively effective.

We have empirical proof that the restrictive extreme works: https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/news/singapore-announces-plans-....

We have no empirical proof that the permissive extreme works. There's also no moral impetus for the permissive extreme, except maybe in rare cases when people are forced into drug use against their will. We are talking about something that virtually always starts out as a deliberate, anti-social choice.

throwup2387 days ago

> We have no empirical proof that the permissive extreme works.

Alcohol.

We have plenty of empirical proof that Prohibition doesn't work.

rayiner7 days ago

Prohibition failed because European Americans have a deep affinity for alcohol. And it was adopted shortly after the mass immigration of Irish and Italians to the US, who had a specially deep affinity for alcohol. It wasn’t just prohibition, it was removing something that the whole country was already addicted to—an addiction that was cultivated over generations and ingrained in the culture.

Prohibition can work fine with alcohol when combined with a strong social taboo. In my home country of Bangladesh, alcohol is illegal for Muslims and virtually nobody drinks it.

Drugs are much more like prohibition of alcohol in Muslim countries than the prohibition of alcohol in America. We have a pre-existing taboo against drug use that we could be strengthening instead of trying to tear down. Capital punishment for drug dealers would go a long way towards reaffirming the taboo.

+1
anon2917 days ago
+1
inglor_cz7 days ago
+1
555557 days ago
doctor_eval7 days ago

The link you provided does not even remotely support your claim, which I can only assume is that the death penalty stops drug distribution.

But unless you control for Singapore’s somewhat unique geography and politics, pointing to Singapore’s death penalty - itself the result of a wider political context - signifies very little.

+2
rayiner7 days ago
petre7 days ago

Oh great, the death penalty. It works fine in Korea even without it.

pixl976 days ago

Ah yes, totalitarianism works! FFS, do you even think about the non drug ramifications of said governments policies.

+1
rayiner6 days ago
seanmcdirmid7 days ago

> In Seattle, for instance, the policy is to distribute drugs and needles to users, but not offer effective recovery options

As a seattlite, this is the first I’ve heard of this. There might have been safe needle exchanges a decade back when heroin was popular, but these days when you just need some foil to smoke some fent…you don’t even see needles on the street anymore. And I’m pretty sure we aren’t giving out drugs (fent or heroin) to addicts, maybe you mean Narcan or methadone as first aid against ODing?

all27 days ago

Ugh. Then I'm terribly out of date.

avidiax7 days ago

You don't have to target dealers.

If the government makes equivalent drugs available for free, no dealer can compete.

Giving out free drugs like candy isn't ideal, so you can put just enough speed bumps to limit the free drugs only to actual drug addicts with a black market dealer. That means that all the dealer's best customers disappear even faster than before.

all27 days ago

The "free candy" approach doesn't take into account the part where some of these drugs literally unwire self control in the user, that is they lose their ability to choose whether they do a drug or not and lose any agency they once had. There's a reason highly addictive drugs should be tightly controlled.

Terr_7 days ago

Yeah: There's some very interesting philosophical territory in there about what situations and choices are actually voluntary, and which ones are essentially a kind of biochemical slavery that the person needs to be liberated from.

brainwad7 days ago

Drugs cost actual resources to produce. Giving them away for free will distort the market towards more consumption than ideal. And unlike e.g. healthcare or education, it's not like we can morally justify that overconsumption. Taxpayers shouldn't be paying to get/keep people addicted to drugs.

avidiax7 days ago

We are all already paying a high price for street drugs. The addicts are not paying out of their pockets, but instead are stealing things and extracting a fraction of the value. Then we pay for emergency medical care when the street drugs have terrible quality.

Pharmaceutical quality opioids and amphetamines are definitely cheaper when you factor in the externalities of street drugs.

The low price also allows lower consumption, counterintuitively. Taper the supply, and if the dealers return, increase supply until they are out of business. Hard to be an addict when the government tapers you and drives the street dealers out of business if they try to supply again.

+1
vidarh7 days ago
rightbyte7 days ago

You can ranson the drugs. There are plenty of methadone programs around the world.

But ye it should be regarded as some sort of damage control and not like 'free libraries and subways for everyone'-policy.

WalterBright7 days ago

The dealers successfully compete by making stronger drugs.

WalterBright6 days ago

Take a look at the black market for marijuana. Much stronger.

WalterBright7 days ago

> but not offer effective recovery options

They do offer treatment, but few take it.

charles_f7 days ago

> until we shake off the current policies rooted in puritanicalism.

Why is anything that is not 100% supportive of people putting needles in their butts is deemed puritan and reactionary?

We had a long public consultation recently where I live, because the city wants to introduce free housing for drug addicts with a safe shooting room. Next to a day care, a park, and a bridge, and in an area that currently doesn't have any of the east-van type population. It was basically locals speaking against and support associations speaking for. Locals were called bigots, racists, needed to check their privilege, stereotyping. They weren't allowed to say there'd be more crime because "there won't be".

There are certainly better things that can be done to help addicted people, but just counting on being nice and giving them clean needles won't change the current curve. The dealers are not the ones making daily life literally shittier through human feces on the sidewalk, and bikes disappearing from under your butt if you only gaze elsewhere for a minute. Their violence is mostly internal. The real impact is from the thousands of these people who need a revenue stream to keep subsisting while trying to surf their high one last time, ride that they'll preferably have slowly on a sidewalk or crossing a street with their pants midway through their calves.

I pity those people, their life must be horrendous, and they don't get any help getting out. But I don't recognize their right to fuck themselves up to a point that it's a nuisance for everyone, and it becomes everyone else's problem to unfuck them.

If you replace them by state sponsored products, you'll just keep the same trend. The only way is to a) break the cycle that makes the problem worse, by making it illegal (prison is not an answer but at least allow cops to confiscate) and breaking the procurement chain and b) fix the existing problem by introducing real programs that get those people out of their addiction, rather than just helping them live through it.

And yeah I know that neither are possible, it's a simplistic point of view, but the policy of just letting things be a vaguely supporting it has only made things worse, and just saying "screw it, nothing can be done, just go with it", that doesn't sound like a winning stance to me.

lettergram7 days ago

It’s pretty damn easy to solve this tbh. Yes, you imprison people, push them out of your cities and confiscate all drugs. You don’t have to change the laws, just enforce them, it doesn’t matter if you’re addicted to drugs, taking a dump on the street has a criminal penalty.

avar7 days ago

    > Not half-measures like
    > they've done in BC &
    > Portugal.
Are you actually aware of what Portuguese drug policy is like, or are you just going by the popular North American misconception that they just decriminalized everything and called it a day?

The actual Portuguese drug policy is draconian in a way that would be unimaginable in the US or Canada. The decriminalization is only a small part of it.

mullingitover7 days ago

Portugal didn’t fully fund treatment, and in the past few years they’ve seen a reversal of their early successes. Oregon is going through the same thing.

Recognizing that drug addiction is a health issue is progress, but that means you actually need to fund treatment.

anon2917 days ago

I actually am fine with drug legalisation. It should be legal for people with more than X acres of land (or people who rent X acres of land). You should be required to have a certified drug security person on staff that will deal with anyone who has a 'crisis' while using, and to especially make sure they don't leave the property to become a public nuisance. And you should be required to provide evidence of sufficient health insurance and coverage.

You should also have to prove that you will be able to maintain this lifestyle in perpetuity, perhaps by posting a sufficiently large bond with the state you're operating in, which can be re-funded to you if you can prove that you're no longer using permanently (I.e., maybe after a decade of no further use).

But if you do all that... please like bake yourself as high as you want and pay good taxes.

I have a substantial problem with people doing drugs in public. And having their trips on public streets.

But seeing as the requirements to safely do drugs are much stricter than most of what the 'typical' street drug user seemed to ever be capable of, I doubt decriminalizing all drugs in a safe manner will do much of anything. The irresponsible people will still be doing it. At some levels drugs will always be criminal, because they're anti social and humans don't like anti social behavior in general.

code_duck7 days ago

Why do people not have to do anything remotely like that for alcohol? It’s almost a cliche of course, but worth noting in this context since alcohol is addictive, destructive to physical and mental health, and commonly provokes violent and antisocial behavior.

ipaddr7 days ago

Certified drug security person? You mean a medical team and hospital equipment plus security guard and counselor rolled into one? Or an ex-user just watching?

seattle_spring7 days ago

It’s interesting to me that you referred to all drugs as one big bucket (“drug legalization[sic]”), and then referred to the usage as “bake yourself as high as you want,” which is typically a term used only for cannabis.

Do you feel like your proposed rules should apply to all currently-illegal drugs equally?

anon2917 days ago

Sure I truly do not care what you want to ingest. I'm truly not a drug prude. I just can't deal with the drugged out individuals masturbating in public in front of kids and stuff.

As for baked v something else, I don't do drugs and have no interest so whatever... You know what I mean.

rayiner7 days ago

[flagged]

mc327 days ago

[flagged]

constantcrying7 days ago

Decriminalization has never been about compassion or freedom. It just is an easy escape from social responsibility allowing parts of the population to indulge into extremely detrimental behavior to themselves and others. The rest can just look away "because it is legal".

Yes, alcohol is bad too. Yes, weed is bad too.

surfingdino7 days ago

Those policies never take into account that part of the population which gets affected by the drug users' behaviour. I was recently approached and threatened with extreme violence by a person who looked like he was on drugs and had an unmuzzled dangerous breed of dog with him, not on the leash. The dog was chasing after joggers and he was chasing after the dog, promising people that "if you ever follow me I'll slice ya". He picked on me too and listed the things he would do to me while his dog was too close for comfort. Central London, broad daylight. Compassion for drug addicts is a hard sell, because there are so many of them and they show no desire to change because "I'm an addict, I can't help it".

fragmede7 days ago

Alcohol criminalization didn't go so well though.

The need is for a nuanced policy that recognizes that people have bad habits, vices, and addictions, and that you can't stop them from that or else they'll just do it harder, like a petulant child. But there's a difference between all alcohol must be legal all the time, and limiting sales to no hard liquor, beer and wine only at certain times. And then, what do people see as the government's role in all this. How much should be up to the government and how much should be cultural norms enforced socially?

constantcrying7 days ago

Yes, but clearly that was a different situation, where you had large non-addict populations still wanting to consume. With heroin there aren't any occasional users, who shoot it twice a month and are totally clean otherwise.

Alcohol is bad, sure, but just because it is a socially acceptable drug, doesn't mean you should allow other drugs to become socially acceptable as well. Just because it seems near impossible to get criminalize one bad thing, doesn't mean that all other bad things should be decriminalized.

In the end I don't see drug decriminalization as anything more than a political class who creates severe misery, because they are utterly unable to help with the underlying problems which push people to drug use.

tgv7 days ago

People often fall into the trap: A is bad, but B is bad too. B is allowed, so therefore A must be allowed too. When put in this abstract way, the irrationality of it is clear. But when it's an emotionally vested topic, the lines suddenly blur.

The powers-that-be are indeed unable to help with the underlying problem, but there's more to it. Politicians want to be seen as doing good. The myths surrounding good drug use have been pushed for a long time, and the combination with the prospect of the very hard task of eliminating drug trade and the social class aspect, means that for many --in particular progressives-- legalization becomes an attractive option.

vidarh7 days ago

The idea that all heroin users are addicts that can't just stop has been known to be false since at least the 1970s. The heroin addicts you notice are by no means the only heroin users (nor the only addicts).

One can argue over ratios, but the addiction rates for heroin are low enough it's sometimes prescribed for post op pain in the UK as an alternative to morphine.

AlecSchueler7 days ago

> With heroin there aren't any occasional users, who shoot it twice a month and are totally clean otherwise.

There aren't?

mcmoor7 days ago

It'd be interesting to have further discussion beyond just parroting a flawed experiment from almost 100 years ago though. DUI has caused very high mortality, although funnily some people here will suggest that we abolish the "driving" part instead.

In my country (Indonesia) where alcohol is frowned and restricted culturally, DUI rates is almost nonexistent compared to developed countries. Although we "replaced" it with sleepy driving which also caused lots of deaths, so maybe we do have to abolish driving after all.

thinkingemote7 days ago

The irony is that alcohol prohibition did actually work. It increased health, reduced violence in the home and on the street, increase safety for women and girls, decreased deaths and increased economic wealth amongst other benefits. It also (needless but I have to say it) increased organised crime which in the end overwhelmed the positives.

DoreenMichele7 days ago

I'm not familiar with the history and details. I'm for decriminalization of drugs but I think that only helps if you also provide meaningful help in getting free of addiction.

I'm for decriminalization because if you can't admit you have a problem and need help without being charged with a crime, it's a barrier to getting clean. I'm also generally for "It's your body. Put what you want in it."

I am not criticizing this change in policy. I am also for holding people accountable for their behavior and not excusing bad behavior generally based on "Poor baby. Has an addiction."

We don't say chemo patients are excused from behaving appropriately, though we do make allowances for the fact they are probably grumpy and not at their most diplomatic because they are miserable. I believe addiction frequently has an unrecognized medical component and people are literally self medicating, often for an issue that doctors have failed to identify. I believe if you find the underlying cause, they can stop.

Anyway, just trying to give context here. Decriminalization should not be code for "Let's let assholes claim the rules don't apply to them at all and excuse all their awful behavior."

charles_f7 days ago

> It's your body. Put what you want in it.

The problem is when you let others deal with the consequences - which is by and large what's happening in Vancouver.

FrankyHollywood7 days ago

In theory I'm also for decriminalization, but in practice it doesn't work. Some drugs are so intense, can't compare to your Friday night beer. See the heroin epidemic in Amsterdam during the 70s, some neighborhoods became completely uninhabitable and an emergency status was declared. It just doesn't work.

"The Dutch Hard Drug Epidemic, 1972–Present" https://www.jstor.org/stable/resrep42912.9

"Heroïne-epidemie in Nederland" https://nl.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hero%C3%AFne-epidemie_in_Ned...

TacticalCoder6 days ago

> In theory I'm also for decriminalization, but in practice it doesn't work. Some drugs are so intense, can't compare to your Friday night beer.

The question is simple, really: "Do you really want your kid to have free access to Tranq?".

Answer that, in all honesty, from the bottom of your earth.

My enemies aren't the dealers or the consumers. My enemies are those saying every single drug should be freely accessible to my kid.

DoreenMichele6 days ago

Drugs that are legal for adults are typically illegal for children. Alcohol and tobacco are both legal for adults in the US and illegal for children.

Saying adults who are generally functional should generally have agency over their own body is not saying "Anything goes!" and is not saying "Let's actively seek to turn kids into addicts!"

A lot of arguments against decriminalization are posited as extremist, worst case scenarios.

I said from the start that I don't know what the history is for the jurisdiction in question and ended with my firm belief that decriminalization should not be code for giving assholes a pass on any and every shitty thing they want to excuse or justify.

Seems like something went wrong in BC and they are trying to course correct. I'm fine with that.

baq7 days ago

> It's your body. Put what you want in it.

What happens after? If you become an addict and steal shit from my car to pay for more shit you want and now need to put in you?

Making people addicted is the opposite of making them free. People have understood this very well for a long time now.

otherme1237 days ago

Stealing is what is illegal. Your reasoning is very dangerous, as you can link whatever you want. For example, it's common in the US to blame certain videogames or movies after mass shooting: by that logic illegalizing the videogames solves the shootings. Or we need to illegalize some videogames because they might cause shootings.

When people think drugs and addiction they immediately think of heavy opiates. But there are a lot of drugs that cause mild to no addiction (and certainty less than alcohol or tobacco), and low harm: LSD, for example. Nobody steals shit from your car to do some acid.

JW_000007 days ago

To be fair, we do this for a lot of other stuff as well. For instance, driving over the speed limit does not harm anyone per se, it's only when this leads to a traffic accident that harm is caused. You could just as well say: let's not have speed limits, let's only criminalize harming people in an accident, and then it's everyone's responsibility to drive at a responsible speed (and maybe in case of an accident, you would need to prove in a court that you drove (ir)responsibly and who was at fault). But we know this doesn't work in practice.

+1
nucleardog7 days ago
otherme1236 days ago

Alcohol is legal. But it's ilegal under some circumstances (driving). Or it's not tolerated on some places (work).

There are a number of low risk drugs, like LSD, that are very ilegal. In fact, they were made ilegal on false premises, like "they led to suicides" or "you'll stare at the sun". Often people make a big bag of drugs, from LSD, shrooms and marihuana, to heroin and fentanil, put them in a bag and stamp "ilegal because some of them are very bad" on it. Sorry, what? Ban the worse of them, and leave the less harmful out. I'm personally for full legalization, but I get that some people want to ilegalize at least the worse opioids.

To go back to your speed example: yes, speeding is bad. Yet we put a limit reasonably high that allows you to use the car. We didn't outlaw car usage altogether! We know there are traffic related deaths and injuries every year, and still we are allowed to drive: we study the problems, we try to fix it, new regulations are in place... We try to get a balance between the risk and the benefits. But the current discourse with drugs is "going in a car at 5mph in the highway is very, very, very harmful". Except alcohol: that "car" can go at full speed.

baq7 days ago

The difference between video games and smoking fentanyl is like between a chair and an electric chair. If you don’t see it, we have nothing to talk about.

otherme1236 days ago

And you are doing exactly what I said: straight to the most powerful opiod available. Fentanil is bad, lets outlaw shrooms, LSD, MDMA, marihuana... But leave out alcohol because...? Ah, yes, because when it was ilegal, mafia, violence and damages related to them were worse than ever.

Also notice how heroin and fentanil are currently illegal. Everywhere. How is it going? I guess there are no addicts, or people stealing cars to get their fix. Because that only happens when they are legal, isn't it?

Somehow we know that ilegalization solves nothing or create worse problems like mafias and linked violence, and still believe that it's the solution.

wetpaws7 days ago

[dead]

VeejayRampay7 days ago

he means the good drug addicts, the ones that stay home and paint avant-garde masterpieces high on expensive high-quality heroine

anon2917 days ago

> I'm for decriminalization because if you can't admit you have a problem and need help without being charged with a crime, it's a barrier to getting clean. I'm also generally for "It's your body. Put what you want in it."

Like literally... this is usually the case even in places where drugs are actually still illegal. In the US at least. For example, my state of Oregon decriminalized drugs. This did... nothing in terms of legal process, other than to eliminate any court appearances (police can't jail you so you don't show up in court). While Measure 110 was being implemented I was on the grand jury. Essentially, the status quo before the bill was that people would be held pre-trial. They would go on 'trial' or take a plea deal and be sentenced to recovery. That is what went on before decriminalization. Then suddenly one day, police could no longer hold them and everyone stoped showing up to court. I think I read today that the drug courts went from thousands of cases to a few hundred per year. That's thousands of people slipping through the cracks.

treflop7 days ago

In California, you can’t drink on the beach.

Except we all do, but we all try to hide it.

But I think it works out because while we’re all doing trashy things, overall the beach doesn’t look as trashy.

I feel like the law exists with everyone knowing it will be broken but working exactly as the law intended. Win-win.

int_19h6 days ago

The problem with stuff like that is that you'll still have the law enforced, just in a haphazard way. So everybody is doing it, and most aren't any worse off for it, but some end up with their lives ruined, largely at random.

treflop6 days ago

There is no world where laws exist that are not subject to that problem. Cops fucking plant drugs on people.

Just because all locks are breakable doesn’t mean that you stop using locks.

int_19h6 days ago

It does mean that maybe throwing people in prison for possession is not the brightest idea given how likely it is to be just some random guy who really didn't do anything that everybody else wasn't doing.

spxneo7 days ago

After decades of decriminalized drug use, people are finally fed up with it, see through the limitations of compassion that is largely driven by political ideology and are voting for stronger laws.

Yet I question whether we will see actual enforcement.

kazinator7 days ago

Decades? Are you still talking about British Columbia, Canada?

mitthrowaway27 days ago

The grandparent might be referring to various degrees of decriminalization, not just the more recent experiment of decriminalizing possession of 2.5 grams of drugs and the allowance of drug consumption in public spaces that was backed by the BC court injunction last year. For example, Insite (a supervised drug injection site which opened 21 years ago) could be considered an early step in decriminalization, including acquiring a legal exemption allowing it to operate.

kazinator7 days ago

Insite can almost be seen as a medical clinic. A hospital OR is a "supervised drug injection site" where you can be legally knocked out with propofol and fentanyl.

mitthrowaway27 days ago

Yes, in the same sense that a street drug user could almost be seen as an amateur anaesthesiologist subjecting themselves to a controlled dosage of opioids for medical purposes. But despite that, street drug use and supervised injection at Insite would both have been criminal offenses if not for changes and exemptions made by legal system to allow them. That's precisely what "decriminalization" is, and a large part of this is the idea that drug abuse should be seen as a medical matter rather than a criminal one.

spxneo7 days ago

medical clinic is an interesting choice of words.

One might think there is a licensed medical doctor prescribing hard drugs without fear of prosecution, free from law enforcement.

Chinatown residents would certainly disagree whether it has been beneficial for them. Yaletown residents certainly disagree

nickff7 days ago

Insite opened over twenty years ago: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/insite-20-ye...

Insite may not have been a 'de jure' decriminalization, but it was definitely a site where the government acknowledged the laws were not to be followed as written, and was a 'de facto' decriminalization.

TacticalCoder6 days ago

> Decades? Are you still talking about British Columbia, Canada?

Ain't that the real scary thing though? That's it didn't take decades but mere years for things to turn to shit?

To me real evilness is the supposedly compassionate ones, who not only refuse to see evil but also encourage it.

scotty796 days ago

"evil", "good" are terrible words. Religious trickery to fend of questions like "what?", "why?".

Tell what you object to or what you support and why and then you can have a conversation and possibly arrive at some solutions or at least some knowledge.

smt887 days ago

It's mindblowing that you think compassion is a political ideology and not, you know, a normal human emotion that motivates people to push for certain policies.

A cynical person would never push for (largely unpopular) compassionate/harm-reducing policies.

rayiner7 days ago

It's a bizarre inversion to say that enabling a small antisocial minority to terrorize the majority and strip away their enjoyment of public spaces is "compassionate."

spxneo7 days ago

harm reduction doesn't work when somebody actively/constantly seeks harm. we've put the personal liberties of a small group of people addicted to hard drugs above the rest. that is the misplaced compassion I'm talking about that hasn't worked.

vasco7 days ago

Harm reduction sounds like putting padding on a rope noose so your skin doesn't get itchy when you break your own neck from a ceiling beam.

anon2917 days ago

There is nothing compassionate about seeing someone destroy their life and their sanity and refusing to help them by jailing them.

zuminator7 days ago

I'm curious what studies you have seen that jailing people helps them improve their life or stay off drugs. From what I can tell, that is not the case.

"The theory of deterrence would suggest, for instance, that states with higher rates of drug imprisonment would experience lower rates of drug use among their residents... higher rates of drug imprisonment did not translate into lower rates of drug use, arrests, or overdose deaths."

[0]https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/issue-bri...

Perhaps if prisoners actually received the drug treatment they needed. "To be effective for this population, treatment must begin in prison and be sustained after release through participation in community treatment programs. By engaging in a continuing therapeutic process, people can learn how to avoid relapse and withdraw from a life of crime. However, only a small percentage of those who need treatment while behind bars actually receive it, and often the treatment provided is inadequate."

[1]https://nida.nih.gov/publications/drugfacts/criminal-justice

But as things currently stand there appears to be "higher rates of substance use disorders in prisons and jails compared to the total population."

[2]https://www.prisonpolicy.org/blog/2024/01/30/punishing-drug-...

anon2917 days ago

It improves everyone else's quality of life and it means they have the potential to access services. The individual homeless are certainly stakeholders but they are neither the only one nor the most important

mindblowing657 days ago

It’s mindblowing that you think compassion means letting s hoard of people absolutely destroy areas of a major cities and not, you know, an over correction to “war on drugs”-like awful policies.

For the individual drug user things might be “better”, but for cities/society they are absolutely not.

andy997 days ago

Yes, I was reflecting on this recently, it feels like public drug use (as well as homeless encampments, aggressive panhandling etc) is putting the rights of the individual drug user well above the rights of society, which seems incongruous for the people that support it.

zachmu7 days ago

Of course the boundless compassion of the kind that permits public spaces to be littered with needles and fentanyl smoke is driven by a political ideology, come on.

Grum97 days ago

[dead]

jmyeet7 days ago

When people make this point they usually refer to Vancouver, Seattle, Portland (OR) or San Francisco. What they do--and waht all politicians do--is completely ignore the root problem: unaffordable housing.

Lack of affordable housing is the number one cause of homelessness and it's not even close (eg [1]). California, in particular, votes in measures to fund housing the homeless but it doesn't really get spent. Why? Because residents, developers and politicians do everything they can to resist building anything to house the homeless in any capacity.

We have decades of long-term incarceration for minor drug possession to show this is not an effective strategy. That's what led to drug decriminzation after the crime panic of the 1980s and 1990s. Decriminalizing drug use is good. If people don't want to see it (which I get), maybe they should do something to house such people, particularly because homelessness itself is a major cause of drug abuse as such people turn to self-medication.

[1]: https://caplinnews.fiu.edu/lack-of-affordable-housing-a-lead...

stufffer7 days ago

>Lack of affordable housing is the number one cause of homelessness

Homelessness isn't a monolith. Treating someone who gets evicted after job loss the same as mentally ill drug addicts is making the problem worse. Homeless assistant programs are successful at helping people who accept the help.

The drug addicts you see on the streets are engaging in destructive antisocial behavior. Sadly the only effective remedy for this behavior is to be roughed up by police and thrown in jail.

squigz7 days ago

> Sadly the only effective remedy for this behavior is to be roughed up by police and thrown in jail.

As clearly evidenced by decades of this very successful strategy.

DoreenMichele7 days ago

No, homelessness is not a monolith.

But lack of affordable housing is still the number one cause.

We only claim someone's problems are entirely due to drug use when they hit skid row. We don't predict homelessness for millionaire rock stars who go to rehab repeatedly.

Drug use doesn't cause homelessness. Lack of housing causes homelessness.

The real solution is: We need to fix the housing crisis.

+1
seanmcdirmid7 days ago
YZF7 days ago

I'm pretty sure a lot of the people on the street doing drugs have other issues. I live in Vancouver. People have mental health and other problems that aren't related to their housing status.

The problem isn't simply housing costs. The problem is the lack of a social support structure. Shelters, access to (mental) health care of various forms, addiction treatment etc... Even in "socialist" (ha) Canada you're mostly on your own. BC used to have more money for those things and at some point in the early 2000's those budgets were cut with pretty immediate impact on the homelessness situation. That said housing should be part of the solution but it all boils down to the attitude that you don't need to take care of ($$$) your neighbor. Each to their own. Worse in the US ofcourse but still.

When I came to Vancouver ~23 years ago I was absolutely shocked by the homeless situation. I've never seen anything like that. It's much worse now. Again, boils down to are members of society willing to take care of each other- or is it each to their own and ignore the people who are down. House prices were 1/8th of what they are now but there was no shortage of drug addicts on the streets. North Americans seem to generally be ok with having a mix of worse than the 3rd world alongside middle class and well off. Nobody cares about what goes on in their city. I guess not trending on TikTok.

zztop447 days ago

Often the mentally ill drug addict you see today was the person evicted after a job loss yesterday. Homelessness hurts people.

+3
Der_Einzige7 days ago
blindriver7 days ago

98% of homeless people are addicts or mentally ill people. They can't hold a home no matter how cheap it is. Affordable housing won't stop homelessness, because drug addicts and mentally ill people will consume themselves and in the process lose everything including their housing.

foldr7 days ago

I’d be mentally ill too if I had to live on the street.

seattle_spring7 days ago

Not just unaffordable housing, but homelessness and addiction is a nationwide problem. Only a few cities try to do anything at all, while the rest of the country just pushes them toward those cities. No matter how much money a city throws at the problem, there’s no way it can ever deal with it at the volume necessary.

spxneo7 days ago

what comments like GP ignore is that there has been housing provisions for homeless/drug addicted population in the past and each time it did not alleviate any of its residence from their afflictions, instead these free housing units became just another bazaar, a place to do business.

sp5277 days ago

Arguing that a random homeless drug addict with negative net social utility is entitled to housing on some of the most expensive land in the world is completely bonkers.

sapphicsnail7 days ago

All human life is valuable. Measuring people's worth through "social utility" is such a fucked way to look at the world.

+1
jlawson7 days ago
Sabinus7 days ago

They only have net negative social utility at the moment, they have the potential to be productive citizens.

Plus, productive citizens need to share a society with the drug addicted homeless. That society is going to be more peaceful if the needs of those homeless are met.

zoklet-enjoyer7 days ago

Some of those people were around before it became some of the most expensive land in the world. Why should people be pushed out of their communities?

heffer7 days ago

Because some people view privilege of any kind critically. Also, especially in North America, being some place first has not historically proven to be a sufficient claim.

colechristensen7 days ago

I’m really in favor of the opposite: zone for fewer jobs. Set limits on headcount per sq ft. Limit zoning of anything that provides jobs to be no more than local housing. If the locals want to keep their residential density, fine, no more commercial development.

klyrs7 days ago

This is such a bad idea, I nearly spit out my coffee, which I drank several hours ago.

You want to build a building? Sorry, there's too many jobs in this area already, so you can't hire people to do that.

Seriously, please draft a law to enact this policy. It sounds hilarious.

anon2917 days ago

Portland is substantially cheaper than all the other areas and has a worse drug problem, so it doesn't seem correlated at all.

jmyeet7 days ago

Portland was ranked #21 in the most expensive places to live [1].

[1]: https://realestate.usnews.com/places/rankings/best-places-to...

anon2917 days ago

Yeah, but compared to SF, Seattle, and Vancouver?

matrix877 days ago

Who would've thought that a lack of available housing implies fewer people in housing?

maybe the people downvoting you have some kind of skin in the game and are benefiting from the housing shortage

olliej7 days ago

There hasn't been decades of decriminalization though? There have been decades of extremely harsh enforcement, far exceeding that applied to, for example, alcohol, fraud, sexual assault, ...

What there has been is decades of "maybe years in jail for drug use is excessive?", to which some places said "let's have less restrictions on drug use than we do on alcohol" which is absurd though I suspect less harmful in the long term, but many have doubled down on punishment.

That is ignoring the demonstrable bias in enforcement of drug crimes, that meant that even in heavily policed and restrictive areas the drug laws primarily act as a method to criminalize specific social groups (drugs used by the wealthy generally have lower penalties than those use by everyone else, enforcement of drug crimes means that despite every study on the topic showing little racial split in use, the overwhelming majority of people in prison for weed use in the US are black).

Treat drugs the same way we treat alcohol: taxed, regulated, age restricted, etc (and please get people to stop smoking joints at concerts. I don't understand why people who would never consider smoking a cigarette inside then light up a joint in a crowded hall.)

coffeebeqn7 days ago

It’s possible decriminalizing works but it’s also been combined with the absurd no policing of public places at all policy in these cities.

If people want to shoot up at home that’s fine. But there’s no reason we need to have large meth/fentanyl encampments with violent and severely mentally ill people on the streets in addition to that.

If you have too many chaotic policies that build up on each other it’s gonna end poorly as we’ve seen

akira25017 days ago

> decades of "maybe years in jail for drug use is excessive?",

Which is why we have a massive network of treatment and diversion programs often initiated by courts directly. It's been a long time since we've had a true "black and white" enforcement regime.

> drugs used by the wealthy generally have lower penalties than those use by everyone else

Wealthy people smoke crack too. What they can afford is to insulate themselves from the risk by being several layers removed from the transactions.

> Treat drugs the same way we treat alcohol

There are dry counties. There are states with specific ABV prohibitions in certain products and with dispensing limits in establishments. Some states have state operated liquor stores. The way we treat alcohol is not homogenous.

Then we'd have to get into product safety, licensing and liability concerns. What process should a "herion shop" be required to submit to before opening?

squigz7 days ago

> Wealthy people smoke crack too.

Do you mind linking to some data on this?

+1
echelon_musk7 days ago
hugocbp7 days ago

I honestly never understood why, if I opened a beer in English Bay in Vancouver, I'd get approached in a matter of minutes to stop/throw away the beer and yet, sometimes a few meters from me, we could see people openly using drugs and doing all the things you can imagine in open air without any repercussions. People completely out of their minds, screaming, walking in the middle of traffic...

I've come to Canada from Brazil, so I know a thing or two about violence, so it saddens me to no end that here I have to tell my wife not to go on certain streets in the middle of downtown due to rampage drug usage by users. And not even bad downtown, fancy Vancouver downtown close to Yaletown and West End.

It is about time that this is addressed. These people need help but the way to way to help them is not to just let them use drugs and stay on the streets every single day.

There are some establishments in downtown Vancouver that I don't even go to anymore simply because of the normalization of open drug usage in Vancouver.

Something needs to change and I thing this is a good start, at least to get this people somewhere where we can then start working on getting them treated or properly helped.

aaplok7 days ago

As someone who doesn't live in an area with a similar liberal law regarding drug use the article was very confusing to me. Perhaps you can help me understand.

The article keeps talking about "problematic" drug use, but I don't understand what that means. When is drug use problematic and when is it unproblematic? They claim that from now on they'll be able to arrest people who disturb the peace, but then aren't there laws already that already make it illegal to disturb the peace, irrespective of drug use? Is there a special kind of problematic behaviour that is not OK when consuming drugs, but is OK otherwise?? Having no experience with the situation, this all feels quite strange.

Same thing with hospitals: can't they just restrict the unmonitored use of drugs within medical facilities rather than some ambiguous notion of problematic use?

Overall, reading the article makes me feel that some people don't like seeing crackheads consume in public (which I understand), and since these people vote, a law is passed that had no head nor tail. I don't see how the law addresses the root of any issue.

ProjectArcturis7 days ago

Problematic: it causes problems not just for you, who are choosing to take the drugs, but also for others. Perhaps that's because you've been on meth for 5 days and are now raving mad in the streets. Perhaps you've taken fentanyl in a public park and are leaning like a zombie on the playground. Perhaps you've fried your brain and are unable to work, only able to aggressively panhandle to feed your addiction.

aaplok7 days ago

But then why not make the problematic behaviour itself what is illegal? Aggressive panhandling should be illegal, regardless of whether the perpetrators were on drugs. It makes people, particularly those that are vulnerable to violent crime, unsafe. Make being raving mad in the streets illegal too. I am surprised that there isn't already a law in BC that does. With regards to being a zombie on public benches, it's hard for me to assess why that is problematic. On the other hand making drug use on children playground illegal seems like an elementary rule to me.

What I mean is that none of these issues seem to be really well addressed by the broad sweep of a "don't be problematic" law.

+1
seanmcdirmid7 days ago
+1
davitocan7 days ago
kredd7 days ago

I would classify unproblematic drug use like the majority of people who get high at home, house parties, or ravers rolling on X. Basically not being a nuisance to the public during/after they consume. Very subjective opinion though, so it’s hard to draw a line.

aprdm7 days ago

I am also from Brazil and have been in Vancouver for 10 years. This is a big exaggeration, both on the beer and the "areas to not go" (unless you mean some parts of East Hastings).

Vancouver is one of the safest cities in the world, and beers are now legal in many parks. I never saw a police ticketing or complaining someone having a beer on a park.

I do support this change in policy.

hugocbp7 days ago

Just go to English Bay on a sunny day and open a beer in the sand and see. Alcohol is prohibited there again since several months ago and being actively enforced.

Or check this https://vancouver.ca/files/cov/05-31-2021-update-regarding-t... and https://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/new-lawsuit-targets...

aprdm7 days ago

I lived on Chilco & Nelson for many years... people simply have Starbucks cups with beer inside or other equivalent methodology of "wink wink". As long as you aren't being an ass there's zero problem..

davitocan7 days ago

You must not get out often. The police roll down kits beach on ATVs looking to give out tickets for open alcohol throughout the summer.

colechristensen7 days ago

The real reason is that you drinking a beer is easy to deal with at every level of escalation.

The homeless using drugs in the street are not.

genter7 days ago

Same reason normal, middle class people in decent vehicles get pulled over for expired tags or burnt out brake lights, yet the shit boxes with 3 tires and a plastic bag for a windshield keep on rolling.

steelframe7 days ago

One is likely to provide revenue to the local government. The other isn't.

+4
nilamo7 days ago
hugocbp7 days ago

And yet, my level of danger to society is also close to zero.

This happened with me right after they reverted the pandemic decision to allow alcohol there and I didn't know. I was drinking in good faith like I did for several months when they allowed it during lockdown.

Still, it is very frustrating that the beer would warrant a couple of park rangers to approach and enforce, while just a few meters away someone was doing hard drugs visibly completely out of their minds and screaming at passer byes.

floren7 days ago

I've often wondered what would happen if I plopped down on the steps of SF City Hall with a 6 pack and started downing them... ought to test it sometime.

dataflow7 days ago

> I honestly never understood why [...]

I can think of an explanation. Your addiction levels are likely to be very different. And therefore your body's ability to avoid your substance is likely to be very different from theirs. It doesn't seem unreasonable to receive more punishment when you have more control over your negative behavior.

anon2917 days ago

> It doesn't seem unreasonable to receive more punishment when you have more control over your negative behavior.

This sort of thing never ends well

bendbro7 days ago

> It doesn't seem unreasonable to receive more punishment when you have more control over your negative behavior

I think it should be the opposite. Because I am superior, I should receive less punishment. Inferior people should receive more punishment so they are incentivized to become superior or disappear.

dataflow7 days ago

I can't tell what you're going for here (is this serious or sarcastic?) but I was just trying to explain a potential reason, not endorse or reject it.

thinkingemote7 days ago

Thailand is rolling back is rolling back it's legalisation of cannabis. Even though the industry brought in over a billion USD, it will be banned at the end of the year, citing protection of health of the youth after concern about the rapid chaotic introduction. Medical use is kept.

The Thai population seems to approve of the reversal. I think many places will be watching carefully after seeing how the experiment goes.

deanCommie6 days ago

That's absolutely not the same situation and is irrelevant here.

Homeless people injecting heroin in bank vestibules, bleeding on the street, or smoking crack on sidewalks != middle class people smoking cannabis at home.

But Thailand is an extremely conservative country, and this decision is ultimately rooted in a moral judgement, not based on impact to the rest of society:

> “We drafted this law to prohibit the wrong usage of cannabis,” said the health minister Cholnan Srikaew, reported Reuters.

> “All recreational usage is wrong.”

https://www.cnn.com/2024/01/10/asia/thailand-cannabis-revers...

jpgvm6 days ago

I live in Thailand.

A roll back of the weed laws isn't entirely conservatism even though you are correct in that Thailand is a deeply conservative country.

The reason it's being walked away from is the same it was passed in the first place, politics. The previous election was even more of a sham then the most recent one. In order to win the junta party had to form a coalition with a party which favoured legalising weed, it's implied for personal monetary gain.

However the political landscape changed massively following the recent election where the progressive youth party won a majority but was denied government though the senate system setup by the junta to prevent exactly that outcome.

As a result though the previously very powerful populist party Phue Thai has returned to power and even brought their leader out of exile. Said leader is extremely anti-drug and is the primary reason why this law is now being revoked.

Weed usage is also just not popular among Thais. They prefer alcohol and kratom and see weed usage by tourists as mostly just a nuisance.

ashconnor6 days ago

Thailand is a great case study of legalization being haphazardly rolled out without a framework.

Germany is still proceeding with legalization and Canada's legalization has largely been a success.

mikeInAlaska7 days ago

Victoria BC is the only place I've walked past someone smoking heroin out in the open on a busy city street. (Last October.)

blackeyeblitzar7 days ago

I’ve seen this in Vancouver, Portland, and SF. Not saying it isn’t worse in Victoria, just that all these cities have a similar political leaning and policies, and have induced the same criminal behaviors.

xer0x7 days ago

Did the policies really induce the criminal behaviors?

blackeyeblitzar7 days ago

Maybe induce is the wrong word? I’m not sure. What’s your perspective?

throwthrowuknow7 days ago

Do sidewalks induce people to walk to the store?

anon2917 days ago

Yes. In Portland, the surrounding counties have much lower rates of issues.

yieldcrv7 days ago

every population center on the pacific coast is like this from Vancouver to San Diego

mtlmtlmtlmtl7 days ago

I've seen people smoking heroin on the subway, in the park, and various other public places in Oslo and yet public drug use isn't decriminalised here. Once you hit a certain low, you just stop caring, I suppose.

jjgreen7 days ago

You see it occasionally in London, the usual deal is to pop into one of the old red telephone boxes for a toot.

causality07 days ago

I don't understand the Western approach to drugs. If what you value is individual liberty and the principles of self-ownership and not punishing victimless crimes, you decriminalize drug use. If what you value is the elimination of the individual and societal harms of drug addiction, you jail users and execute dealers like Singapore. The half-measures taken by Western governments seem to combine the worst aspects of every possible approach, both disrespecting the individual and failing to protect society.

kube-system7 days ago

> victimless crimes

There's a grey area between 'completely victimless' and 'there was an individually identifiable victim'. Some things harm an undefined number of people by harming a collective resource. e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragedy_of_the_commons

These aren't 'half-measures', they're a recognition of nuance.

andy997 days ago

I don't understand it either really, but this is about drug use in public spaces. In principle the focus isn't really even the drug use, it's the public order issue of having a bunch of people behaving badly in a public space. For some reason we've given all the power to people who want to abuse public spaces in the false name of compassion.

monero-xmr7 days ago

Individual freedom should be restricted where your actions begin to harm the quality of life for others. Meaning camping on public sidewalks and parks, injecting drugs openly, panhandling, and other nuisances. Children shouldn’t have to walk through drug addict encampments on the way to school.

squigz7 days ago

I find it notable that you threw in panhandling and "other nuisances" right up there with doing drugs in public. They don't seem comparable.

andy997 days ago

Why? The point is that it's all behavior that causes people to fear for their safety. I could care less if someone is on drugs or a drug user. What I do care about is public spaces being not safe because of the behavior of people in them.

+1
squigz7 days ago
causality07 days ago

Somebody doing drugs behind the Walmart doesn't bother me. The endless stream of people at the gas station who "just need some money to get home" does bother me.

ashconnor7 days ago

So drug use is OK as long as you can do it off the streets?

pedalpete7 days ago

Drug use is ok as long as you are not harming/impeding the public.

Children shouldn't be afraid to walk down the street because it is filled with zombified addicts.

We don't allow public nudity, hate speech, etc etc.

You should be allowed to do as you wish in your private residence, as long as you are not harming society.

+3
ashconnor7 days ago
kazinator7 days ago

Yes? Like shitting is OK as long as you do it in a toilet, and not on the sidewalk.

squigz7 days ago

And of course, some drugs are more okay to do in public than others.

coffeebeqn7 days ago

Some drugs lead to a lot more of anti social behaviors in public than others

anon2917 days ago

Of course. I fully support weirdo silicon valley types taking drugs out in some desert far away from other people. Please just keep it there.

rufus_foreman7 days ago

>> injecting drugs openly

How does someone injecting drugs openly harm the quality of life for others? I can see it for the other things you mentioned.

Is it just, "I don't want to see that"? Because there are many things I don't want to see.

Not saying we shouldn't throw people in jail for drug possession. I'm OK with that. But if you're going to criminalize injecting drugs openly, you've got to live up to the fact that you're not a libertarian anymore.

roskelld7 days ago

Navigating around discarded needles is fun, even better when you have a curious dog that likes to sniff around.

+1
rufus_foreman7 days ago
beaeglebeachh7 days ago

Some would argue their quality of life goes down more from not being able to get high in the street than everyone else's does from watching it.

Ultimately it's more a property rights issue imo.

jolmg7 days ago

It's easier to understand if you see people as divided rather than unified in a single direction. Stuff like this are the compromises between the 2 halves.

steve767 days ago

[dead]

Sparkle-san7 days ago

We've definitely tried the Singaporean approach for decades in the US during the war on drugs. There's people currently serving life sentences for possessing a meager amount of Marijuana. It turns out it's far more complicated than "just throw them in jail and the problem will fix itself." Singapore is almost the polar opposite of the US (and to a lesser extent Canada) and what works there won't necessarily work here because of that fact.

skissane7 days ago

> We've definitely tried the Singaporean approach for decades in the US during the war on drugs. There's people currently serving life sentences for possessing a meager amount of Marijuana.

That’s not the Singaporean approach. The Singaporean approach is executing people for drug crimes. The US has never (to the best of my knowledge) executed anybody for a drug crime, as opposed to drug-related murders/etc.

Not saying the US should emulate Singapore - I personally believe the death penalty is immoral and should be abolished - but the US has never adopted Singapore’s approach

ashconnor7 days ago

If life imprisonment is not a deterrent then why would the death penalty be?

skissane7 days ago

I don't think anything is much of a deterrent, because that overestimates the extent to which criminals are rational agents.

But there is a massive difference between life imprisonment and the death penalty – with life imprisonment, there is always the possibility of some day getting out due to a commutation, a change in the law, etc. Whereas, once someone is executed, they are dead.

+1
creato7 days ago
anon2917 days ago

Because a good amount of people on life imprisonment end up ... leaving jail. Also, there is a quiet movement to end life sentencing in this country, including releasing people. There's no movement to 'undead' people that has any scientific merit.

causality07 days ago

You also have to actually do it and not just say you're doing it. There's no point in jailing people for marijuana possession while parts of the government are selling cocaine to generate revenue.

Sparkle-san7 days ago

Fair enough and some how I don't think that's the missing piece here given the number of drug users and dealers we've locked away for extended periods of time.

refurb7 days ago

> The Singaporean approach is executing people for drug crimes.

No, that's not the Singaporean approach.

The death penalty is reserved for very few circumstances - smuggling large quantities or dealing in large quantities.

3,101 "drug abusers" were arrested in Singapore in 2023. Only a few were executed and they tend to be high profile smuggling cases.

Drug users are usually sent to mandatory treatment (basically prison + drug treatment). There are plenty of users who end up getting caught several times.

Even dealing in small quantities of drugs results in prison, not execution.

https://www.cnb.gov.sg/docs/default-source/drug-situation-re...

+1
skissane7 days ago
MyFedora7 days ago

I sure hope drugs include alcohol in this context? It's quite strange how, where I live, a drunk driver can keep their driver's license, whereas a tiny trace of drugs costs people their driver's license and lands them in jail. Obviously unrelated to public spaces, but it goes to show the favoritism in drug legislation.

tgv7 days ago

Discrimination and favoritism are not by definition bad. E.g., I favor vegetarian over meat, wit over insult, health over sickness. I do agree that driving under influence, as well as dangerous driving, should lead to clear punishments, in particular regarding the driving license.

MicolashKyoka7 days ago

encouraging drug usage leads to societal deterioration by the very fact that these substances degrade the brain, so the person that is using them. it should have never been decriminalized.

lucasyvas7 days ago

You can’t drink alcohol publicly so you shouldn’t be able to do drugs publicly. I live in BC - it’s ridiculous. I seriously do not care anymore it needs to end now.

Find a way to better address the source of the issue for future generations. It is too late for these people.

And before someone thinks they are clever - wait until you either have kids in the area, or walk a dog. It’s complete horseshit.

anon2917 days ago

The source of the issue is that opioids exist.

Opioids are useful but they have literally been a thorn in the side of mankind's existence since their discovery by Europeans (arguably even before). They have caused no end of trouble. People criticize Asia for its handling of drugs but they do that because they've been through exactly this. Literally exactly this just a few hundred years ago. They fought wars over it and it arguably caused the Communist revolution in China, and the ending of an almost 5000 year old unbroken polity. These are smart, accomplished , compassionate cultures and they've basically all settled on the same solution.

bendbro7 days ago

Interesting argument!

BoingBoomTschak7 days ago

Weakness is the root of all failings. Don't know how to fix that, though.

aristofun7 days ago

Drugs are bad. For you personally and for society in general.

Period.

Only ignorant or malicious people bring arguments against it.

Yes, this point can itself be taken too far and radicalized. There are no idiot-proof ideas.

aristofun6 days ago

Sorry to disappoint dear downvoters.

But i speak both from experience (personal and some brilliant friends lost to drugs) and common sense.

And this should be reflected somehow in legal and social norms.

deanCommie6 days ago

The following are drugs [0]:

* Heroin

* Meth

* Crack

* Cocaine

* Cannabis

* Cigarettes

* Alcohol

* Coffee

* Sugar

There is also fat and salt which while necessary to life, are also habit-forming in the excess and negatively affect humans.

Pray tell where you would like to draw the line of which drugs you would ban for the benefit of society.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug

> A drug is any chemical substance that when consumed causes a change in an organism's physiology, including its psychology, if applicable

aristofun6 days ago

Jokes aside, the line is much more clear than drug defenders and beneficiaries are trying to frame.

Did you know of anyone who sent their life down the toilet due to coffee?

At the same time how many people you think are dying every day from diabetes, obesity and lung cancer?

Not to mention all people who ruined their lifes because of alcoholism, marijuana etc.

What other “nuances” do you need?

+1
deanCommie4 days ago
khazhoux6 days ago

This is not a serious argument. Are you suggesting the distinction between heroin and salt is arbitrary, on the scale of good-vs-bad for humans and society?

deanCommie6 days ago

No, I'm saying that the balance between "<substance is so harmful in it's effects that it's beneficial to society to eradicate it outright>" and "<substance is harmful to the individual but in a free society we have body autonomy>" is a spectrum.

On one extremes we have substances that people would pretty universally agree which of the buckets they'd put them into.

But where in the middle the balance shifts from one to the other is fairly controversial. Heroin decriminilization is controversial. Banning excessively large soda drinks is controversial.

Everyone agrees cigarettes and alcohol are harmful, and probably wouldn't be legal if they were invented today but noone seriously suggests criminalizing them.

My point with OP that treating all "drugs" so black-and-white is harmful without more nuanced discussion. Do they believe cannabis be illegal but cigarettes legal? I don't know.

aristofun6 days ago

Are you ignorant or malicious? )

Yes, alcohol and cigarettes should be controlled too. They are as bad to society as marijuana etc.

And one day we’ll also realize how harmful uncontrolled and excessive sugar in every product is too.

switch0077 days ago

The only thing that will work is if you get rid of the reasons why hoards of people do drugs in the first place.

That is likely incredibly complex - beyond the ability of any government (many of which actively contribute to the destruction of society and increased drug/suicide rates) - and very expensive.

nobodyandproud5 days ago

Catch and release. I was (and still am) a proponent of decriminalizing small use and non-distribution; or at least something else.

But certain class of drugs are just too much.

phoenixreader7 days ago

US and Canada should invest more in finding a treatment for opioid addiction. A drug that cures heroin addiction would save so many lives and helps people reach their true potential.

joenot4437 days ago

There is a treatment for opioid addiction, it's called methadone. It works very well and it takes a very long time. The US actually did exactly what you said, it was American doctors and universities who developed the programs now used around the world.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opioid_agonist_therapy

kazinator7 days ago

Are alcohol restrictions combined with this law, or unhinged?

aprdm7 days ago

This is not a problem British Columbia has. Alcohol consumption and selling is already quite restricted in BC.

kazinator7 days ago

I mean, { may I have / may I not have } a beer in exactly all the places where someone else { may | may not } enjoy non-alcohol drugs?

If it's not consistent, what is the rationale?

aprdm6 days ago

It is consistent after this change, yes. Or even better for beer, since there are parks you can have a beer.

phoenixreader7 days ago

A beer is not as addictive as Heroin. Drinking a beer is not going to ruin your life.

+1
kazinator7 days ago
pkphilip7 days ago

Instead of making it legal to consume drugs in public spaces, they need only have made it necessary for the law enforcement to prove that a person is a drug dealer rather than a user - example: by the weight of drugs being carried, by showing evidence that a person was actually selling/distributing the drugs etc

LeoPanthera7 days ago

OK. But only if you include tobacco and alcohol.

belorn7 days ago

Tobacco are fairly quickly being outlawed all over the world. In my country you can not smoke in public spaces, rented apartment, restaurants, mass transits, or the work place (unless there is designated smoking areas, which the work place is not required to build and basically no new building have). That mostly leaves streets, private own homes, and private cars, with the later two shrinking significant in second hand value if a smoker owned it. It should also be noted that all tobacco products is plastered with warning labels, and the tax is more than 100%. It is estimated that tobacco will be more or less eliminated within current generation.

Alcohol is taking a bit longer time but consumption has been shrinking fairly fast the last decades. Very high taxes and strict laws regarding who can sell it, where, when, and to whom are also already in place. There is also laws against production for personal use.

notfed7 days ago

And caffeine!

khazhoux7 days ago

This. My best friend in high school is now living on the streets somewhere in LA, stealing ("boosting") whatever he can to fund his Starbucks macchiato addiction.

FrozenSynapse7 days ago

would drinking coffee make me shit on the sidewalk, while others are looking at me?

mtlmtlmtlmtl7 days ago

If you have a sensitive stomach, it might...

dvh7 days ago

And sugar

throwaway220327 days ago

The way that people describe degenerate behaviour online baffles me.

They are humans just like you and I. They can choose, as you and I do, not to engage in this sort of nonsense.

To pretend that they are somehow some sort of different species and can't help themselves is abhorrent to me.

ysofunny7 days ago

are they running out of outside places?????

hnthrowaway03287 days ago

Finally they are doing something sensible. Get rid of the injection houses too, please.

JattMannu6 days ago

[dead]

MagicManX16 days ago

[dead]

renewiltord7 days ago

The previous US system was ideal: drugs are punished, but the rich get away with it. What this meant what that if you had sufficient assets to take care of you, you could get away by using those assets. This is a smart system. We do it for accredited investors.

Let me post a bond and I'll be fine. People act as if these things are addictive, but at various times I gave up tobacco and oxycodone and alcohol quite easily. Even after being administered fentanyl I didn't try it again despite easy availability.

I am clearly superior in this respect and should not be constrained by those who don't have these skills.

user_78327 days ago

I'm aware sarcasm translates terribly through screens but just wanted to throw in a word of caution, it's very much possible to be prescribed opioid painkillers after a terrible accident and still get "used" to them. (Fortunately it was quickly recognized and tapered off.)

renewiltord7 days ago

Haha, I know. That's why I was on the fent and on the oxy. It's really easy to stop.

all27 days ago

I still don't know if any of those things actually happened or if you were being sarcastic.

+1
renewiltord7 days ago
VeejayRampay7 days ago

he says fentanyl is easy to stop, so obviously sarcasm

anon2917 days ago

I'm not sure if this is satire or not, but I unironically agree. I'm not some prude. If you really are capable of drug use, go for it. I think it would be fine to develop responsible systems to allow responsible people to use it in a safe manner. Usually this would mean rich people with land or yachts. Please take your LSD trips on international waters somewhere. I don't care

renewiltord7 days ago

And that's the beauty of it. If you could not tell if it's satire or not, then you join the ranks of all those who cannot tell whether I've used the drugs or not. That's America's true condition to use drugs. There must be no externally detectable effect you can observe.

anon2917 days ago

And that's exactly how it should be. I will sometimes read articles attempting to deflect from the problem of street users by claims that successful people somewhere use drugs quietly without anyone knowing. I honestly don't care if all these people are high as a kite. I really only care about people on the street ruining the cities.

AlexandrB7 days ago

You're just describing "living in a society". The more extreme the behavior, the less tolerance there is for someone doing it publicly. There's a non-zero number of coprophiliacs in the US, but as long as they indulge in their fetish in the privacy of their own home nobody really cares.

bredren7 days ago

>That's America's true condition to use drugs. There must be no externally detectable effect you can observe.

Well said, though I'd use language with a bigger tent: "That's America's true condition to use intoxicants."

As for the wit, its a fun game you play here with other commenters. Everyone reading through this would likely enjoy the long form of this from The Onion, 20 years ago:

Drugs Now Legal If User Is Employed

>"If you are paying taxes and keeping your yard tidy, we're not going to hassle you if you come home from a hard day of work and want to enjoy a little pot or blow. But if, on the other hand, you're one of these lazy, shiftless types hanging out on the street all day looking for your next high, we're coming after you."

https://www.theonion.com/drugs-now-legal-if-user-is-employed...