[HN Gopher] Oregon decriminalized hard drugs - early results are...
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Oregon decriminalized hard drugs - early results aren't encouraging
 
Author : slapshot
Score  : 211 points
Date   : 2023-08-01 17:27 UTC (5 hours ago)
 
web link (www.theatlantic.com)
w3m dump (www.theatlantic.com)
 
| KingLancelot wrote:
| [dead]
 
| 1letterunixname wrote:
| Decriminalization isn't a panacea (no pun intended.) If there's
| no integrated treatment, social services, and medical system to
| support this, then it's doomed to fail.
| 
| OTOH, militarized and racist Nixonian prohibition also doesn't
| serve a public good. One easy change: the US schedule of
| substances should go away because it levies unfair and unequal
| punishment on users. Psychoactive substances don't need the
| regulations, controls, or expense of monitoring highly enriched
| uranium: it's spending money and effort on the wrong parts of the
| public health situation. There is already a template for dealing
| with other substances, i.e., alcohol and tobacco. Focusing on
| healthcare and mental healthcare for all, with substance
| treatment being part of it, would lead to better outcomes and
| probably reduce the costs of policing.
 
| janalsncm wrote:
| Expecting legalization to fix drug-related social issues was
| never realistic. What it does fix is mass incarceration of people
| who are ill.
| 
| So you need to compare the effects of legalization with the
| effects of criminalization. First order effects might seem bad:
| more drug users in public, more crime. But you also don't see the
| drug users who weren't imprisoned and were able to get help and
| turn their lives around.
| 
| What Oregon tells me is that deinstitutionalization doesn't work.
| You can't just kick drug users to the streets and expect that to
| fix the problem. Sick people need help.
 
| michaelteter wrote:
| I don't even have to read the article.
| 
| The US military is, if anything, serious about understanding
| cause and effect. They studied and learned about drug addiction
| during and after the Viet Nam war.
| 
| What they found might seem counterintuitive. Addicted soldiers
| could break the habit easily once they returned home. Of course
| this is an oversimplification, but the idea is that circumstance
| has a lot to do with behavior.
| 
| Given that, if you don't change the circumstances, then changing
| the details (criminalization, penalties) won't change the
| behavior.
| 
| WHY are people using drugs (or alcohol, as many of us do?) What
| is being avoided or intentionally clouded?
 
  | MisterTea wrote:
  | > Of course this is an oversimplification, but the idea is that
  | circumstance has a lot to do with behavior.
  | 
  | This is why rehab clinics seemingly "work" - you remove the
  | person from the environment driving them to seek refuge from
  | reality. They relapse very easily once back in the same
  | situation that got them addicted in the first place.
  | 
  | Ive experienced it myself on a vacation during an addiction
  | long ago: I was not worried about my situation, I had positive
  | people around me and we did fun things. During that time I
  | realized I had no interest in being high but felt the
  | withdrawal so I wound up dosing as little as possible just so I
  | wasn't jonesing. I realized breaking the addiction meant making
  | life changes which weren't easy but I managed to get over it.
 
  | mdgrech23 wrote:
  | There was also a pretty famous study w/ mice I believe. One of
  | them had a good world w/ plenty of food, plenty of toys to play
  | with and ample people to hang out with and have sex with. They
  | had two feeding tubes, one contained drugs and other didn't.
  | The mouse repeatedly took the drug free version. Then they
  | created a shit mouse world. I think it was just overcrowded and
  | didn't have any toys or that shit they borrow in. Low and
  | behold the mouse in the shit world chose the feeding tube w/
  | the drugs.
 
    | thehappypm wrote:
    | This study has been widely debunked as junk science
 
      | taeric wrote:
      | To help others that may be looking,
      | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rat_Park is a good read on
      | it.
      | 
      | Calling it junk science is probably overly stated. Seems
      | the largest confounding fact is that different strains of
      | rats have different propensities to addictions. I can see
      | why that would be a scary thing to look at in humans.
 
  | sircastor wrote:
  | Any time we have a conversation about this, my wife brings it
  | up: People are using drugs to deal with something - often
  | trauma of some sort. That trauma might be anything from
  | childhood abuse to homelessness. Our society (The USA,
  | generally speaking) is not particularly interested in helping
  | people deal with their trauma before it becomes a problem.
 
    | carpet_wheel wrote:
    | We create misery and then distribute poison to escape it.
    | Ugly way of disposing of the unwanted, but it can serve as a
    | warning to the rest.
 
      | reilly3000 wrote:
      | Manufactured Misery. Would make a great slogan for America
 
  | plantwallshoe wrote:
  | Right, in Vietnam soldiers could use with relative impunity.
  | 
  | In the US they would be jailed or socially ostracized.
  | 
  | The circumstances changed such that there were serious
  | consequences for doing drugs, and many were able to get off
  | them when presented with consequences.
  | 
  | Removing consequences for antisocial levels of drug use does
  | nothing to encourage people to get clean.
 
    | michaelteter wrote:
    | Not at all, at least not from what I read a few years ago
    | about this. The war situation there was frankly unfathomable
    | to us privileged folk. Beside the obvious physical pain and
    | injuries there were psychological influences which are
    | normally so far removed from our lives that we cannot deal
    | with them. Drugs are an escape from the physical injuries and
    | pain, and then they turn out to be an escape from the mental
    | awareness.
    | 
    | Shooting at other humans, killing them, is not something we
    | are designed psychologically to handle. But obviously if you
    | feel you must kill another to avoid being killed, you may do
    | it. And then your mind must reconcile that memory. Drugs can
    | help you avoid it.
    | 
    | The change of attitude has absolutely nothing to do with
    | laws.
 
      | HideousKojima wrote:
      | >Shooting at other humans, killing them, is not something
      | we are designed psychologically to handle. But obviously if
      | you feel you must kill another to avoid being killed, you
      | may do it. And then your mind must reconcile that memory.
      | Drugs can help you avoid it.
      | 
      | The vast majority of soldiers in Vietnam (and in any modern
      | war) don't kill anyone at all, and don't get into
      | firefights. Modern armies are basically 90%+ logistics.
      | Drug abuse was spread throughout all roles in the military
      | in Vietnam, it wasn't exclusive to combat roles.
 
    | idiotsecant wrote:
    | Your partially stated assumption here is that soldiers
    | stopped using drugs _because_ of the punishments. I think
    | this is a case of post hoc fallacy. Yes, punishments create a
    | disincentive for some behavior, but only in the case of
    | rational actors who have the means to act on that motive.
    | Some soldiers who left Vietnam had the necessary support
    | systems to overcome addiction or were never addicted in the
    | first place or weren 't in an environment where those drugs
    | were available at home. Others did not and stayed addicted,
    | even when they came home. Heavy penalties don't necessarily
    | cause a proportionally smaller addiction problem. They just
    | punish heavier. The only rational path to reducing drug
    | addiction is to improve the conditions that _cause_ drug
    | addictions. Very few people become drug addicts for no
    | reason.
 
  | mouse_ wrote:
  | Experts and the educated class will say it's a complex and
  | multifaceted issue. I say it's because the fraction of the
  | sweat of our brow we are entitled to is shrinking ever smaller
  | into nothingness.
 
    | michaelteter wrote:
    | I think you could expand on this a bit, because I want to
    | understand... I think I might be close...
 
      | mouse_ wrote:
      | In the 1970s/80s, an hour of minimum wage could afford you
      | about 7 big macs. Now, it will not even buy you one. Real
      | wages have dropped to an all time low, and it is harder
      | than ever to account for yourself as a working class
      | citizen. Circumstances for the average American have
      | devolved to nightmarish levels, and it seems that it is
      | only going to get worse.
      | 
      | It has been said that inflation is not a bad thing because
      | median wages will increase alongside it. In practice that
      | has not been the case. In 2014, when I was asking for $15
      | an hour, my rent was $740. Now that I'm getting $15 an
      | hour, my rent is $2,400 and I need several room mates just
      | to get by. Inflation is not a bad thing if wages increase
      | in correlation to it, but if they DON'T, then it functions
      | as a tax on our future. The vice is tightening, things are
      | becoming miserable, and a growing number of our children
      | and our future are turning to hard drugs and escapism as a
      | way of coping with it.
      | 
      | The 1% has managed to enslave everyone else; people grow
      | apathetic, and take drugs, because, really at this point,
      | who cares?
 
  | brundolf wrote:
  | There's treating the root cause (totally agree with, except
  | that as a task it's almost impossibly large/complicated to
  | solve at a societal level), and then there's deciding not to do
  | _additional_ harm (prosecution) on top of the harm that 's
  | already happening
  | 
  | I don't think the main expectation of decriminalization is to
  | solve the drug issue, but to stop adding fuel to the fire. But,
  | maybe that will turn out to have been wrong
 
| FredPret wrote:
| I thought legalization was the way due to libertarian reasons.
| Who is the gov to regulate my behaviour?
| 
| But then I met addicts. People who made one (fatal) mistake and
| are now hooked for life, and careening through life completely
| out of their own control.
| 
| In the past, we had strong social institutions like the church,
| and mass participation in the army, and insane asylums for the
| bad apples. The problem there was over-control and abuse of
| disempowered people.
| 
| Note I don't agree with the above, but now we've swung so far the
| other way that there are people doing hard drugs 100m from where
| I'm typing this, and there are seemingly no answers.
| 
| I hope we find an enlightened way to guide those who need help
| because neither the old nor the current way is working perfectly.
 
| urmish wrote:
| The HN/reddit stance on "war on drugs" and drugs in general is
| proof education and common sense don't have as much correlation
| as is commonly thought of. These forums kept bringing up Portugal
| for more than a decade and when finally the results were seen,
| the new favorite psyop they're shilling is "the govt isn't doing
| enough" and "we must do more". Lol.
 
| spoonjim wrote:
| Drugs have destroyed many societies and we look like we're
| allowing it to happen to us.
 
| dahwolf wrote:
| Some have the belief that hard drug users are temporarily down,
| but with the proper help can be converted back into productive
| citizens.
| 
| I think we overestimate for how many of them this is a realistic
| path. Quite a few of them will struggle for life. Have no family
| or a dysfunctional one, no marketable skills or ability to gain
| them, mental issues and cognitive shortcomings, wrong kind of
| friends/network, a whole host of issues.
| 
| Miracle comeback stories will grab the attention, but shouldn't
| be seen as the normal path. The normal path may be dedicating
| enormous resources for very little return.
| 
| I don't have the answers. You can't do nothing but you can't
| babysit somebody for their entire life either.
 
| lampshades wrote:
| I support decriminalizing/legalizing hard drugs. But you need to
| have the force to quickly and harshly deal with crime that it
| causes.
| 
| I keep hearing of people on the west coast committing small
| crimes constantly and being let out. We can't blame it all on the
| drugs, people still need to be required to act responsible. Right
| now we're letting people become junkies on the street and not
| even doing anything when they rob all the stores.
| 
| Make robbing the fucking store illegal, not doing drugs.
 
| giraffe_lady wrote:
| This the most openly bloodthirsty and triumphant comment section
| I've seen in a while. Given the context and implications, the
| power of the consensus and emotional tone here is chilling.
 
| droptablemain wrote:
| China, not Oregon, has the right idea regarding junkies and
| pushers.
 
| throw7 wrote:
| paywall and the archive is down.
| 
| did oregon have a unified intervention program where there was
| one point of contact who knew and tracked the patient from
| initial contact through all ups, downs, sides, and arounds? that
| p.o.c. would have access to full patient history (in a social
| sense also), and be able track the progression and punishments
| and rewards the "system" offers.
 
| glonq wrote:
| Vancouver BC says hello, where the same experiment is also
| failing.
| 
| On a related note, anybody got a quick turn-around on a Hyundai
| Veloster rear window? Ours was just smashed out _for the fourth
| time_ , because local fentanyl zombies somehow believe we are
| stashing a treasure trove under the back hatch.
 
| AYBABTME wrote:
| On an individual point of view, being easy on drug makes sense.
| We ought to have the right to do what we please to our bodies.
| But if you zoom out and look at the collective outcome, this is
| the sort of stuff that takes down millenium-old empires and keeps
| them down for centuries - China.
| 
| Being so bold to think that a good dose of superior modern
| intellectualism is going to make up for the fundamental flaws
| this introduce in a society, is a special type of belly button
| observationism.
| 
| As a society, we shouldn't stop our inquiry by looking at the
| personal tragedy that this causes on the individuals. The real
| long term issue is at the higher order level, where a society's
| fabric is torn apart by the debilitating nature of many drugs
| when deployed at scale on a society. Addictive debilitating drugs
| are a powerful force bringing a people down, taking others along
| with them.
| 
| Softness on drugs from a high minded perspective boils down to a
| decoupling mistake similar to the mispricing that carbon taxes
| attempt to correct. Drugs impose a high social cost that's hidden
| from sight when we just look at it from first-order individual
| right's perspective. But if we dig deeper, our collective
| individual rights are all put in jeopardy.
 
| indymike wrote:
| Addictions and incarceration have three things in common: they
| both rob a person of vast amounts of time, society of whatever
| that person's output is and impose vast hardship on the people
| around the addict/incarcerated.
 
| hintymad wrote:
| Funny. Chinese people were plagued by opium more than a 100 years
| ago. The Qing government, no matter how corrupted and useless
| they were, were willing to go to wars with British for fighting
| opiums. Pictures like this are national stigma even today:
| https://www.economist.com/books-and-arts/2011/10/29/be-caref....
| Yet, the US, the lighthouse of the nations on earth, thought it
| was okay to tolerate drugs, and it's certainly okay to have
| streets like in SF or like Kensington in Phili.
 
  | wittenbunk wrote:
  | Opiates arent decriminalized in Philadelphia, seems like your
  | argument is more based in bias then logic
 
    | hintymad wrote:
    | I was talking about the general tolerance towards drugs.
 
| Ajay-p wrote:
| I resided in Portland for two years and volunteered at a free
| medical clinic. We saw many individuals who were addicted to hard
| narcotics and it was the same people, repeatedly in our clinics.
| Then new drugs would emerge on the street and it seemed a never
| ending cycle of drug addiction, poor health, homelessness, and
| death. It wore me down because the tide of addicts never slowed,
| and I questioned if such legalization is beneficial.
| 
| Prison is not the answer but decriminalization removes incentives
| against powerful narcotics.
 
  | frandroid wrote:
  | ...Do you have evidence that the disincentives worked before?
 
  | calibas wrote:
  | There's already powerful incentives against narcotics, you
  | mentioned three of them: "poor health, homelessness, and
  | death." If that's not enough to dissuade someone, laws aren't
  | going to make much difference.
 
| BSEdlMMldESB wrote:
| on the other hand. the very 'late' results of criminalizing drugs
| are also really terrible.... e.g. latin america
 
| Tiktaalik wrote:
| From what is written here in the article it sounds to me that
| unlike the Portugal jurisdiction they are trying to emulate,
| Oregon really hasn't followed through on building out the
| required health measures, that is treatment, that is required to
| go hand in hand with decriminalization for the entire concept to
| be a success.
| 
| It's very easy to change legislation and deregulate. A lot harder
| to actually spend the money to build out a robust system of
| healthcare.
| 
| Deregulation is a necessary step in order to treat addiction as a
| disease best fixed with healthcare, but it can't be the single
| only step.
| 
| It's dispiriting that people are looking at Oregon struggling
| through the implementation details and thinking that the whole
| idea was a mistake and we need to go back to decades old drug war
| tactics. Not clear at all how those approaches would succeed in
| this moment as the new problem of fentanyl and toxic drugs has
| made things worse than it has ever been.
| 
| The notion that we need to give up and go back to the old ways
| seems more like a knee jerk reaction and flight to safety of what
| we've always done.
 
| tlogan wrote:
| I used to strongly support making drugs legal. I thought: this is
| a free country, you should be able to do what you want.
| 
| But what I've seen in San Francisco has made me think
| differently. Most people who use drugs eventually end up not
| being able to live like normal adults. And no one willingly goes
| to get help or treatment.
| 
| The problem will stick around because politicians care more about
| how things look. They'll say the numbers are wrong, or focus on
| wedge issues like transgender, guns, but they're not going to do
| anything on hard issues like this one.
| 
| Does anyone have ideas on what we should do? Should we make drugs
| illegal again and force people into rehab? Should we require drug
| tests for homeless people to receive government help like SF CAAP
| payments?
 
  | kouru225 wrote:
  | How does this compare to Portugal's wild success when it comes
  | to decriminalizing hard drugs? Seems like SF is a way less
  | useful example.
 
    | tlogan wrote:
    | Portugal is disaster. I went there but here is a link [1] :(
    | 
    | [1] https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/07/07/portugal-
    | dru...
 
    | anon84873628 wrote:
    | I suspect there may be a network effects / regulatory
    | arbitrage problem. If only a small number of places
    | decriminalize drugs, that will attract lots of drug addicts
    | without being able to support them. The policies need to be
    | more universal in order for them to bear fruit... Though I
    | realize this sounds like doubling down on failure. It would
    | explain why a country wide program like Portugal could be
    | more successful.
 
    | epolanski wrote:
    | It backlashed in Portugal in recent years actually.
 
  | patrickmay wrote:
  | > Most people who use drugs eventually end up not being able to
  | live like normal adults.
  | 
  | Got a cite for that? I doubt it's true.
  | 
  | We're seeing the same problems with drug prohibition that we
  | saw with alcohol prohibition. It's time for the government to
  | stop destroying people's lives.
 
  | rqtwteye wrote:
  | It was clear that making drugs legal wouldn't solve all
  | problems. What needs to happen is that the budgets that got
  | spent on prosecuting and imprisoning drug users now gets spent
  | on treatment options.
 
  | buttercraft wrote:
  | > Most people who use drugs eventually end up not being able to
  | live like normal adults.
  | 
  | Maybe you just don't notice the ones who live like normal
  | adults because... they live like normal adults.
 
  | DyslexicAtheist wrote:
  | keep them legal. but also invest in social workers. finally a
  | model like the Portugal approach won't yield results if the
  | basics aren't there (healthcare, housing, etc)
 
  | sircastor wrote:
  | > Should we make drugs illegal again and force people into
  | rehab? Should we require drug tests for homeless people to
  | receive government help like SF CAAP payments?
  | 
  | I think this is dealing with the problem far too late for it to
  | be effective. Rehab treats the drug as though it's the problem.
  | The drug is not the problem. The person using the drug is
  | trying to manage some sort of stress or situation that they
  | otherwise can't deal with. If you get a person off drugs but
  | don't address their health, home-security, childhood trauma,
  | abusive relationships, etc. At best they're simply going to
  | shift to dealing with that issue through some other way: Food
  | addiction, sex addiction, video games, abusing a loved-one,
  | etc. And if it's not obvious, this is a repeating cycle.
  | 
  | We need to do a better job of taking care of people in our
  | communities. Before they end up using drugs (or other types of
  | dangerous coping mechanisms). If we can't get to them before,
  | we need to pick them up and start taking care of them. The
  | trouble is (at least in the US), our approach to community
  | support is contrary to our sense of individual freedoms - we
  | don't want the government to support struggling individuals at
  | the cost of individual freedoms (see healthcare, food and
  | housing subsidy, etc)
 
  | alfalfasprout wrote:
  | Part of the problem frankly is that not all drugs are created
  | equal.
  | 
  | There's very little reason for opioids to be freely available.
  | 
  | But weed, psychadelics, mdma, etc. why not?
 
  | rvcdbn wrote:
  | We have built a society where the best options for these people
  | are to do what they are doing. Nobody starts using because they
  | have a great life but they're just curious what a bit of meth
  | feels like and then accidentally get hooked. They do it because
  | there's no better life path open to them. It's really a form of
  | suicide. Criminalizing will make the suicide process faster and
  | less visible to you. It won't stop anyone from using but it
  | will make using more dangerous. There is no easy solution. We
  | need societal change. Making it illegal would be like
  | criminalizing sugar because of the obesity epidemic.
 
    | kljasdlkjfsd wrote:
    | That's an interesting take but I think it's mostly reasoned
    | from flawed first principles, as if everyone is a rational
    | actor. For starters, some people do meth just because their
    | friends are doing it. Some people aren't able to see the
    | consequences clearly.
    | 
    | And even if you assume it's only people having a bad go at
    | life, every life includes bad parts, despair, etc. We're all
    | vulnerable to irrational acts in those times.
    | 
    | Legalizing drugs just makes access a little bit easier during
    | those times. Once they're addicted, though, no rational
    | amount of jail time will dissuade anybody.
 
      | anon84873628 wrote:
      | Yes, once they're addicted no amount of prohibition will
      | dissuade them. And we already have lots of addicts so the
      | prevention ship has sailed. It's time to address the
      | negative effects of black markets and drug impurity. During
      | alcohol prohibition people used to die from the adjuncts or
      | improper distillation. Now you can still become an
      | alcoholic but at least can rely on the quality. And no
      | gangsters make a living from rum running.
 
      | rvcdbn wrote:
      | All I know is that if I were born into their circumstances
      | I would probably do the same thing. Some lives are way
      | worse than others due purely to accident of birth and the
      | really uncomfortable truth is that we have built a society
      | where some lives are not even worth living. We need to face
      | up to that, not pretend like everyone suffers to anything
      | like the same degree. Life in the USA is very unequal. I've
      | suffered terrible events in my life but I also have hope
      | that my future will be worth living. If I didn't have that
      | hope, I'd be doing exactly what these folks are.
 
    | serf wrote:
    | >Nobody starts using because they have a great life but
    | they're just curious what a bit of meth feels like and then
    | accidentally get hooked. They do it because there's no better
    | life path open to them.
    | 
    | that's pretty obviously wrong. Look at the demographic sample
    | of meth users; it's not just down-and-out on-the-street
    | folks.[0]
    | 
    | it's not some "i'm going to try heroin on my deathbed" drug;
    | affluent people try/use it routinely and it's fairly common
    | in vacation destinations/sex-clubs/bars/'adult-venues' across
    | the U.S.
    | 
    | Some 100k+ salary earner who frequents sex clubs every
    | weekend while on meth isn't doing it because 'there's no
    | better life path open to them'; they're doing it because
    | they're bored and it is entertaining, which is essentially
    | the raison d'etre of all recreational drugs.
    | 
    | One could also note that the existence of such casual users
    | belittles the idea that it forms such addictive bonds as to
    | guarantee a ruined life.. but personally I think that's a
    | person-to-person thing; some people don't get addicted to
    | things like others.
    | 
    | [0]: https://www.nih.gov/news-events/nih-research-
    | matters/trends-...
 
      | rvcdbn wrote:
      | I think these are not the same people we're talking about
      | here (the people on the streets in SF).
 
    | atomicfiredoll wrote:
    | I had a friend who had tried several substances and thought
    | they were above addiction... until they were eventually
    | hooked on heroin. It's anecdotal, but having watched people
    | (more than him) get addicted, I don't have much doubt that
    | even people with a good life get hooked on bad drugs.
    | 
    | Hopefully, as society becomes more honest about drugs and
    | stops scheduling every drug as equally dangerous or criminal,
    | friends like that will be able to better trust that dangerous
    | drugs do exist and know which ones to avoid.
    | 
    | You'll never find disagreement on the need for societal
    | change. My impression is that the U.S. doesn't really have
    | tools in place to help people caught in the grip addiction
    | back from the brink. Best case, it seems like something that
    | that is being dealt with city by city without a national
    | framework. Therefore, addicts largely end up on the street,
    | hurting others, and/or in a prison system that's not designed
    | to help them.
 
    | tlogan wrote:
    | I understand. But what is the solution? Just wait for them to
    | all die? Here in San fransciso we have 3 overdose death per
    | day. That is 40% spike from last years. In 2017 we had 222
    | overdose death for entire year and we reached that number by
    | march 15h this year.
    | 
    | [1] https://sf.gov/sites/default/files/2021-05/2021%2005_OCME
    | %20...
 
      | rvcdbn wrote:
      | The solution that seems most likely to work IMO seems to be
      | a European-style welfare state. All drugs have long been
      | decriminalized in Portugal and you don't see that kind of
      | thing on the streets of Lisbon. But I don't see that
      | happening any time soon in the USA.
 
        | cyberax wrote:
        | Portugal has not yet been fully hit with dirt-cheap
        | fentanyl.
        | 
        | It IS different from other drugs.
 
        | tlogan wrote:
        | It seems it got hit this year ( visiting as tourist).
        | Rome and Milan too (visiting family).
 
        | tlogan wrote:
        | > you don't see that kind of thing
        | 
        | > on the streets of Lisbon.
        | 
        | Actually that is exactly what I saw on the streets of
        | Lisbon. Please do visit by yourself.
 
        | rvcdbn wrote:
        | I visited before the pandemic when last did you visit SF
        | because I think it's a totally different scale.
        | 
        | EDIT: just googled the stats and the number of homeless
        | in SF is roughly the same as the whole of Portugal
 
        | rvcdbn wrote:
        | Actually one thing I would be curious to try is to
        | substitute ketamine for opiates. It might work out that
        | some people prefer it and it's far less harmful on the
        | body. Problem is it's super expensive compared to
        | opiates.
 
    | z0r wrote:
    | I think you're oversimplifying things a little bit. Some
    | people will try e.g. heroin and get hooked due to curiosity.
    | Some people do derail otherwise promising lives with drug and
    | alcohol use.
 
      | rvcdbn wrote:
      | How many people do you know who work in harm reduction? How
      | many of your friends are regular drug users? I'm speaking
      | from direct experience are you? or are you just making
      | assumptions that make you feel more comfortable?
 
      | anon84873628 wrote:
      | Heroin is one of the few drugs where "once is enough". Many
      | people go through phases experimenting with drugs in
      | specific party contexts (e.g. raves) but that doesn't carry
      | over to daily life. The people who carry it over are the
      | ones looking for an escape as parent describes.
      | 
      | Edit: And of course it doesn't require that they have
      | obviously impoverished hopeless lives. Part of the illness
      | of our society is the huge numbers of depressed/lonely/etc
      | middle class people who otherwise seem to have a life "on
      | track"
 
  | lm28469 wrote:
  | > you should be able to do what you want.
  | 
  | I'm still baffled at how this argument makes it anywhere paste
  | high school. Living a single second makes it plain obvious that
  | no, you don't do what you want. Living in any type of society
  | or even the most basic and smallest community will tell you
  | that
 
    | havblue wrote:
    | I've heard that this is a generational difference: xers
    | thought of free speech as being an essential value and to
    | hell with the sanctimonious totalitarians who are telling you
    | that you can't listen to rap music.
    | 
    | This gave way to accepting any and all behavior, social
    | contact be damned. So social stigmas themselves are
    | repressive and it doesn't matter if you're hurting your
    | heath, that's your choice as an individual. La vie boheme!
 
  | P_I_Staker wrote:
  | With a more controlled supply, softer drug options, and social
  | supports, it's not a stretch to say there's are important
  | options being neglected.
  | 
  | Lots of people get pushed into harder options, when it becomes
  | a race to the bottom. Meth and hard opioids are massive
  | problems in the US.
  | 
  | AFAIK most similar counties have lower usage of meth, and fent,
  | though I'm sure opioids are in the picture. Don't underestimate
  | how many of these cases are deaths of despair, due to our
  | cultural issues, not just poverty. I suspect we're seeing the
  | costs of our toxic culture, income inequality, and lack of
  | safety nets.
  | 
  | Oregon IMO was set up for failure. Decrime is overrated. In
  | some ways it may be the worst of both worlds. Even moreso when
  | you do it during a drug poisoning pandemic... that's a really
  | good time to start distributing verified product.
 
  | mock-possum wrote:
  | Is it really 'most people' that end up that way though?
  | 
  | Or are those people simply the most visible?
  | 
  | I mean, how can you tell if someone is a functional user - you
  | can't, they look just everybody else, you know?
  | 
  | It's not about the substances themselves, it's the way that
  | they're used - and abused. It's helplessness in the face of
  | addiction that's the problem - addiction will drive the
  | afflicted to trade the rest of their life to get a fix.
 
    | lacy_tinpot wrote:
    | I think the main problem is that we lack the other side of
    | this equation. Namely that we don't have an avenue for
    | addicts or even "functional users" to go to when things get
    | tough. No way to prevent their addiction. No way to take
    | these people in and actually really rehabilitate them into
    | society.
    | 
    | Instead we throw these people into jail. And if even that
    | gets too burdensome we let people rot in the streets. So yes.
    | Decriminalize addiction because addiction is NOT a crime. It
    | is an illness.
 
  | matheusmoreira wrote:
  | > Most people who use drugs eventually end up not being able to
  | live like normal adults.
  | 
  | Yes. Claiming people can use these things without consequences
  | is just wrong. Anyone who thinks otherwise has clearly never
  | dealt with addicts. The only possible argument for drug
  | decriminalization is getting rid of all the violent crime
  | surrounding it. That's a worthy reason but must certainly be
  | weighed against the significant risks presented by drugs. Lots
  | of people out there have literally never witnessed the extent
  | an opioid addict's drug seeking behavior.
 
  | MisterTea wrote:
  | > Most people who use drugs eventually end up not being able to
  | live like normal adults.
  | 
  | I have a close family member who has been addicted to heroin
  | for most of their life and they are in their late 60's. They go
  | to a clinic and receive methadone which they can then go
  | outside and trade for whatever else. Basically a flea market of
  | intoxicants and they are found around every major rehab clinic.
  | 
  | The problem is they are so used to being in a stupor most of
  | the day that reality is something they cant handle anymore.
  | When they become sober they are faced with a loud, bright world
  | of sensory overload along with physical discomfort, pain and
  | headaches (I had addiction issues so this is my perception).
  | You want to go back to lala land and forget about all the
  | bullshit seemingly clawing at you.
  | 
  | These extreme cases become hollowed out vessels - the person
  | becomes a kind of animal that knows only one thing: defend the
  | mind against reality. They don't care about family, friends,
  | jobs, hobbies, ad nauseam. They need SERIOUS help - help that I
  | don't think we can provide as how do you rebuild a human mind
  | and life?
 
  | happytiger wrote:
  | I think the lessons are there in what Portugal has done with
  | their insane heroin wave (it was reported that _1 entire
  | percent of the population_ was reported to have an addiction to
  | hard drugs).
  | 
  | The parallels in Van, SF and Portland are striking, except now
  | it's not Heroin it's Fentanyl.
  | 
  | Here's a good primer:
  | https://www.cbc.ca/news2/interactives/portugal-heroin-decrim...
 
  | antihero wrote:
  | > Most people who use drugs eventually end up not being able to
  | live like normal adults.
  | 
  | Most people who use drugs function like completely normal
  | adults or eventually get bored or reduce usage as they age. You
  | are seeing the fringes.
 
  | laverya wrote:
  | The Singapore (and rest of Southeast Asia) solution set might
  | work here, but there's no way we have the political will for
  | it. If we won't execute the vast majority of murderers, there's
  | no way we'll do it for people just running a kilo of coke or
  | weed.
  | 
  | Not to mention "works" and "worth it" are not quite the same
  | thing.
 
  | GeoAtreides wrote:
  | I used to strongly support people getting fat. I thought: this
  | is a free country, you should be able to do what you want.
  | 
  | But what I've seen in the US has made me think differently.
  | Most people who get fat eventually end up not being able to
  | live like normal adults. And no one willingly goes to get help
  | or treatment.
  | 
  | The problem will stick around because politicians care more
  | about how things look. They'll say the numbers are wrong, or
  | focus on wedge issues like transgender, guns, but they're not
  | going to do anything on hard issues like this one.
  | 
  | Does anyone have ideas on what we should do? Should we make
  | fast food illegal again and force people into rehab? Should we
  | require weight tests for homeless people to receive government
  | help like CAAP payments?
 
    | [deleted]
 
    | styren wrote:
    | Not sure what point you're trying to make here? Policymaking
    | to limit access to unhealthy food isn't particularly
    | controversial and if there weren't more pressing issues were
    | I live I'd love for politicians to push it further.
 
      | HDThoreaun wrote:
      | It very much is. My city, Chicago, instituted a sugar tax.
      | It was so unpopular that it didn't even last a couple
      | months. I'd say it's not just controversial but outright
      | deeply unpopular.
 
      | seadan83 wrote:
      | Limiting access to any kind of food AFAIK is extremely
      | controversial!
      | 
      | For starters there are the massive astro-turf campaigns
      | that make a lot of noise. Beyond this, food regulation is
      | catnip for the culture wars.
      | 
      | > Taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages reduce consumption,
      | but a strong public backlash holds that they compromise
      | consumers' liberty, freedom, and autonomy.
      | 
      | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6916313/#:~:te
      | x....
      | 
      | Recall when there was a hint that Biden would limit
      | hamburgers? (This idea was a bad extrapolation, nobody was
      | proposing it as law - but nonetheless the mere mentioned
      | brewed a holy-shit storm of foaming at the mouth outrage):
      | - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/conservatives-beef-
      | with-bi... - https://www.statesman.com/story/news/politics/
      | politifact/202... - https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2
      | 021/04/26/republicans...
 
        | photonerd wrote:
        | > Limiting access to any kind of food AFAIK is extremely
        | controversial!
        | 
        | Where? Not in the US it's not & it's much more common to
        | do so in the rest of the world too.
        | 
        | Try buying proper raw milk cheese in the US for example.
 
        | seadan83 wrote:
        | > Where? Not in the US it's not & it's much more common
        | to do so in the rest of the world too.
        | 
        | I can't find personally any examples in the US where
        | regulations that limited access to certain foods was not
        | met with an unholy backlash. Here are examples: -
        | https://crosscut.com/equity/2022/08/study-finds-seattles-
        | con... (the point there is that the ordinance was very
        | controversial) - https://thefern.org/2022/12/how-food-
        | became-a-weapon-in-amer... (this resource describes
        | how/where food is controversial and has become part of
        | the culture war; which means everything related to it is
        | unnecessarily controversial)
        | 
        | Trying to find such examples, even lead in food is not
        | regulated! [1] The FDA only has guidelines around lead
        | and does sporadic testing. Fail those tests and the FDA
        | only shames you, no jail, no required testing, no
        | required compliance.
        | 
        | The example of the raw-milk-cheese is actually (according
        | to this resourced) a poster-child of limiting access to
        | certain foods as being contentious:
        | 
        | > There are many laws and regulations affecting the
        | cheese and dairy industry in the United States. However,
        | none is more contentious than the FDA-mandated
        | pasteurization of all milk products for human consumption
        | that was instituted in 1987. [2]
        | 
        | To be clear, food safety guidelines are very different
        | from limiting access to food. This is a case though where
        | access to certain foods was restricted and the cited
        | resources states that as an example of the most
        | contentious regulation.
        | 
        | I wondered as well what regulations have actually come
        | from the FDA in the last 20 years and how were those
        | received? It seems like the answer to that is the FDA has
        | long been unpopular and structurely castrated to not be
        | able to do anything regarding food [3]. Why that is the
        | case, how it came to be - I could only speculate. My bets
        | would be that it is easy to use the FDA as a punching
        | bag, gutting it from the inside is certainly part and
        | parcel to the 'small government' push that has been
        | advocated of late [6]. It could also be part that the
        | agency has fallen pray to corruption and is in the pocket
        | of those it is there to regulate [4][7].
        | 
        | Looking at the list of 'milestones' from the FDA,
        | published by the FDA itself, the list seems very
        | underwhelming to me regarding anything food related going
        | back 20 years, even 40 years (nutrition labels are one of
        | the biggest items on that list; very underwhelming to me)
        | [5]
        | 
        | Do you have examples where access to a given food was
        | limited that was _not_ super contentious? I'm honestly
        | not aware of any examples.
        | 
        | [1] https://www.fda.gov/food/environmental-contaminants-
        | food/lea....
        | 
        | [2] https://www.foodandwine.com/lifestyle/why-americans-
        | dont-get...
        | 
        | [3] https://www.politico.com/interactives/2022/fda-fails-
        | regulat...
        | 
        | [4] https://time.com/4130043/lobbying-politics-dietary-
        | guideline...
        | 
        | [5] https://www.fda.gov/about-fda/fda-history/milestones-
        | us-food...
        | 
        | [6] https://www.news-
        | journalonline.com/story/news/2012/04/05/bud...
        | 
        | [7] https://www.ewg.org/news-insights/news/2022/05/fda-
        | food-safe...
 
      | GeoAtreides wrote:
      | But nobody would propose making sugar illegal and putting
      | people that eat sugar in jail.
 
        | brightlancer wrote:
        | > But nobody would propose making sugar illegal and
        | putting people that eat sugar in jail.
        | 
        | Michael Bloomberg has entered the chat.
        | 
        | As an almost absolute rule, "nobody is saying" is false.
        | Lots of crazies are saying it. Sometimes they're well
        | respected politicians.
        | 
        | "But Bloomberg never did that!" Right, he did the first
        | _step_ by targeting the sale of "large" sodas. But if you
        | look at his actions on tobacco for ADULTS and the larger
        | War On Drugs, it starts with selling, then buying, then
        | possessing.
        | 
        | There are authoritarians who want to ban anything and
        | everything you can imagine (plus many more). They start
        | with what's popular and then move on to what is, crying
        | "What about the children?!?!" and "Do you just want
        | people to die?!?!" the whole time.
 
        | Apes wrote:
        | Of course such an extreme proposal is going to seem silly
        | - but what about outlawing any advertisement for sugary
        | goods towards children, coupled with a heavy tax on
        | sugary goods? Now that not only seems possible, but seems
        | like only a matter of time.
 
        | zeroCalories wrote:
        | It wouldn't be 1-to-1, but I wouldn't mind a war on
        | sugar. Letting your kids be fat should be treated as
        | child abuse, and you should lose access to
        | medicare/medicaid if you've been fat for too long. People
        | have gotten too soft(pun intended) about the right to do
        | whatever you want.
 
        | RoyalHenOil wrote:
        | >you should lose access to medicare/medicaid if you've
        | been fat for too long.
        | 
        | Right, so you want to compound the problem, not actually
        | solve it.
 
        | zeroCalories wrote:
        | If we don't have to pay for their healthcare their not a
        | problem anymore.
 
        | P_I_Staker wrote:
        | I think you should be responsible for other peoples poor
        | life decisions.
        | 
        | These decisions are part of the equation for health. eg
        | people exercise poor judgement with their health as a
        | result of another condition and genetics. Those decisions
        | also lead to further health problems.
        | 
        | They've found multiple genes tied to obesity. It's
        | striking how poorly these conditions respond to attempts
        | to get better. At a certain point you either blame the
        | patient, or accept that this is an incurable disease. (by
        | incurable I mean we're not very effective at curing it).
        | 
        | Why just lash out at someone with a disease, when for the
        | majority of people this isn't really tough? They just
        | don't struggle with these issues.
 
    | tomp wrote:
    | People should be allowed to be fat. But if you're so fat you
    | need 2 airline seats, you should pay for 2 seats, just like a
    | non-fat person who wants 2 seats.
    | 
    | People should be allowed to use drugs and be drug addicts.
    | But if you're so drugged up that you shit in the street and
    | attack other people, you should go to jail, just like a non-
    | drug user who shits in the street or attacks people.
 
      | lotsofpulp wrote:
      | And how about payment for surgery for coronary artery
      | disease/type 2 diabetes medications/etc?
 
        | Apes wrote:
        | I guess for you that might be an upside of the American
        | Healthcare system - fat people pay more for health
        | insurance, and have to pay money out of pocket for their
        | surgery and medications.
 
        | lotsofpulp wrote:
        | No, they do not. After age 65, the federal government
        | picks up the hospital tab via Medicare, and depending on
        | how many qualified assets you have, Medicaid helps with
        | the rest.
        | 
        | Before 65, health insurance can only use a few factors to
        | determine premiums, but none are related to one's health.
        | 
        | https://www.healthcare.gov/how-plans-set-your-premiums/
        | 
        | >Factors that can't affect premiums
        | 
        | >They also can't take your current health or medical
        | history into account. All health plans must cover
        | treatment for pre-existing conditions from the day
        | coverage starts.
 
        | Apes wrote:
        | The ACA changed the insurance cost, but it doesn't change
        | having to pay for the surgery and medication.
 
        | lotsofpulp wrote:
        | Out of pocket maximums are a drop in the bucket compared
        | to the cost of open heart surgery and other emergency
        | healthcare related to bad eating and exercising habits.
        | And those events mostly happen after age 65, after which
        | Medicare takes over.
        | 
        | Yes, those with assets do have to pay a bit out of
        | pocket, even after age 65, but nowhere near the costs of
        | the healthcare they receive.
 
        | pas wrote:
        | good thing their life expectancy will soon be below 65,
        | no?
 
    | downvotetruth wrote:
    | I used to strongly support people getting guns. I thought:
    | this is a free country, you should be able to do what you
    | want.
    | 
    | But what I've seen in the US has made me think differently.
    | Most people who get guns eventually end up not being able to
    | live like normal adults. And no one willingly goes to get
    | help or treatment.
    | 
    | The problem will stick around because politicians care more
    | about how things look. They'll say the numbers are wrong, or
    | focus on wedge issues like LBGTQ or drugs, but they're not
    | going to do anything on hard issues like this one.
    | 
    | Does anyone have ideas on what we should do? Should we make
    | guns illegal and force people into rehab? Should we require
    | background checks for homeless people to receive government
    | help?
 
      | FormerBandmate wrote:
      | Legal guns do way less damage than drugs by a long shot.
      | Even illegal guns kill less people, and you don't solve
      | illegal guns by banning guns, the millions of illegal guns
      | aren't going to turn in themselves
      | 
      | We do need gun control but it is an absurdly tiny issue
      | compared to drugs. Barely anyone dies in mass shootings
      | with legally purchased guns, it's up there with lightning
      | strikes
 
        | downvotetruth wrote:
        | Drugs do way less damage than cancer by a long shot. Even
        | illegal drugs kill less people, and you don't solve
        | illegal drugs by banning drugs, the millions of illegal
        | drugs aren't going to turn in themselves
        | 
        | We do need drug control but it is an absurdly tiny issue
        | compared to cancer. Barely anyone dies in mass overdoses
        | with legally purchased drugs, it's up there with
        | lightning strikes
 
      | GeoAtreides wrote:
      | There is a difference between things that only affect me
      | (or my body) and things that affect other people. Guns
      | heavily skew towards the latter.
 
        | dabluecaboose wrote:
        | Funny how my closet full of guns is just randomly killing
        | people who walk outside my apartment. I should get better
        | lead shielding.
        | 
        | From a less snarky perspective, something absurd like
        | 2/3rds of all gun deaths are suicide*. Which pretty
        | definitively skews towards affecting one's own body over
        | others.
        | 
        | EDIT: 54% in 2021, according to Pew Research [1]
        | 
        | [1] https://www.pewresearch.org/short-
        | reads/2023/04/26/what-the-...
 
    | unethical_ban wrote:
    | Is your attempt at satire trying to say "being against legal
    | hard drugs is like being against legal obesity"? Are you
    | saying that trying to curb hard drug use is as immoral in a
    | free society as trying to curb unhealthy eating?
 
      | cmilton wrote:
      | I interpreted it as:
      | 
      | We shouldn't treat the addictions all that differently.
 
    | basicoperation wrote:
    | This but unironically
 
  | epolanski wrote:
  | > Does anyone have ideas on what we should do?
  | 
  | Tackle the issue at the root: mental health.
  | 
  | It's an error to focus too much on the substance (illegal
  | drugs) when alcohol, legal drugs, food and many other forms of
  | abuse and dependency can lead to similar or worse outcomes.
 
  | stouset wrote:
  | > Most people who use drugs eventually end up not being able to
  | live like normal adults.
  | 
  | This isn't even remotely true. The number of people in SF who
  | use marijuana, cocaine, LSD, ketamine, MDMA, GHB, 2-CB and/or a
  | laundry list of other substances would astonish you.
  | 
  | The majority of them successfully hold jobs: many of them
  | highly paid ones as tech company engineers and execs.
  | 
  | What you associate with "not living like normal adults" is
  | poverty plus opiates.
 
  | causality0 wrote:
  | It's principles vs pragmatism. We have an example of one
  | approach that works: Singapore. Mandatory execution of drug
  | dealers, carried out three years after conviction, not three
  | decades. That obliterates drug addiction as a societal ill.
  | 
  | On the other hand, the philosophical stance I agree with is
  | that one human being does not have the right to dictate what
  | another human being does with their own body, so long as they
  | are an informed adult.
  | 
  | Our unwillingness to truly commit to our beliefs and values,
  | whatever they are, gives us the worst of both approaches.
 
  | 4gotunameagain wrote:
  | It is clear that the need/desire for drugs will not disappear.
  | Not only that, but drug usage seems to be on quite the incline.
  | 
  | One of the biggest problems with drugs is the paraeconomy that
  | is created, funnelling millions to the wrong hands, and ending
  | up with fentanyl spiked dope on the market. If we accept that
  | the need for drugs will not go away, then they need to be
  | legalized, controlled, taxed, and regulated so that not only
  | the cartels aren't funded, but the state receives their profit
  | and turns it into measures for controlling drug abuse, for
  | offering help, etc.
  | 
  | Now how do we handle the general lack of meaning that the west
  | is experiencing which is turning people into mice hitting the
  | dopamine level forever running on the hedonistic treadmill,
  | that's a different question.
 
  | glonq wrote:
  | I fully support decriminalization of all drugs, as long as it's
  | far away from me and from anybody else who is just trying to
  | live their best life.
  | 
  | Let's go build a 10-acre island that is full of free housing
  | and free drugs for anybody who wants it.
 
    | terminatornet wrote:
    | I assume you're being somewhat sarcastic, but I'd bet giving
    | drug addicts stable housing would probably help at least some
    | people with rehab.
 
  | [deleted]
 
  | StimDeck wrote:
  | [dead]
 
  | photochemsyn wrote:
  | A robust public health system that includes treatment for drug
  | and alcohol addiction as part of the services offered to the
  | public would be helpful. It's true that many people won't use
  | such services because of distrust, however (would you want a
  | medical record stating you were a recovering drug or alcohol
  | addict, or mentally ill?).
  | 
  | Legalizing and quality controlling drugs would also help - but
  | the problem there is that we live in a advertising-driven
  | consumer society. Alcohol, tobacco and sugar-laced soft drinks
  | are all unhealthy, but that's a profitable enterprise, so
  | people are incentivized to block public health campaigns,
  | restrictions on sales, etc.
  | 
  | At some point, the problems become so deeply entrenched and
  | societal in nature that passing laws and setting up government
  | programs doesn't really help. For some reason in the USA, a lot
  | of people are really miserable and their only relief is to turn
  | to drugs and alcohol. That's the more fundamental problem.
 
  | brightlancer wrote:
  | San Francisco doesn't have a problem with marijuana, it has a
  | problem with store robbery, muggings, crazies smoking/ shooting
  | "hard" drugs on the metro and on sidewalks, etc.
  | 
  | For too long, San Francisco and California more broadly have
  | rejected The Stick in favor of The Carrot -- and they didn't
  | improve the balance, they just through it out of balance in a
  | different direction.
  | 
  | If folks want to fry their brain on whatever, I think that's
  | their right. They don't have the right to do that on the
  | sidewalk in front of my house, in the park where kids play, on
  | the subway, etc. SF and CA lost the plot.
 
    | sixQuarks wrote:
    | Exactly, some cities don't even allow smoking cigarettes in
    | public parks, we can surely make it difficult to do hard
    | drugs in public.
 
  | irthomasthomas wrote:
  | I'm not surprised. Since the market is still controlled by drug
  | dealers. Legalise the whole supply chain and let people buy
  | opium and cocaine at the apothecary, like they did in olden
  | days, see how things are then.
 
  | hmmokidk wrote:
  | If drugs were legal, two of my friends would not be dead from
  | fentanyl.
  | 
  | That's already enough of a case to legalize. Make it safe.
  | 
  | Then address the root of the issue.
 
  | whycome wrote:
  | I support making drugs legal. But, it also requires an
  | extensive framework around that legalization. Social supports.
  | Information. Safety nets/healthcare. Without that, it's gonna
  | fails.
 
    | unethical_ban wrote:
    | I'll pick your comment out of the pack to pick on, though I
    | think we agree.
    | 
    | Yours, and dozens of others, talk about "drugs".
    | 
    | That's like talking about banning "food" when there is a
    | problem with people eating five cheeseburgers a day.
    | 
    | ---
    | 
    | The problem is not with cannabis, or mushrooms, or aspirin.
    | It's with meth, heroin, fentanyl, and prescription opioids.
    | 
    | Drugs need to be *properly* ranked by government and
    | restricted accordingly.
    | 
    | * How easy is it to acutely overdose on a substance?
    | 
    | * How chemically addictive is the substance?
    | 
    | * How damaging is chronic use of the drug over time to the
    | body and mind?
    | 
    | * Is there any medical benefit?
    | 
    | The fact that cannabis is federally ranked as the most
    | controlled level of drug in the US shows we have a broken
    | system.
    | 
    | I support the legalization/decriminalization of many drugs
    | too, but our Congress, the Biden administration and the DEA
    | are too inept or corrupt to make reform a priority.
 
  | barbs wrote:
  | > _Most people who use drugs eventually end up not being able
  | to live like normal adults. And no one willingly goes to get
  | help or treatment._
  | 
  | Citation needed.
  | 
  | Seriously though, the amount of unsubstantiated opinions that
  | get thrown around as facts on HN whenever drugs are discussed
  | is ridiculous.
 
  | pkulak wrote:
  | The assumption behind your entire post is that temporarily
  | putting people in prison for drug use limits their use. I'm
  | pretty sure it just makes people do drugs where you can't see
  | them. That's probably good enough for most folks though.
 
  | runako wrote:
  | > Most people who use drugs eventually end up not being able to
  | live like normal adults
  | 
  | Is this true? The US consumes a lot of hard drugs, but my
  | perception is that most users not have their lives fall apart
  | as a result. Curious if there are estimates on the % of e.g.
  | cocaine users who are recreational vs those who eventually end
  | up on the street as a result of their use.
 
    | anon84873628 wrote:
    | I interpret that to mean, "people who use drugs habitually"
    | not just those who dabbled in particular contexts.
 
      | coffeebeqn wrote:
      | That's completely wrong too. Most people are habitual users
      | of some drugs. I guess they mean people with serious
      | underlying mental health issues who are self medicating
      | with hard drugs and unable to keep a job
 
      | brightlancer wrote:
      | I think you're giving too much credit.
      | 
      | It's more likely GP was talking BS than that they made an
      | absolute statement where they really meant a very specific
      | nuanced statement.
 
      | KnobbleMcKnees wrote:
      | I'm sure someone will turn up with evidence to support this
      | any moment now
 
  | yodog wrote:
  | [dead]
 
  | simonh wrote:
  | What was done in Oregon, based on the successful policy in
  | Portugal, was decriminalising use and possession of very small
  | quantities. Distribution and sale are still just as illegal as
  | before.
  | 
  | Basically I think this is the right approach. Drug use at low
  | levels in endemic. I don't think it makes sense for huge
  | swathes of otherwise law abiding citizens to be technically
  | criminals. It ends up with grossly distorted demographic
  | distributions of those that suffer legal consequences in deeply
  | unfair ways. Criminalisation on use also aligns the interests
  | of users with those of dealers, where differences in criminal
  | liability help drive a wedge between them.
  | 
  | The 3 year old policy in Oregon looks like it was fumbled. They
  | didn't put in place essential social and health care support
  | services that a policy like this relies on for 2 years.
  | Portugal has a national health care service, so a co-ordinated
  | approach seems like it was far easier to implement and co-
  | ordinate. Still, Oregon seems to have made much needed
  | improvements in this area.
  | 
  | Policies like this are not silver bullets. Drug abuse is a
  | severe issue with deep roots in individual lives and society,
  | and manifests differently in different societies. I hope Oregon
  | sticks with it and works on trying to get this policy to work,
  | and tailor their response to their needs. 50 years of the war
  | on drugs has failed utterly, let's give an alternative a
  | chance.
 
    | lossolo wrote:
    | > based on the successful policy in Portugal
    | 
    | There are doubts about success of that policy now. Article
    | from a few weeks ago:
    | 
    | https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/07/07/portugal-
    | dru...
 
    | jorvi wrote:
    | Tolerating use but keeping sale / production illegal means
    | you are creating a billion dollar market that by default can
    | _only_ be serviced by criminal organizations.
    | 
    | Legalize and harm reduction have been the tenets for so so
    | long. No one does it.
 
    | fooker wrote:
    | It is always easy to blame the execution rather than the
    | policy, if you are ideologically biased to believe in the
    | policy.
 
      | wobbly_bush wrote:
      | Isn't the opposite also true?
 
      | troutwine wrote:
      | Sure, and if you're ideologically opposed to a policy you
      | can make a comment like this. What's needed is data on many
      | alternative approaches, what policies _and_ executions
      | taken as one promote better outcomes? Over what timeframes?
      | Otherwise it's just all shouting into a windstorm.
 
  | AtlasBarfed wrote:
  | The most heavily abused drugs are the legal ones.
  | 
  | That is the primary argument against legalization /
  | decriminalization. MJ legalization has led to a 20% increase in
  | use already. It's a very good argument.
  | 
  | The only argument I have for legalization is the current
  | situation we have with Mexico (and Guatemala, etc). Our
  | inability to not control/treat drug addiction has led to a
  | fundamentally destabilized country in a de facto civil war
  | (against cartels we trained in the School of the Americas, an
  | entirely different nutso side). Those cartels are supported by
  | the economics of illegal drugs.
  | 
  | Not just that, with the fall of our puppet regime in
  | Afghanistan, we will be enriching the Taliban regime by paying
  | for the output of their poppy fields.
  | 
  | What is mindblowing is listening to all my right leaning
  | relatives scream at the top of their lungs about the illegal
  | immigration flood, but they are the ones supporting the side
  | that most opposes dealing with the drug problem in a
  | constructive way.
  | 
  | IMO the fundamental way to fight illegal drugs is to
  | decriminalize, replace the supply / undermine the economics
  | with medically or governmentally supply (at prices that
  | undercut mafia economics), and make treatment zero-cost
  | available as part of the drug availability.
  | 
  | Of course that will probably lead to something like Purdue
  | Pharma and painkillers / Medicaid fraud.
  | 
  | But the War on Drugs has to end.
 
  | dr_dshiv wrote:
  | 1. Licenses or prescriptions should be required for all drugs;
  | either can be taken away. Also, people need education.
  | 
  | 2. Start a better public works program. Employment is good for
  | mental health.
  | 
  | 3. Maybe require a month of service or something, just to have
  | a way to resocialize people when they break.
  | 
  | 4. Have people pick up their benefits somewhere not in the
  | city. Some reason to move.
  | 
  | 5. Forced rehab to those engaged in harm; nature and nutrition.
  | 
  | 6. Need to avoid cultures of homelessness. Need good policy.
  | Look to Amsterdam, a city with virtually no homelessness.
  | 
  | 7. Make better drugs available? Fentanyl seems like the worst.
 
  | anotherhue wrote:
  | I suggest the drug user equivalent of an insane asylum. If
  | you've shown you're a danger to yourself and/or others you get
  | a place in a retreat/monastery/rehab centre/prison island where
  | you get the care you need.
  | 
  | Fraught with opportunities for abuse but not arguably more than
  | the current situation and at least the rest of us can have our
  | public spaces back.
 
    | brightlancer wrote:
    | > I suggest the drug user equivalent of an insane asylum. If
    | you've shown you're a danger to yourself and/or others you
    | get a place in a retreat/monastery/rehab centre/prison island
    | where you get the care you need.
    | 
    | "Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good
    | of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better
    | to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral
    | busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep,
    | his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who
    | torment us for our own good will torment us without end for
    | they do so with the approval of their own conscience. They
    | may be more likely to go to Heaven yet at the same time
    | likelier to make a Hell of earth. This very kindness stings
    | with intolerable insult. To be "cured" against one's will and
    | cured of states which we may not regard as disease is to be
    | put on a level of those who have not yet reached the age of
    | reason or those who never will; to be classed with infants,
    | imbeciles, and domestic animals." - C.S. Lewis, "God in the
    | Dock"
    | 
    | To be fair, I used to think it would be best to use the
    | courts to force medical treatment; the problem is that it
    | invariably leads to labeling folks as "ill" and using courts
    | to imprison them for their own safety.
 
      | anotherhue wrote:
      | It's a great quote, pity it came from a literal Christian
      | apologist. Art/Artist etc. This was around the time of
      | chemical castrations and other such 'cures' so it's quite
      | meaningful.
      | 
      | I'm personally much less interested in their care then the
      | safety of our public spaces, but I think we can all agree
      | one leads to the other.
 
  | ecshafer wrote:
  | Supporting legalization / decriminalization of hard drugs is a
  | luxury belief. If you're in a nice rich circle it's easy to
  | believe it doesn't harm anyone except yourself. If you are
  | around people that become drug addicts, it becomes apparent
  | that it drastically harms everyone around them, themselves
  | probably not the most. You can only see so many addict parents
  | throw away the money for kids food, or pawn of their kids
  | PlayStation for drugs / gambling / etc before you see a lot of
  | things aren't as simple as it's a free country.
  | 
  | Personally: drugs should be illegal, but the punishment should
  | be rehab and life stabilization not prison. Drug selling,
  | production, and smuggling should have the harshest possible
  | punishments.
 
    | anon84873628 wrote:
    | Clearly the prohibition on drugs is not preventing those
    | people from accessing them. Obviously rehabilitation would be
    | ideal. But all else being equal, it would be better if the
    | drugs were cheaper and safer.
 
      | bobthepanda wrote:
      | The real root issue, is that we drastically underfund
      | rehabilitation.
      | 
      | There are generally just not enough rehab spots,
      | therapists, psychiatrists, etc. to address the unmet need.
      | There are not enough of them in the health system because
      | we don't pay for them enough.
      | 
      | There are also not really resources in the prison system
      | either. A lot of the prison-reform movement was actually
      | supported initially by conservatives, because low-tax
      | governments cannot afford to lock large numbers of people
      | up for petty crime.
      | 
      | No matter what the solution is, it requires _spending
      | money_.
 
      | toomim wrote:
      | That's not true. If that were true, then decriminalization
      | wouldn't be making them easier to access. But since drugs
      | have been decriminalized, they have gotten much easier to
      | access. There are open-air drug markets in SF and Portland.
      | You can walk through and say "fent?" and get offers to sell
      | right there. You couldn't do that 10 years ago.
 
        | anon84873628 wrote:
        | 10 years ago you could do that in many places across the
        | country.
 
      | dan_mctree wrote:
      | Can we all just be honest and just agree that prohibitions
      | do in fact make access to the prohibited thing harder and
      | reduce the prevalence of it. This is true whether your
      | topic of choice is drugs, guns, abortions, alcohol, some
      | form of sex, vpn access or whatever you want to talk about.
      | 
      | Sometimes the prohibition can make obtaining illegal things
      | more difficult and risky, and many of us are too lazy or
      | risk avoidant to push through that. Sometimes accessing a
      | prohibited things requires social contacts not everyone has
      | access to. Sometimes people will just straight up respect
      | the law and not obtain the illegal thing even if it is easy
      | or avoid providing it. Prohibitions can be very effective
      | in reducing the incidence of some thing, especially if
      | enforcement is draconian
      | 
      | Prohibitions can have negative effects, obviously
      | especially for those who like the thing that is being
      | prohibited, but it just seems dishonest to try to pretend
      | like prohibitions don't change behavior whenever that
      | happens to suit some political preference
 
        | gochi wrote:
        | Why do you want prohibitions to be viewed as very
        | effective? Their side effects seem to always be far more
        | disastrous than the core incident.
 
        | pas wrote:
        | well, drug use is on the rise in many places with
        | prohibition. so maybe that general statement needs some
        | serious qualifiers, no?
        | 
        | prohibition as a concept works, and prohibition when
        | implemented has an effect, but that effect might be small
        | compared to society's overall demand changes.
        | 
        | yes, of course, draconian measures have significant
        | effects, usually the side-effects are bigger though
 
      | kcb wrote:
      | It's not so hard to believe that lack of access prevents
      | some from getting hooked.
 
        | brnaftr361 wrote:
        | The dangers of getting hooked are greatly exacerbated by
        | current "treatment" modalities and the culture the black
        | market breeds.
 
      | darth_avocado wrote:
      | > would be better if the drugs were cheaper and safer.
      | 
      | Drugs are never going to be safer. If FDA approved
      | painkillers can get you addicted, I am not sure how much
      | safer can Fentanyl get. And making them cheaper is only
      | going to create more problems.
      | 
      | Prohibition doesn't prevent people from accessing drugs.
      | But that doesn't mean we make it easily accessible. Theft
      | is illegal, but it doesn't stop people from stealing. That
      | doesn't mean we legalize it. Because if we do, we'll have a
      | free for all like we have in SF and other parts of
      | California.
 
        | setr wrote:
        | Safer drugs is usually referring to not getting drugs cut
        | with other unknown shit. A common scenario is heroin from
        | dealer A being mixed, then you switch to dealer B and get
        | it pure (or at least more so) but not knowing that, you
        | take the same dosage and overdose
 
        | anon84873628 wrote:
        | Yes, exactly.
 
        | darth_avocado wrote:
        | That is never going to go away though. After weed was
        | legalized in California, 2/3 purchases are still from the
        | black market. [1] That market always will exist because
        | cutting makes drugs cheaper and legal drugs will never be
        | able to compete.
        | 
        | [1] https://calmatters.org/commentary/2023/06/california-
        | illicit...
 
        | vhlhvjcov wrote:
        | How much moonshine do you drink?
        | 
        | As another commenter pointed out, from the article you
        | posted:
        | 
        | > all of this is taking place in an industry without
        | bankruptcy protections, where individuals carry personal
        | liability for business taxes, and where businesses are
        | barred from writing off normal expenses.
        | 
        | So your argument is not backed up by your own link
        | 
        | > That market always will exist because cutting makes
        | drugs cheaper and legal drugs will never be able to
        | compete.
 
        | [deleted]
 
        | rovolo wrote:
        | >I am not sure how much safer can Fentanyl get
        | 
        | Proper labeling/packaging would make it easier to know
        | what dose you're taking. I believe many overdose deaths
        | were blamed on fentanyl added to heroin, where the user
        | was expecting just heroin.
        | 
        | (I don't know how true my memory is of those initial news
        | articles about fentanyl overdoses in the early 10s)
 
    | whimsicalism wrote:
    | People in less affluent communities also see the violence
    | when criminalization drives this stuff underground.
 
    | esotericimpl wrote:
    | [dead]
 
    | [deleted]
 
    | epolanski wrote:
    | Delusional.
    | 
    | The drug that kills and ruins most lives on the planet is
    | alcohol followed by food (diabetes). And the abuse of alcohol
    | and food has the same root that drug abuse does: mental
    | health and education.
    | 
    | And let's not even start talking about the damage of legal
    | drugs (medicines) on society at all age tiers.
 
      | ecshafer wrote:
      | Great. Let's ban alcohol and sugar too. I am totally fine
      | with taking the idea of something being harmful to society
      | and it being banned. Though for sugar, I haven't personally
      | seen people pawn off their childrens possession or rob
      | people to get a fix, so it might not be as bad as drugs.
      | But it's subsidization should stop.
 
      | polski-g wrote:
      | Per capita?
 
      | thehappypm wrote:
      | Interesting that junk food and alcohol are legal and the
      | most heavily abused
 
    | mike00632 wrote:
    | Doesn't the same apply to alcohol?
 
      | ecshafer wrote:
      | Sure. I wouldn't be against a ban on alcohol also, with the
      | same prohibitions.
 
      | varjag wrote:
      | Alcohol use exerts enormous tax on society which chose to
      | tolerate it for historical adoption reasons. Adding hard
      | drugs is going to exacerbate the situation, and a number of
      | those are worse than alcohol by any metric imaginable.
 
        | themitigating wrote:
        | So then alcohol should be banned? Why the line if only
        | historical?
 
        | swexbe wrote:
        | It's hard to get toothpaste back into the tube.
 
    | brightlancer wrote:
    | Rubbish.
    | 
    | Folks made the exact same arguments about alcohol and
    | marijuana. Specifically with alcohol, anyone can walk into a
    | treatment center without fear that they'll be arrested for
    | the mere _use_ of a substance. (Marijuana has very low risk
    | and rates of addiction, physical or psychological.)
    | 
    | If "hard" drugs are legalized, then they will likely be
    | treated the same as alcohol and pot and tobacco: highly
    | regulated, sold only to adults in very limited stores, and
    | folks can enter treatment without fear of arrest.
    | 
    | The big mistake California (and other Leftist faux-topias)
    | made was decriminalizing THEFT, ASSAULT, smoking and shooting
    | on BART, smoking and shooting in public parks, smoking and
    | shooting on sidewalks in front of residences -- and taxing
    | the legal pot industry so highly that it was miles cheaper to
    | buy stuff illegally no the corner.
 
      | pyuser583 wrote:
      | Legalizing pot didn't eliminate illegal markets. They're
      | still going strong.
      | 
      | Same with tobacco, but that's because of taxes.
 
      | mech765 wrote:
      | Let's take fentanyl for example. It kills so many people
      | that there isn't any good reason for it to be a legal drug
      | off prescription.
      | 
      | The difference between fentanyl and other drugs is a matter
      | of degree.
 
      | paiute wrote:
      | I think another big mistake was prescription painkillers
      | and that whole story. Get everyone hooked on cheap low
      | grade painkillers, it definitely caused problems but they
      | were manageable if they got more pills. Then there was a
      | huge crackdown on them, and the price shot up ending with
      | fentanyl being the cheap and accessible option.
 
      | SalmoShalazar wrote:
      | It's amazing you can log onto this website and spout utter
      | bullshit like "assault and theft have been decriminalized
      | in California". It's a totally laughable thing to say and I
      | don't know why no one else has called this poster out for
      | this blatant lie.
 
        | culopatin wrote:
        | But you can't ignore the struggle to enforce in the Bay
        | Area.
        | 
        | Just moved here and I feel like an idiot paying for the
        | Bart when most people just jump the gates in and out.
        | 
        | Take your dick out and just pee while you walk. No
        | worries. Cross the street naked throwing stuff around,
        | normal. Dogs in parks? Leash optional, right under the
        | sign that says "dogs must be on a leash". Break into
        | cars, no one cares. Steal a Kia, doubt you'll get caught.
        | 
        | Yet there are rules like no eating in the Bart. What?
        | $250 fine if you drink something in the train? Who comes
        | up with that crap?
        | 
        | I come from a red state and I can tell you that the
        | conservatives out there don't want "th government telling
        | them what to do" but they are more tightly controlled
        | than the people in the bay. People in the bay experience
        | real freedom, almost to the point of anarchy by far.
        | 
        | Red state: Back into your driveway? Tag can't be seen
        | from the street = ticket. Look aggressive in the street
        | or take your dick out? Arrested, if not shot. Break into
        | a car in a public space? I wanna see that one go as
        | smoothly as in the bay.
 
      | xienze wrote:
      | > Specifically with alcohol, anyone can walk into a
      | treatment center without fear that they'll be arrested for
      | the mere _use_ of a substance.
      | 
      | Are you under the impression that cities like SF, Portland,
      | Seattle etc. were arresting drug users who went to
      | treatment centers at any point in the last 20 years or so?
      | Ever heard of methadone clinics?
 
      | fnord77 wrote:
      | > The big mistake California (and other Leftist faux-
      | topias) made was decriminalizing THEFT, ASSAULT, smoking
      | and shooting on BART
      | 
      | This is exactly it. The problem is letting the drug use
      | impact other people's quality of life, access to common
      | resources like parks, etc.
 
      | danielovichdk wrote:
      | I think you should contribute a valid source for the
      | subjective claim of this statement.
      | 
      | "Marijuana has very low risk and rates of addiction,
      | physical or psychological."
      | 
      | I would, and that is not based on subjective opinion, call
      | your statement - rubbish.
      | 
      | I will even throw you a bone.
      | 
      | https://www.amazon.com/Marijuana-Madness-Deepak-Cyril-
      | DSouza...
 
        | [deleted]
 
        | gochi wrote:
        | You did the exact same they did, but linked an
        | inaccessible amazon book. Surely you can do better.
 
      | dumpsterdiver wrote:
      | To be fair though, you don't really hear much about people
      | selling their bodies (or other similar behavior, I.e.
      | stealing from friends and family, etc) in order to obtain
      | marijuana or alcohol.
      | 
      | This kind of behavior is primarily encountered when hard
      | drugs are part of the equation.
 
      | darth_avocado wrote:
      | I generally agree with the sentiment that drugs should be
      | treated like we treat other addictions like alcohol. Drugs
      | should be decriminalized, anti social criminal behavior
      | should stay criminalized. If I'm drunk and pee in public or
      | assault someone, I'll go to jail. That is what should
      | happen if I do it under the influence of drugs.
      | 
      | The one difference though between alcohol and some of the
      | drugs is potency and how quickly one can be addicted to it.
      | Therefore, treatment should be much more easily be
      | available and it should be much easier to have an
      | intervention.
 
        | toomim wrote:
        | Driving drunk is illegal because you're likely to kill
        | someone, and then it'll be too late to say "let's just
        | prosecute the crime of manslaughter, and not prevent
        | future manslaughters by prosecuting drunkenness in the
        | car."
        | 
        | In the same way, we should make it illegal to do drugs in
        | situations where you are likely to cause irreparable
        | harm.
        | 
        | If we legalize drugs, let's create safe situations to do
        | so. Many drugs are being legalized under the supervision
        | of a doctor. We could also allow drug use within a safe
        | space where you can't OD, and where you won't leave
        | needles on the ground for kids to step on.
 
        | FredPret wrote:
        | There's no safe way to consume a substance that rewires
        | your lizard brain to seek more of it
 
        | amanaplanacanal wrote:
        | Yet somehow most people are not alcoholics. So evidently
        | it can be done.
 
        | fooker wrote:
        | As long as your current economic/geopolitical situation
        | is favorable, sure.
        | 
        | Up to a third of the population of some of the east
        | European countries are alcoholics.
        | 
        | I'm not saying bans are the solution, but ignoring
        | problems just because you aren't affected isn't a great
        | idea either.
 
        | actionfromafar wrote:
        | It can be done by a certain percentage of people.
 
        | darth_avocado wrote:
        | Legalization and decriminalization are two different
        | things. I am all for decriminalizing. From a personal
        | viewpoint, I don't think drugs should be legalized.
        | 
        | And as far as the legal administration etc., that already
        | exists in SF and it has had a poor track record of
        | helping people.
 
        | JoeJonathan wrote:
        | Decriminalizing drugs doesn't fix the supply problem,
        | which makes drug use such a budensome expense that there
        | are all kinds of knock on effects (theft, poverty, etc).
        | Someone commented on how rich people don't see drug use,
        | but sure they do. Aside from the fact that most everyone
        | here is pretty rich and complaining about addicts, I come
        | from an upper middle class suburb with a ton of addicts.
        | Lots of people I went to school with died of overdosed.
        | But it's not immediately visible because people's
        | families reluctantly take them in, they generally have
        | enough money for drugs, etc.
        | 
        | Not arguing for outright legalization--while I once did,
        | I now think it's naive. And I'm not sure we could pull
        | off a Portugal style system in the US. But
        | descriminalizariam doesn't seem to be working that well.
 
        | darth_avocado wrote:
        | Which is why I argue:
        | 
        | > Therefore, treatment should be much more easily be
        | available and it should be much easier to have an
        | intervention.
        | 
        | If drugs become burdensome enough that you have to commit
        | crimes to feed your habit, then maybe the society should
        | be able to intervene and help? If I have a drinking
        | problem that I need to steal money for, the solution
        | shouldn't be cheaper alcohol, but a way for me to stop
        | drinking. Same applies for drugs. Part of the reason why
        | families support (reluctantly) drug habits is because
        | getting help is often not easy or cheap.
 
        | samketchup wrote:
        | More people are killed on the road in accidents caused by
        | elderly folks than drunk drivers. I know this sounds
        | insane, but drunk driving should be no harm no foul.
 
        | whinenot wrote:
        | My friend who was killed by a repeated drunk driver might
        | have argued otherwise. If you can't drive responsibly,
        | it's in society's interest to make sure you never do.
 
        | jurassic wrote:
        | This is whataboutism. Drunk driving kills and should be
        | harshly punished. People who are unsafe drivers for other
        | reasons (e.g. too old) should be handled separately, but
        | their existence is not an excuse for irresponsible
        | behavior.
 
        | jakear wrote:
        | In some sense, it is. Barring random sobriety checkpoints
        | (which are _generally_ avoidable).
 
        | pests wrote:
        | We don't have checkpoints where I live near Detroit. Are
        | these really a thing? I've seen them in movies and TV but
        | never experienced it.
 
        | jakear wrote:
        | I've seen a handful in CA. Usually they're visible from a
        | large distance, given the flashing lights and traffic
        | backup. Sometimes they'll even have signs up a few blocks
        | in advance warning about the upcoming stop.
 
        | samketchup wrote:
        | Arizona has very aggressive checkpoints by the lakes and
        | rivers during the holiday's
 
        | samketchup wrote:
        | I guess I have some not so unique experience. I was given
        | a DUI in 2011 during a routine traffic stop. They officer
        | cited I cut the protected left turn too tightly. The
        | officer then said he smelled marijuana, even though I was
        | currently smoking a normal cigarette. I was arrested
        | immediately, my blood was taken, and being an occasional
        | pot smoker, THC was in my blood, I got a DUI while
        | completely sober driving to work at 9 AM.
 
        | jakear wrote:
        | Sucks. Shoulda got a better lawyer. I know folks who have
        | gotten out of full on crashes at 0.18 BAC thanks to
        | lawyer shenanigans.
 
        | samketchup wrote:
        | Was fresh out of high school and grew up poor, I never
        | had a chance of beating it. But hey, at least I got to
        | visit tent city before it was shut down.
 
        | snypher wrote:
        | Elderly folks should be taken off the road as well?
 
        | FormerBandmate wrote:
        | For PCP that's basically everything. For weed that's
        | basically nothing (although you shouldn't drive high)
 
        | brightlancer wrote:
        | > The one difference though between alcohol and some of
        | the drugs is potency and how quickly one can be addicted
        | to it.
        | 
        | This is a good point.
        | 
        | If I go to the liquor store, I can buy bottles that are
        | 90% alcohol or bottles as low as 3% alcohol.
        | 
        | If we legalize "hard" drugs like opiates, meth, etc. then
        | we'll get a similar differentiation along with the
        | benefit that the drugs will be checked by Trusted Sources
        | (both government and industry) to effectively eliminate
        | certain adulterants.
        | 
        | And for the folks who become addicts (physically or
        | psychologically), there's no legal risk in telling their
        | doctor or therapist or anyone, and they can better enter
        | treatment.
        | 
        | There are folks who drink 750ml (~24oz) of 40% liquor
        | every day. It's rare but they have an addiction. They can
        | also get treatment, while the rest of us enjoy 5% beers
        | and 13% wines more moderately.
 
        | alephnerd wrote:
        | > I can buy bottles that are 90% alcohol or bottles as
        | low as 3% alcohol
        | 
        | Depends on the state. Some states banned 90%+ hard
        | liquors (eg. Everclear) while other states allow it. Some
        | other states have banned selling hard liquors and wines
        | unless it's from a state run liquor store. Other states
        | just allow open sale at any store. It's all state
        | dependent as the US is federal.
 
        | monkpit wrote:
        | > there's no legal risk in telling their doctor or
        | therapist
        | 
        | Maybe no LEGAL risks, but if you live in the USA and want
        | to have insurance and/or life insurance, you wouldn't
        | want to disclose this info since they'll either deny you
        | or charge you extra.
 
        | brightlancer wrote:
        | That's an interesting argument -- I don't know if/ how
        | much it's true, but that was certainly the norm for
        | decades for gay men.
        | 
        | On that basis, I think it's better if we remove the legal
        | risk even if there are still societal or economic risks.
 
      | mcphage wrote:
      | > The big mistake California (and other Leftist faux-
      | topias) made was decriminalizing THEFT, ASSAULT, smoking
      | and shooting on BART, smoking and shooting in public parks,
      | smoking and shooting on sidewalks in front of residences
      | 
      | Not being from California--when/how did they do that?
 
        | stcroixx wrote:
        | It was this way when I first came to the Bay Area around
        | 2008. Police simply ignore all of these criminal
        | behaviors. They know the DA is not interested in
        | prosecuting. It's shocking at first. I came from a city
        | where none of that is tolerated.
 
        | brightlancer wrote:
        | > They know the DA is not interested in prosecuting.
        | 
        | I think this was the biggest issue.
        | 
        | Cops have done (and will do) some abusive stuff, but IME
        | the west coast was more driven by DAs refusing the
        | prosecute.
 
        | Volundr wrote:
        | Also not from California; my understanding is some
        | municipalities either don't enforce these laws, or don't
        | do it to the extent people would like.
 
        | svnt wrote:
        | They didn't, but the police force stopped enforcing those
        | laws, generally in response to defunding or threats of
        | defunding.
        | 
        | The police forces in these cities are in the majority
        | comprised of individuals who live outside of the city and
        | commute to perform enforcement in an area they don't want
        | to live in.
        | 
        | This is the difference that never translated between the
        | Black Lives Matter and Blue Lives Matter/Thin Blue Line
        | groups: in one, in the majority the enforcers are not and
        | have never been part of the community. In the other, the
        | deputy's kids go to your elementary school and they
        | volunteer at the pancake breakfast.
 
        | ars wrote:
        | > generally in response to defunding or threats of
        | defunding.
        | 
        | No, it's in response to the DA not prosecuting - what's
        | the point of arresting if nothing happens afterward?
 
      | etc-hosts wrote:
      | > taxing the legal pot industry so highly that it was miles
      | cheaper to buy stuff illegally no the corner
      | 
      | the legal pot industry's problem is it's impossible for it
      | to turn a profit. they can't deduct operating expenses from
      | their tax liability like other businesses can, because of
      | federal law. items like rent, payroll.
      | 
      | they also can't use the same systems of credit management
      | and bank accounts, because of federal law.
      | 
      | state taxes are a very minor part of the story.
 
        | bhewes wrote:
        | As someone who runs four stores in the legal pot industry
        | in Oklahoma and turns a profit yeah not true. You can
        | make plenty of money playing by State rules. If a company
        | has expansion plans that rely on the interstate commerce
        | clause then yes the feds are your problem.
 
        | chaosharmonic wrote:
        | The bank accounts thing also makes them bigger targets
        | for theft, because of all the extra cash that stores end
        | up handling when they can't use standard payment methods.
 
        | FormerBandmate wrote:
        | The legal pot industry's problem is that it's a legal no-
        | man's-land because pot is actually illegal at a federal
        | level but states just ignore it and the government
        | ignores them ignoring it. It should be legalized at a
        | federal level because that's already true de facto
        | 
        | Incidentally, the second that happens Altria/BAT/whoever
        | will swoop in and make it a consumer product. This will
        | probably have a serious impact on mom and pop guys, but
        | also cartels
 
        | [deleted]
 
      | dmode wrote:
      | But doesn't alcohol trigger a wildly different reaction
      | than hard drugs ? Which alcohol triggers schizophrenia,
      | psychosis, hallucination and make you violent ? And these
      | are triggered very very easily by using a small amount of
      | meth or fentanyl. To get to a comparable state with
      | alcohol, you would have to drink copious amount, but then
      | you are more likely to be passed out than exhibit violent
      | behavior.
      | 
      | I agree with your other point though - permissiveness of
      | use shouldn't come with ignoring all societal norms, just
      | because you are a vulnerable drug user. In fact,
      | permissiveness of use should be paired with stricter
      | enforcement of quality of life laws
 
        | WesolyKubeczek wrote:
        | > But doesn't alcohol trigger a wildly different reaction
        | than hard drugs ? Which alcohol triggers schizophrenia,
        | psychosis, hallucination and make you violent ?
        | 
        | Every one of them does. Except triggering schizophrenia
        | maybe, which is barely comforting.
        | 
        | > And these are triggered very very easily by using a
        | small amount of meth or fentanyl.
        | 
        | But you're replying to a comment about pot, thereby
        | shifting some goalposts.
 
        | [deleted]
 
        | stouset wrote:
        | Are we just ignoring the whole thing about violent drunks
        | right now? Alcohol and violence are _highly_ correlated.
 
        | theGeatZhopa wrote:
        | I thinking to stop drinking, but I still sway
 
        | mattnewton wrote:
        | > Which alcohol triggers schizophrenia, psychosis,
        | hallucination
        | 
        | Sounds like acute ethanol withdrawal aka delirium tremens
        | https://g.co/kgs/BHB6p9
        | 
        | > and make you violent ?
        | 
        | People getting violent with alcohol doesn't need a
        | citation I trust?
        | 
        | These are basically all the arguments for prohibition.
        | Temperance movements work but legal prohibition doesn't
        | seem to.
 
      | bottled_poe wrote:
      | The government must never, in good conscience, open up the
      | use of extremely physically addictive substances.
      | Decriminalisation for users, I can support, but legalising
      | and selling is a terrible idea. Alcohol, tobacco and
      | marijuana are not in the same league as heroin and other
      | opiates. It's extremely dangerous to equate all drugs in
      | this debate.
 
  | darkclouds wrote:
  | > And no one willingly goes to get help or treatment.
  | 
  | I trust health experts as much as the Nasa scientists who lost
  | contact with voyager2 and the nasa scientists are working under
  | much less pressure than an ER room!
 
  | alphazard wrote:
  | Why is there something to do? Your questions seem predicated on
  | a false assumption that no one likes to say out loud: Drug
  | users have a better life waiting for them after they stop
  | using.
  | 
  | Daily drug use may actually be the correct way for some people
  | to maximize the integral of happiness over their lifetime.
  | Especially for those at the bottom with limited prospects. I
  | don't think most of HN can fathom what it's like to actually be
  | completely useless. You're delusional if you think the homeless
  | problem is a bunch of software engineers who tried heroin once,
  | and left FAANG to get high every day.
  | 
  | > Should we require drug tests for homeless people to receive
  | government help like SF CAAP payments?
  | 
  | This is a great idea. If you want society to invest in you, you
  | have to take basic steps to be a worthy investment. But even
  | this is predicated on the idea that what these drugs users are
  | doing is wrong, and that they should instead do something that
  | lets the rest of us reap the benefits of their productivity.
  | Who are we to demand someone be more productive for our own
  | benefit? We're right to want something in exchange for our
  | investment, but there's no place to stand and say a drug user
  | is wrong for not taking the deal.
 
    | sbierwagen wrote:
    | Okay, then build a camp for them out in the desert. There's
    | no reason to have them shitting on the streets of downtown
    | SF.
 
      | RoyalHenOil wrote:
      | They don't have the means to move. Why don't we just build
      | a camp for low-empathy people instead? You are a far, far
      | bigger strain on everyone else's lives, and then you can
      | make your own sociopath paradise without the rest of us
      | getting in your way.
 
  | sniglom wrote:
  | For other possibly dangerous things in society there are things
  | like taking a license and renewing that license. Perhaps that
  | should be a requirement for buying hard drugs where it's legal.
 
    | anon84873628 wrote:
    | Exactly. You can buy pseudoephedrine or codeine at the
    | pharmacy, but not too much or too frequently. Party sized
    | amounts of safe drugs could be made available. People who go
    | to far get directed to treatment.
 
  | deepsun wrote:
  | Can you make the same argument for children?
  | 
  | Children don't know the world yet, cannot contain their urges,
  | and can get their brain chemistry permanently altered after
  | trying heroin.
  | 
  | Now here's the trick -- all adults are children, just older.
  | Some can contain the emotions better than others.
 
  | chrisweekly wrote:
  | "Most people who use drugs eventually end up not being able to
  | live like normal adults."
  | 
  | Many drugs are incredibly dangerous, addictive and harmful, but
  | that's still a wild overstatement.
 
  | singpolyma3 wrote:
  | The point is that putting them in prison doesn't solve the
  | problem and giving power to police results in inconsistent
  | enforcement harmful to communities.
  | 
  | The point isn't that using some of these substances is "fine"
  | but that it should be treated as a public health problem (like
  | smoking) not a criminal problem.
 
    | anon84873628 wrote:
    | Isn't prison one of the easiest places to get drugs??
 
  | bsder wrote:
  | > Does anyone have ideas on what we should do?
  | 
  | Heathcare facilities for the mentally ill is a really good
  | start.
  | 
  | But, you know, that's, like, _expensive_.
 
  | antisyzygy wrote:
  | I think we're missing part of the equation there.
  | 
  | Decriminalization isn't legalization. Legalization would mean
  | controlling purity, and strength where the drug is licensed to
  | be sold.
  | 
  | Marijuana legalization hasn't lead to any major problems.
  | People don't even bother getting it on the black market anymore
  | where it is legal. They go for what's convenient.
  | 
  | Beyond that simply throwing people in prison doesn't mean that
  | we reduced the number of drug addicts. It just means you don't
  | see them anymore.
  | 
  | Decriminalization actually would mean you see more of them out
  | on the streets because they're not being locked away in prison.
  | 
  | Drugs will always be a part of the human experience. People
  | will continue to use them whether it's legal or not.
  | 
  | The other side of it is most cities don't spend much money on
  | harm reduction strategies or treatment options because of the
  | stigma associated with drug users. Tax payers look at them as
  | subhuman and don't do the math.
  | 
  | It costs more to let a drug addict run around town stealing and
  | breaking things, or getting sick and going to the ER, than it
  | does to mandate they spend some time in a State funded mental
  | hospital.
  | 
  | Prisons also cost a lot. It costs a full time job's worth of
  | money ~35k to imprison 1 person per year.
  | 
  | Not only did you take a potential worker out of the work force,
  | but now you're sinking a full time jobs worth of money into
  | keeping them in prison.
  | 
  | For a murderer, that seems worth it because they literally cost
  | the world a full time worker and maybe more. But for a homeless
  | drug addict it really doesn't seem worth it to me.
 
    | bayindirh wrote:
    | Your focus on monetary matters is well on par with how alarm-
    | equipped hospital beds are marketed: "Consider the cost of a
    | patient who had skin tissue compression due to wetting
    | themselves. Use our calculator below!". Not kidding, seen
    | almost the exact copy on a hospital bed vendor.
    | 
    | While the numbers may be true, it's a very inhumane way to
    | think about people.
 
      | antisyzygy wrote:
      | It's a tactic to convince a general audience, not meant to
      | indicate how I feel about the addicted.
      | 
      | Unfortunately about half the population doesn't have
      | empathy for anyone they don't grow up with, and some of
      | those have empathy for no one at all.
      | 
      | I know a thing or two about these folks and they're all
      | suffering before they started using. They often start by
      | self medicating because they were traumatized or incredibly
      | impoverished due to a series of unfortunate accidents.
      | 
      | So, yes, I believe it's the right thing to do to treat
      | rather than imprison.
 
    | hn_throwaway_99 wrote:
    | > Marijuana legalization hasn't lead to any major problems.
    | People don't even bother getting it on the black market
    | anymore where it is legal. They go for what's convenient.
    | 
    | This is actually really not true at all, and it's important
    | to be honest about the reality. First, in many places where
    | weed is now legal, black markets have continued to thrive
    | because there are high taxes on legal weed, and thus black
    | market weed is considerably cheaper. Totally fine to argue
    | that this is then a problem with implementation, but it is
    | definitely not correct to say "People don't even bother
    | getting it on the black market anymore where it is legal." -
    | that's just wrong, and it's not hard to Google for lots of
    | articles discussing this.
    | 
    | Also, while I agree with legalization, I would state that I
    | underestimated some of the downsides. A couple years ago I
    | was in downtown Denver, along their 16th St pedestrian mall,
    | and it's not really a nice thing to see tons of people stoned
    | out of their minds walking around like zombies. Also not
    | great when you get in an Uber and your driver seems totally
    | baked.
    | 
    | Can't emphasize enough that I think the alternative (throwing
    | people in jail) is much worse. But I don't think it's honest
    | to minimize the downsides.
    | 
    | Edit: Save you a google search,
    | https://calmatters.org/commentary/2023/06/california-
    | illicit...
 
      | antisyzygy wrote:
      | Eh I don't know. I would guess in some States that
      | implemented dumb policies it could be the case.
      | 
      | WA and CO are where my experience was. The product is more
      | often than not cheaper than the black market prices were.
      | 
      | It was pretty common for a black market eighth to cost
      | 40-80 dollars, and you're looking at 20-60 dollars for
      | legal stuff now even with taxes. It's a bit more expensive
      | in WA but I'd say comparable to black market prices.
      | 
      | That's not even to mention the convenience aspect. You can
      | buy a joint that will last a moderate user all evening for
      | like 5 dollars. No need to roll it yourself and all that.
 
    | mtalantikite wrote:
    | > People don't even bother getting it on the black market
    | anymore where it is legal.
    | 
    | The unlicensed weed bodegas popping up on every other block
    | in NYC beg to differ. People might not text a delivery
    | service anymore, but they're definitely not going to legal
    | recreational dispensaries here in NYC.
 
      | kasey_junk wrote:
      | NYC had a very peculiar roll out where they made it very
      | difficult to get a license to sell but then didn't do any
      | enforcement for needing the license.
      | 
      | In most places that rolled out legal pot that wasn't the
      | case and people largely do use the legal places. The only
      | time it's not true is if the taxes are so bad or if there
      | are regulations that make the quality worse that it makes
      | the legal pot extremely uncompetitive.
 
      | antisyzygy wrote:
      | My experience was Colorado and Washington. Nobody in either
      | state will bother with black market weed. You can find a
      | licensed dispensary with quality product within a 5 minute
      | drive 20 hours a day.
      | 
      | They both did it right, and took different approaches even.
      | Colorado is a bit looser on the requirements for
      | dispensaries and have cheaper product overall. There is a
      | licensed dispensary just about every block in Denver,
      | sometimes two, when I left. Not sure about now.
      | 
      | In Colorado actually the legal product is cheaper than
      | former black market prices too. In WA is about the same
      | price but there are some cheaper options if you're OK with
      | a lower quality product.
      | 
      | By "Quality" here I don't mean that it's laced, but that
      | it's a product with less high quality plant in it. More
      | stems, less buds, that kind of thing.
      | 
      | I don't know NY law or licensing, but I've heard that this
      | sort of unlicensed pop-up pot shop problem occurred in some
      | States where they didn't plan the roll out and licensing
      | very well.
      | 
      | Either couldn't get their shit together to regulate it
      | properly, and dragged their feet for too long after
      | legalization, or didn't issue nearly enough licenses to
      | sell to meet the demand.
      | 
      | WA had more issues than Colorado actually with meeting
      | demand initially but they recovered pretty quick. It was
      | because they had a different licensing scheme whereby you
      | can't grow and also sell retail, you gotta pick one.
      | 
      | In Colorado you can grow your own and sell it to retail
      | customers. They also seemed to issue far more licenses than
      | WA did.
      | 
      | In any case, I'd look to Colorado for a good case study. WA
      | for a mediocre one. And then CA and NY for what not to do.
      | CA also had some of those pop up shops that were
      | unlicensed.
 
      | rrrrrrrrrrrryan wrote:
      | That's got to be some sort of policy failure. Perhaps they
      | need to make it easier to run a legal dispensary, crack
      | down on the illegal ones, or both.
      | 
      | In California, the only people that still buy black market
      | weed are kids that aren't old enough to go to a dispensary.
 
      | squeaky-clean wrote:
      | Part of the reason for that is they've been so slow to
      | allow them to open. There's only like 8 stores at the
      | moment (4 of those are very recent), and they're all in
      | Manhattan except for one that's way out in Jamaica at the
      | end of the JZ line. Because there's so few of them, they
      | always have an hour long line of people waiting to enter,
      | mostly tourists.
      | 
      | The higher prices will still leave room for black market
      | weed sales, but right now the biggest problem is buying
      | weed legally is a 2 hour ordeal.
 
    | oatmeal1 wrote:
    | > Decriminalization actually would mean you see more of them
    | out on the streets because they're not being locked away in
    | prison.
    | 
    | Decriminalization means the government cannot mandate people
    | enter treatment. If people are out on the street and
    | addicted, the government needs some teeth so they can treat
    | even those that are in denial.
 
      | seadan83 wrote:
      | Mandating treatment gets people into treatment, it does not
      | mean they are treated.
      | 
      | Detox centers (AKA treatment) are myopic, they get you
      | detoxed but kick you back out to your shitty life that made
      | you do drugs in the first place. Follow up is needed to
      | make sure people can re-establish connections with their
      | community and not feel alone and trapped.
      | 
      | > the government needs some teeth so they can treat even
      | those that are in denial.
      | 
      | You cannot 'treat' those people. Nobody can un-addict the
      | drug addict except the drug-addict themselves. Others can
      | support, but the hard work has to come from the person
      | them-self.
      | 
      | What's more, current day we have many prison sentences that
      | are effectively "go to treatment, do 30 days of parole - or
      | go to jail." The effectiveness of this kind of treatment
      | AFAIK is tantamount to a joke. So, the mandated treatment
      | is kinda already what is happening and it's ineffective.
 
        | themitigating wrote:
        | So is jail but there's a higher probability of success
        | with treatment. Maybe they go in and during group hear
        | someone that inspires them. It's a personal to choice to
        | change of course but that can be influenced
 
      | qawwads wrote:
      | Everytime the subject come around, someone repeat this like
      | it's a fact but nobody care to explain. Is criminalisation
      | really the only hammer the gov has? What are the goods of
      | saving people against their wishes? Are these goods higher
      | than the damages caused by criminalisation?
 
      | stavros wrote:
      | Agreed. Let's criminalize smoking and alcoholism as well.
 
    | adamredwoods wrote:
    | >> Marijuana legalization hasn't lead to any major problems.
    | People don't even bother getting it on the black market
    | anymore where it is legal. They go for what's convenient.
    | 
    | This is actually bigger than people realize.
    | 
    | Fentanyl lacing is a MASSIVE problem. With purity, people can
    | rely that there's no fentanyl.
    | 
    | https://www.cdc.gov/stopoverdose/fentanyl/index.html
    | 
    | https://www.colorado.edu/health/blog/fentanyl
    | 
    | https://wellbeing.missouri.edu/wellness-
    | services/substance-u...
    | 
    | https://www.justice.gov/usao-cdca/programs/opioid-and-
    | fentan...
 
      | antisyzygy wrote:
      | Yeah for sure. That's pretty much what I was thinking
      | about.
      | 
      | There are a ton of accidental overdoses because of black
      | market opiates being laced with fentanyl.
      | 
      | If there were legal opiate shops, government regulated, you
      | wouldn't have to worry about that. They could even control
      | how much you can buy and what strength it is to ensure
      | overdoses are rare.
 
  | pyuser583 wrote:
  | The solution is simple: we treat Im drug addiction as a
  | disease.
  | 
  | This means using testing as to detect outbreaks. Schools should
  | be allowed and encouraged to test students, as long as a
  | positive test results in a trip to the doctor, not prison.
  | 
  | We shouldn't force law abiding adults into treatment, but if
  | they break the law, like vagrancy, treatment should be an
  | alternative to gradually increasing prison time.
  | 
  | Treat it like we treat COVID. Test and treat. Vaccinate and
  | manage. But if you refuse testing and treatment, you're on your
  | own.
 
  | ecf wrote:
  | I don't have any evidence to back this feeling up so take it
  | with a grain of salt: San Francisco has a drug problem simply
  | because it's one of few places in the country where it's safe
  | to have a drug problem. Other states pay for addicts/homeless
  | to be shipped off to California and all of a sudden it becomes
  | our taxpayer problem.
  | 
  | If drugs were legalized country-wide then SF wouldn't have the
  | concentration it does and it would seem like a nice place.
 
    | burkaman wrote:
    | This is a common theory but it isn't true. There are a lot of
    | homeless people in San Fransisco because there are a lot of
    | people there and it's hard to afford a home.
    | 
    | From a huge recent survey of homelessness in California:
    | 
    | > Nine out of ten participants lost their last housing in
    | California; 75% of participants lived in the same county as
    | their last housing.
    | 
    | https://homelessness.ucsf.edu/sites/default/files/2023-06/CA.
    | ..
 
      | nvrmnd wrote:
      | My understanding is that "living in the same county as your
      | last housing" can mean that you moved to California with
      | enough money to rent a room for a month before running out.
      | Though, I have seen many other surveys that do indicate
      | that most unhoused individuals have lived in the area for
      | an extended period before factors forced them out
      | (https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/06/us/homeless-
      | population.ht...).
      | 
      | In any event, I feel that metric used by UCSF is really not
      | a good one to the point where it's almost dishonest. It's
      | not hard to come up with questions that do a better job at
      | trying to answer whether CA is burdened by individuals
      | moving from out-of-state to make use of more generous
      | social programs and/or lax drug policy.
 
      | cyberax wrote:
      | This data is st00pid. It relies on self-reporting, and the
      | questions are coached to get the "required" result.
      | 
      | A while ago I did an experiment, I found the list of people
      | convicted for typical "homeless" crimes in SF, and did a
      | background search on them. About 90% had extensive crime
      | records in other states, far away from CA.
      | 
      | This is not a definitive result for sure, but it's
      | suggestive.
 
    | Hermitian909 wrote:
    | > Other states pay for addicts/homeless to be shipped off to
    | California
    | 
    | This has happened but it's not substantial, most homeless in
    | CA were living here and homed before becoming homeless[0]
    | 
    | > San Francisco has a drug problem simply because it's one of
    | few places in the country where it's safe to have a drug
    | problem
    | 
    | I've spent a lot of time volunteering with the homeless in
    | SF. This doesn't match the data or anecdotal experience. Many
    | drug addicts follow the path of _becoming_ homeless
    | (overwhelmingly because of cost of living) and transitioning
    | into hard drugs to cope with the pain of living on the
    | street.
    | 
    | [0] https://homelessness.ucsf.edu/our-impact/our-
    | studies/califor...
 
    | 2OEH8eoCRo0 wrote:
    | > If drugs were legalized country-wide
    | 
    | No thank you. I don't want to catch what SF has. I'll vote
    | against anyone who suggests we need to legalize in my area.
 
      | anon84873628 wrote:
      | Then make sure you also vote for the people who want to
      | build more housing.
 
        | 2OEH8eoCRo0 wrote:
        | More single family homes? Sure. Low income housing? Nah
 
        | r2_pilot wrote:
        | I'm not sure I follow your reasoning. If someone is rich
        | enough to have a 3 bedroom detached home, that's all fine
        | and dandy, but it's a complete nonstarter to house 30
        | poor people in the same space? I don't see how that
        | solution reduces or solves homelessness for low-income
        | individuals, who may not be able to afford much more than
        | a single apartment. I suggest having more empathy for
        | people in different circumstances; one day you might find
        | yourself needing just a cheap roof over your head and I
        | hope that you never do. If so, though, I hope that
        | (against your stated preferences) you find shelter,
        | because all humans should have that basic need.
 
        | RoyalHenOil wrote:
        | So you want more homelessness then? Got it.
 
  | [deleted]
 
  | throw__away7391 wrote:
  | I have suffered tremendously from the drug use of family and
  | friends. Way too much attention and undeserved sympathy is
  | given to drug users while basically nothing at all to the
  | people around them whose lives they derail for no fault of
  | their own.
  | 
  | As far as what to do, half of this is cultural. People in the
  | US need to grow up, we can't have a nation of people who
  | require perpetual care of their community, there just aren't
  | enough "adults" to go around anymore. The US is super rich
  | compared even to other "first world"/G20 countries, even so-
  | called poor people in the US have US dollars to get drugs
  | smuggled to them, creating endless human misery outside the
  | country as well as in.
 
| carpet_wheel wrote:
| The opioid epidemic is at the heart of these issues. Maybe Oregon
| voters were naive, or maybe fentanyl is just too poisonous to
| really be considered a drug.
| 
| If you grew up in the rust belt, none of this is new. Kids were
| ODing in middle school in the 90s. Tragic of course, but someone
| is getting rich so inevitably the root cause is not bothered
| with.
 
| alphanullmeric wrote:
| Like with most things, I would strongly support decriminalizing
| all drugs on the condition that other people are not held
| responsible, financially or otherwise, for the actions of drug
| users. Your body your choice, my money my choice.
 
| alex_lav wrote:
| It's funny to me that governments (and citizens) aren't realizing
| you can't simply _do less_ and expect things to improve. As in,
| deciminalizing drugs could work if the effort that was formerly
| spent mindlessly arresting and prosecuting smalltime drug
| offenders was instead spent on increased efforts in community
| outreach and rehabilitation, but that's not what happened. What
| we got was a society in which drugs are no longer criminalized
| but no additional resources. Literally just a government and
| society _doing less_. Who thought this would work?
| 
| Speaking as a person in Portland OR, it's not the decriminalizing
| that isn't working, it's the absolute dipshit of a mayor in Ted
| Wheeler and the total apathy from the local PD that are our
| largest failing.
 
| kelnos wrote:
| https://archive.is/rznQr
| 
| We've plainly seen over the past several decades that the War on
| Drugs is an abject failure. All it's done is increase
| incarceration rates (without solving the problems of drug use and
| addiction), and many people caught in the system are just drug
| users, not distributors/traffickers. This really doesn't help
| much of anything.
| 
| > _State leaders have acknowledged faults with the policy's
| implementation and enforcement measures._
| 
| And there you go, right there in the second paragraph.
| 
| > _As Morse put it, "If you take away the criminal-justice system
| as a pathway that gets people into treatment, you need to think
| about what is going to replace it."_
| 
| And clearly they didn't do that well enough, or at least didn't
| follow through well enough on what needed to be done.
| 
| It's good to see reporting on this, because clearly "just
| decriminalizing" doesn't help, and can make things worse on some
| dimensions. And some measures to replace prison sentences likely
| work better than others, and it's good to see the ones that don't
| work so we can refine policies like this.
| 
| But let's not take this as failure of the idea of
| decriminalization.
 
  | lotsofpulp wrote:
  | Is it possible the probability of success of treating the use
  | of certain brain altering chemicals is untenably low, even if
  | treatment was "properly" funded?
 
    | kelnos wrote:
    | I don't think so. Portugal was famously very successful at
    | drug decriminalization, at least until they slashed funding
    | to rehabilitation programs.
    | 
    | If you have data that suggests some drugs just make
    | rehabilitation impossible or unlikely, I'd be interested to
    | see it, though.
 
      | anon291 wrote:
      | I went to Portugal during this supposed 'golden' era and it
      | was just as depressing then as Portland is now. I have no
      | idea how anyone can say it was a success. The despair on
      | the street was palpable.
 
      | seanmcdirmid wrote:
      | > Portugal was famously very successful at drug
      | decriminalization
      | 
      | It isn't that famously successful at all, at least in
      | Portugal.
      | 
      | https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/07/07/portugal-
      | dru...
 
        | chefandy wrote:
        | Excerpt from that article:
        | 
        | " _Experts argue that drug policy focused on jail time is
        | still more harmful to society than decriminalization.
        | While the slipping results here suggest the fragility of
        | decriminalization's benefits, they point to how funding
        | and encouragement into rehabilitation programs have
        | ebbed. The number of users being funneled into drug
        | treatment in Portugal, for instance, has sharply fallen,
        | going from a peak of 1,150 in 2015 to 352 in 2021, the
        | most recent year available._ "
        | 
        | It did work well. It doesn't now. What changed in between
        | then and now is funding and commitment to getting addicts
        | into treatment-- the founding principle of the program to
        | begin with.
 
        | lotsofpulp wrote:
        | The interesting metric would be the percentage of addicts
        | that were treated and went on to be "productive" or at
        | least not using for at least x, y, and z years, and
        | probabilities of relapse.
 
        | chefandy wrote:
        | It may well exist. The initial policy went into effect in
        | 2001.
 
        | lotsofpulp wrote:
        | I have never seen it advertised, and if it were
        | impressive, I cannot imagine why it would not be
        | advertised.
 
        | chefandy wrote:
        | Why do you need the statistic? You seem to have already
        | reached a conclusion. Have you looked at related
        | statistics to inform your perspective?
 
        | lotsofpulp wrote:
        | No, I have not seen related statistics. I need the
        | statistic because I do not see any other way to evaluate
        | whether or not treatment is cost effective.
        | 
        | I have reached a conclusion that in order to evaluate the
        | "success" of Portugal's policies and how they can
        | translate to other places, then I would like to know what
        | kind of addictions it succeeded for and for what
        | proportion of people and for which addictions.
 
        | chefandy wrote:
        | Wikipedia is a good source for sources.
 
        | seanmcdirmid wrote:
        | That is just one perspective from the article, not a
        | consensus, and definitely nothing that could qualify as
        | famous, and even then the argument is along the lines of
        | "It was successful until we stop dumping lots of money
        | into it."
        | 
        | That reminds of how Salt Lake City recently found out the
        | same thing with its success in curing homelessness. The
        | problem never ends.
 
        | chefandy wrote:
        | "It was successful until we stop dumping lots of money
        | into it."
        | 
        | Generally, successful public programs often stop being
        | successful when they stop recieving funding. That is a
        | fact. The resources used to pay for the portugal program
        | were redirected from enforcement. Perusing the wikipedia
        | page, the stats seemed a lot more encouraging than any
        | similar ones I've seen from a country with war-on-drugs
        | type policies, but I'm not an expert.
 
        | chimeracoder wrote:
        | > That reminds of how Salt Lake City recently found out
        | the same thing with its success in curing homelessness.
        | The problem never ends.
        | 
        | It's funny that you mention Salt Lake City, because that
        | example is commonly misunderstood and actually
        | illustrates the exact opposite of what you're pointing
        | out.
        | 
        | Utah set out to solve _chronic_ homelessness. The causes
        | and effects of chronic homelessness are completely
        | different from transient or episodic homelessness, and
        | the three require different approaches. Utah eliminated
        | 91% of chronic homelessness within ten years, using a
        | Housing First policy. After they ended the policy,
        | _total_ (not chronic) homelessness increased. The
        | majority of that increase was from non-chronic
        | homelessness, which was not targeted by their policy and
        | which was increasing even before that policy ended
        | (because it was, well, independent of a policy that
        | was... not aimed at addressing it). Chronic homelessness
        | has increased in Utah since the end of the program in
        | 2015, but the overwhelming majority of homelessness that
        | 's reported on in Utah is still _not_ chronic
        | homelessness, because chronic homelessness makes up less
        | than 20% of the homeless population.
        | 
        | It's odd to look at that as "the problem never ends",
        | because the problem (chronic homelessness), _did_ very
        | nearly end, until the state decided to end the program
        | and go back to their own ways.
 
        | seanmcdirmid wrote:
        | https://www.deseret.com/utah/2023/6/29/23771556/report-
        | incre...
        | 
        | > 2023 report reflects a 96% increase in people
        | experiencing chronic homelessness since 2019, but also
        | indicates Utah is making headway in developing deeply
        | affordable housing
        | 
        | For however you define chronic, I guess.
 
        | 310260 wrote:
        | What are you trying to say here though? The money is more
        | important than people being rehabilitated?
        | 
        | Not everything scales well. Sometimes you just have to
        | spend to fix.
 
        | seanmcdirmid wrote:
        | > Not everything scales well. Sometimes you just have to
        | spend to fix.
        | 
        | I don't get how we can be pushed to decriminalize drugs
        | and then be asked for tremendous resources to treat the
        | drug abuse we enabled? Those asks cannot coexist: if drug
        | abuse is costing society billions or trillions of dollars
        | in resources to fix, why do we allow it in the first
        | place?
        | 
        | > The money is more important than people being
        | rehabilitated?
        | 
        | I don't understand why we have to pay for other people's
        | mistakes. Eventually, they have to take responsibility
        | for their own choices, especially if we have allowed that
        | choice (if you think drug crime is victimless so
        | shouldn't be punished is true).
 
      | lotsofpulp wrote:
      | I do not have data, but did Portugal deal with fentanyl?
      | And why did Portugal slash funding for treatment?
 
    | Supermancho wrote:
    | If there was a measure for success that was agreed upon, for
    | a region, the probability of success would then be lowered to
    | "untenably low". That isn't the case, when data collection is
    | performed.
 
      | [deleted]
 
  | anon291 wrote:
  | > We've plainly seen over the past several decades that the War
  | on Drugs is an abject failure. All it's done is increase
  | incarceration rates (without solving the problems of drug use
  | and addiction), and many people caught in the system are just
  | drug users, not distributors/traffickers. This really doesn't
  | help much of anything.
  | 
  | Given that Oregon stopped its war on drugs and has had a
  | terrible experience, I don't see how anyone can honestly
  | believe that the war on drugs did not reduce the rates of drug
  | use and addiction. This is not a political issue. Come to
  | Portland and see. It's not like any other city. People engage
  | in drugs freely and with impugnity. Correspondingly, people
  | overdose continuously.
  | 
  | It seems obvious to me the war on drugs kept addiction rates
  | and usage rates at a much more acceptable level. At least, it
  | ensured the dangers of drug use didn't spill onto the streets
  | (needles in public parks; drug users in public restrooms...
  | places kids go).
  | 
  | Thus, it correspondingly seems obvious to me that the higher
  | incarceration rate is worth it.
 
  | AbrahamParangi wrote:
  | Is the war on drugs a failure in Singapore too? I mean, it is
  | self-evidently obvious that at some level of enforcement, you
  | _can_ actually control the problem.
  | 
  | The question then is whether we are willing to tolerate the
  | level of enforcement necessary. Is the cure worse than the
  | disease? That is a real question and a worthy one, but
  | pretending that no tradeoff exists is just silly.
 
    | oatmeal1 wrote:
    | > The question then is whether we are willing to tolerate the
    | level of enforcement necessary.
    | 
    | I think the question is how do we make prisons less cruel and
    | dangerous, and lower recidivism. Of course there is a
    | backlash against enforcement when the solution is locking
    | people in cages.
 
      | pas wrote:
      | obviously by spending money on it. but the US in general is
      | vehemently against doing that.
 
    | pravus wrote:
    | After the outrage I saw when a US citizen was caned in
    | Singapore for a vandalism violation, I'd say no, the people
    | here probably don't look to Singapore as a guide for
    | enforcement.
 
      | spamuel wrote:
      | Minds have been changed on a lot of things that are pretty
      | wild lately, in a short span of time. If this stuff
      | continues, there might be further pretty wild changes of
      | mind.
 
    | chimeracoder wrote:
    | > Is the war on drugs a failure in Singapore too?
    | 
    | Considering that thousands of people are arrested for drug
    | possession every year in Singapore, to say nothing of the
    | number of people who use drugs in Singapore and avoid legal
    | action, then yes.
    | 
    | > The question then is whether we are willing to tolerate the
    | level of enforcement necessary.
    | 
    | Drug use is rampant even inside prisons, which are literally
    | the most surveilled and draconian environments on the planet.
    | If a carceral approach to preventing drug use doesn't work
    | _even within prisons_ , what makes anyone think it can work
    | in society at large, even if people were willing to turn all
    | of society into a police state?
 
      | postmeta wrote:
      | A few thousand arrests for possession in Singapore is
      | nothing compared to the USA, NYC has that many people die
      | of drug overdose every year: https://www.snpnyc.org/opioid-
      | crisis/ vs Singapore arrests for possession or use:
      | https://www.statista.com/statistics/1007331/dug-abuser-
      | numbe...
 
    | whimsicalism wrote:
    | Singapore is a dictatorship, count me out.
 
  | gremlinsinc wrote:
  | Yeah, I see it as a failure in implementing a better road to
  | recidivism for drug users that doesn't involve prison. It's a
  | mental health issue after all. I think perhaps maybe even
  | separate "mental" health from normal healthcare and make it
  | free / universal might go a long way. Maybe insentivize it,
  | like giving plasma. Go to therapy 4 weeks in a row get $100
  | cash. That way it's not "forcing" people into something which
  | is still a sort of "prison" mindset, but it's more like
  | "encouraging" them to be there, and drug users will do almost
  | anything for money, right? So why not have them do therapy?
 
    | lotsofpulp wrote:
    | Why would mental health be separated from "normal"
    | healthcare? Mental health involves chemical signals in the
    | brain. Once a chemical dependency has been established, how
    | possible is it to "talk" someone out of it in therapy?
 
      | monknomo wrote:
      | well, the thing with mental healthcare compared with
      | regular healthcare is that the first bit of it is often
      | kind of coercive?
      | 
      | Like folks with chest pain want it fixed.
      | 
      | But folks who hear voices/are addicted to something/suffer
      | from crippling anxiety often don't want to fix it for a
      | variety of reasons, some of which are even pretty good
      | (such as nasty medication side effects). Crossing that
      | hurdle is tough
      | 
      | And you can talk someone out of a chemical dependency. Or
      | rather, you can talk them into suffering through it, much
      | the same way as you can talk someone into suffering through
      | climbing a mountain or similar.
 
  | agentofoblivion wrote:
  | a.k.a., "that's not real communism".
 
  | cyberax wrote:
  | > We've plainly seen
  | 
  | I have not seen that.
  | 
  | > over the past several decades that the War on Drugs is an
  | abject failure.
  | 
  | It was not. WoD helped to _control_ the amount of drugs. It
  | certainly had not eradicated them, but it helped to reduce
  | their prevalence.
 
  | j_walter wrote:
  | Clearly they had the best of intentions, but Oregon's
  | politicians are terrible at implementing anything properly.
  | Open drug markets, increased property and retail thefts and a
  | homeless population explosion are what happened...when <1% of
  | people actually seek the treatment if they can even find it it
  | causes problems.
  | 
  | They always claimed to follow other successful implementations
  | like Portugal, but the law was no where near what they
  | implemented as far as requiring treatment.
  | 
  | Whats funny is the Governor is telling the Portland mayor to
  | fix the drug issues...like it didn't stem from measure 110.
  | 
  | https://www.wweek.com/news/2023/07/19/kotek-and-blumenauer-t...
 
    | rubyn00bie wrote:
    | Ted Wheeler is a piece of shit, pushing policies that are
    | completely ineffective. He's more interested in illegally
    | gassing non-violent protestors than fixing issues. The police
    | here are well-funded and by-and-large don't do anything,
    | bringing up the real question "why are we funding them?" A
    | family member of mine had someone ARMED and going through a
    | very obviously psychotic episode enter their house and it was
    | over week before the police showed up to remove them. The
    | damage to the house was outstanding, and my family member
    | obviously couldn't stay there during it, but the Portland
    | Police couldn't fucking be bothered. For a fucking week. It's
    | absolutely insane we pay for police in my opinion.
    | 
    | The biggest issue in Portland that's been ignored since COVID
    | started is that downtown Portland never recovered after the
    | shutdown. It has nothing to do with safety, I know I live
    | there, and it has everything to do with prices. The city is
    | too expensive for what you get and what opportunities are
    | here.
    | 
    | I'm no fan of Kotek, but truly Ted Wheeler is among the most
    | shit mayors the city has ever known.
 
    | kelnos wrote:
    | That's fair, and certainly a problem, but I don't think the
    | solution is "let's just go back to throwing everyone in
    | jail". We know from long experience that isn't working.
 
      | UncleOxidant wrote:
      | > but I don't think the solution is "let's just go back to
      | throwing everyone in jail".
      | 
      | As someone who lives in Oregon we need some way to force
      | addicts into treatment. Jail worked in some cases because
      | it meant that some addicts no longer had access to the
      | drugs they were addicted to. But even better would be more
      | of a therapeutic environment where they actually get
      | treatment for addiction. However, it seems that most
      | addicts aren't going into treatment willingly (big
      | surprise) and this is why we're seeing so much trouble
      | here. I voted for 110, but now I'm thinking that was a
      | mistake. It either needs some major revisions to enable
      | forcing drug users into treatment or it just needs to be
      | repealed (the former would be better, I think).
 
      | [deleted]
 
      | brightlancer wrote:
      | How about, and I'm just spit-balling here, how about we
      | enforce laws again theft and assault and "quality of life"
      | offenses like smoking and shooting up drugs in public
      | parks, on sidewalks, on transit?
      | 
      | If someone wants to get high in their home, I don't care.
      | If someone wants to get high in a bar or such, I don't
      | care. If someone wants to get high in one of those places
      | and then walk out in public _without harming anyone else_,
      | I don't care.
      | 
      | The thefts, the assaults, the zombies and crazies in
      | public, that stuff I care about.
      | 
      | There is a middle-ground between "criminalize USE" and
      | "stop enforcing laws, particularly when drug abusers and
      | homeless are involved".
 
        | chimeracoder wrote:
        | > How about, and I'm just spit-balling here, how about we
        | enforce laws again theft and assault and "quality of
        | life" offenses like smoking and shooting up drugs in
        | public parks, on sidewalks, on transit?
        | 
        | > If someone wants to get high in their home
        | 
        | That doesn't work in a society in which housing is not
        | guaranteed, and in which almost all "last-resort" housing
        | options (such as shelters) require sobriety. Achieving
        | and maintaining sobriety without stable housing is
        | virtually impossible, and yet somehow society expects
        | _everyone_ to be able to do it and then complains when
        | this doesn 't magically happen.
        | 
        | The "tough on crime" mentality says, "well, this should
        | give you an incentive to stop using drugs", except that
        | attitude is completely fantastical: it goes against all
        | clinical evidence of how substance use disorders actually
        | work, and all empirical evidence of what resources a
        | person needs to stop using drugs (assuming that is even
        | the end goal, which is not a given).
        | 
        | To spell it out: if you don't provide housing options for
        | people who use drugs, then you will wind up with homeless
        | people using drugs in public. And criminalizing drug use
        | doesn't change that; it just moves those people "out of
        | sight" to jails and prisons, where they keep using drugs,
        | at a monetary cost to society that is literally orders of
        | magnitude greater than the straightforward option of just
        | giving them housing.
 
        | brightlancer wrote:
        | > The "tough on crime" mentality says, "well, this should
        | give you an incentive to stop using drugs",
        | 
        | How many times did I have to say that I don't care if
        | people use drugs?
        | 
        | _I don't care if people use drugs._ I'm not interested in
        | forcing folks into rehab.
        | 
        | But this crap:
        | 
        | > That doesn't work in a society in which housing is not
        | guaranteed...
        | 
        | > To spell it out: if you don't provide housing options
        | for people who use drugs
        | 
        | Is a BS excuse to let folks commit THEFT and ASSAULT
        | because It's Really The System, or expose kids to fent
        | smoke on the train because It's Really The System, or
        | have kids step over zombies on the sidewalk because It's
        | Really The System, or have children and women (and some
        | men) harassed or threatened by crazies because It's
        | Really The System, etc.
        | 
        | I don't care about the drug use. I worked with homeless
        | folks for years and most of them are not OD'ing in public
        | parks or harassing folks on the sidewalk. Stop making
        | excuses for criminal behavior.
 
        | chimeracoder wrote:
        | > Is a BS excuse to let folks commit THEFT and ASSAULT
        | because It's Really The System, or expose kids to fent
        | smoke on the train because It's Really The System, or
        | have kids step over zombies on the sidewalk because It's
        | Really The System, or have children and women (and some
        | men) harassed or threatened by crazies because It's
        | Really The System, etc. I don't care about the drug use.
        | I worked with homeless folks for years and most of them
        | are not OD'ing in public parks or harassing folks on the
        | sidewalk. Stop making excuses for criminal behavior.
        | 
        | Your original comment literally draws a false equivalence
        | between "theft and assault" and "smoking and shooting up
        | drugs in public parks, on sidewalks, on transit".
        | 
        | Here's your comment:
        | 
        | > How about, and I'm just spit-balling here, how about we
        | enforce laws again theft and assault and "quality of
        | life" offenses like smoking and shooting up drugs in
        | public parks, on sidewalks, on transit?
        | 
        | Since the article is only talking about decriminalization
        | of drugs (theft and assault are still criminal offenses),
        | the only relevant difference here regards people who are
        | using drugs in public places.
        | 
        | It's a pretty convenient bait-and-switch that allows you
        | to complain about people using drugs (which is neither
        | violent nor criminal behavior), and then when people call
        | you out on it, revert back to complaining about violent
        | and criminal behavior, which nobody in this entire
        | comment chain except for you is talking about.
        | 
        | > Stop making excuses for criminal behavior.
        | 
        | Nobody's talking about criminal behavior. We're talking
        | about drug use, which, as discussed in the article, is
        | not a criminal offense in Oregon.
 
        | brightlancer wrote:
        | > Since the article is only talking about
        | decriminalization of drugs (theft and assault are still
        | criminal offenses), the only relevant difference here
        | regards people who are using drugs in public places.
        | 
        | You should look up to the folks I was replying to:
        | 
        | "Clearly they had the best of intentions, but Oregon's
        | politicians are terrible at implementing anything
        | properly. Open drug markets, increased property and
        | retail thefts and a homeless population explosion are
        | what happened...when <1% of people actually seek the
        | treatment if they can even find it it causes problems."
        | 
        | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36959984
        | 
        | Even from the article:
        | 
        | "Earlier this year, Portland business owners appeared
        | before the Multnomah County Commission to ask for help
        | with crime, drug-dealing, and other problems stemming
        | from a behavioral-health resource center operated by a
        | harm-reduction nonprofit that was awarded more than $4
        | million in Measure 110 funding.
        | 
        | ...
        | 
        | "In a nonpartisan statewide poll earlier this year, more
        | than 60 percent of respondents blamed Measure 110 for
        | making drug addiction, homelessness, and crime worse."
        | 
        | https://archive.ph/rznQr
        | 
        | The rest of your comment is just as full of
        | misrepresentations.
 
      | schnable wrote:
      | I don't know the specifics in Oregon, but in many places
      | (especially bigger cities) that stopped prosecuting drugs
      | and prostitution, "throwing everyone in jail" was not the
      | previous scenario. People were arrested then put into
      | diversionary programs that were enforced by the courts. It
      | worked much better than just letting people stay on the
      | streets as the process acted as a wake up call for many (of
      | course, not all).
 
        | chimeracoder wrote:
        | > I don't know the specifics in Oregon, but in many
        | places (especially bigger cities) that stopped
        | prosecuting drugs and prostitution, "throwing everyone in
        | jail" was not the previous scenario. People were arrested
        | then put into diversionary programs that were enforced by
        | the courts.
        | 
        | The big difference between Oregon and the other
        | cities/countries that tried this approach successfully is
        | _not_ diversionary programs - it 's _housing_. In Oregon,
        | housing is not guaranteed, which means any money spent on
        | mandatory treatment programs for people without stable
        | housing is essentially wasted.
        | 
        | Diversionary programs and rehabilitation are a waste of
        | time and money if the recipient does not have guaranteed
        | access to stable housing. It's virtually impossible to
        | achieve and maintain sobriety in those circumstances.
 
        | j_walter wrote:
        | Oregon basically made it a $100 fine or you could get
        | treatment...<5% of the people arrested chose treatment.
        | Portugal had more rules requiring treatment which is what
        | made it effective...Oregon did not choose that route.
        | 
        | https://www.wweek.com/news/state/2023/04/22/economist-
        | magazi...
 
        | chimeracoder wrote:
        | > Portugal had more rules requiring treatment which is
        | what made it effective...Oregon did not choose that
        | route.
        | 
        | As I explained in a sibling comment, requiring treatment
        | is not the difference. Very few people who use drugs in
        | Portugal are subject to mandatory drug treatment.
        | 
        | The key difference is that Portugal has a radically
        | different housing policy than Oregon. As of 2019, housing
        | is a formal legal right (and even before 2019, it was
        | much closer to a _de facto_ right than it was to Oregon
        | 's current model, which is "if you can't pay for a roof,
        | pitch your tent over there, and hope we don't arrest you
        | for vagrancy").
        | 
        | Most people who use drugs do not meet clinical criteria
        | for addiction, so drug treatment programs are irrelevant
        | and a waste of money for them. For those who do, drug
        | treatment programs are _still_ a waste of money unless
        | they have stable housing, because it is essentially
        | impossible to achieve and maintain sobriety without
        | stable housing.
 
        | EricDeb wrote:
        | Yea not jail but supervised programs makes sense.
 
      | [deleted]
 
    | orangepurple wrote:
    | I disagree that the implementation is terrible. Having seen
    | several interviews on the matter I think its implemented
    | exactly as the people of Portland wanted it. The major
    | outstanding problem is a lot of the homeless people on drugs
    | need someone to genuinely be there for them and care about
    | them. That's the primary message you will hear from them if
    | you care to listen to their stories on The Soft White
    | Underbelly. It seems that you can't possibly spend enough
    | money to make that happen at a policy level. There were
    | horrible abuses in the institutions where it was tried here
    | historically.
 
      | j_walter wrote:
      | They didn't spend any money on it...they didn't fund or
      | push treatment programs at all. The implementation was 100%
      | awful...just like every Oregon program that means well.
      | 
      | https://www.wweek.com/news/state/2023/05/13/survey-shows-
      | ore...
      | 
      | https://www.wweek.com/news/city/2023/03/20/wheeler-slams-
      | mea...
 
        | orangepurple wrote:
        | Why do legislatures keep passing half-baked drug-related
        | measures? It's not like this was the first one.
 
        | lotsofpulp wrote:
        | Measure 110 was not introduced or passed by legislators,
        | it was passed by the public via ballot measure.
 
        | j_walter wrote:
        | Yep, and it took effect 13 weeks after voting it through.
        | No possible way to get things in order in only 13
        | weeks...especially at the state level.
 
| ortusdux wrote:
| I was saddened to learn that Portugal slashed funding for their
| post decriminalization drug outreach programs. The shift from
| enforcement to treatment doesn't really work if you skip the
| treatment part.
| 
|  _After years of economic crisis, Portugal decentralized its drug
| oversight operation in 2012. A funding drop from 76 million euros
| ($82.7 million) to 16 million euros ($17.4 million) forced
| Portugal's main institution to outsource work previously done by
| the state to nonprofit groups, including the street teams that
| engage with people who use drugs. The country is now moving to
| create a new institute aimed at reinvigorating its drug
| prevention programs._
| 
| https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/07/07/portugal-dru...
 
| ConanRus wrote:
| [dead]
 
| dadjoker wrote:
| Uh, yeah "early results aren't encouraging" is the understatement
| of the century for those of us who live here.
 
| damnesian wrote:
| A sea change like this, especially when it comes to substances
| people take to feel some relief from the bullshit of our
| bullshit-heavy world- and involve physical dependance- isn't
| going to look awesome overnight. We have to wait until some of
| the dust shakes off. and this is a major problem with public
| initiatives in this polarized day and age. If they aren't
| immediately effective and amazing, we demonize them immediately.
| 
| Slow down. Let's not just toss it out just yet.
 
| m3kw9 wrote:
| If you legalize it, you need to have a system in place to get to
| that objective on why you wanted to legalize it in the first
| place.
 
| ttul wrote:
| Oregon decriminalizes drugs for a couple of years and we expect
| that the toxic drug crisis, homelessness, violence, poverty,
| petty crime, and child abuse will all magically disappear
| overnight. Yet the prohibition on drugs has been in force for
| decades and has accomplished none of its goals.
| 
| It's fine to critique a new approach and work on improvements,
| but let's not be too hasty here. We are trying to undo decades of
| harm caused by ridiculous policy failures.
 
| counterpartyrsk wrote:
| Make prescription drugs legal, it's stupid that I need to get a
| prescription for asthma medicine for the rest of my life.
 
| tracker1 wrote:
| From the last time I drove through Oregon, it kind of felt like
| they had already done this.
 
  | d35007 wrote:
  | Oregon voted to decriminalize hard drugs in the 2020 election,
  | according to the article.
 
| sharperguy wrote:
| I always thought decriminalization was in some ways the worst of
| both worlds. On one hand, keeping the production and trade side
| illegal continues to perpetuate the underground culture and fund
| international cartels. Meanwhile their market base increases due
| to fewer people being afraid of being caught, the product quality
| is still completely unregulated. Users still need to stay
| embedded in an an unscrupulous underworld in order to maintain
| the connections necessary to obtain the product, increasing the
| chances of abuse and reducing their chances of getting help if
| they need it. Of course, it's nice not to send people to jail for
| small quantities, but failing to fully legitimize the market in
| these ways could cause a lot of other issues.
 
  | NoMoreNicksLeft wrote:
  | Without legal sales, opiate users get trash street drugs that
  | vary anywhere between unsafe and catastrophically dangerous.
  | Furthermore, there's absolutely none of the benefits like being
  | able to encourage them to keep their used needles in sharps
  | containers like you might be able to do, if they had to drop
  | off the full ones before they got their next fix.
  | 
  | We don't get the reduction in violence we'd see from legal
  | sales. None of it.
  | 
  | Decrim is what you get from cowardly legislators and imbecilic
  | activists worried that Tweaky the Copper Wiring Thief isn't
  | getting a fair shake at life.
 
    | morkalork wrote:
    | Without legal sales, cartels will keep doing cartel things.
    | Also where will money for treatment programs come from? It
    | will always be at risk of being cut by fiscally conservative
    | governments, vs legal sales that can be taxed to fund
    | amelioration efforts.
 
      | treeman79 wrote:
      | Perhaps guard the boarders so not nearly so much is
      | crossing. Would also help stop human trafficking. Just a
      | thought.
 
        | morkalork wrote:
        | Are they unguarded right now? Your casually sarcastic
        | "just a thought" makes it sound like everyone else is an
        | idiot for not doing something obvious. Or are you
        | suggesting building a magnificant wall?
 
        | NoMoreNicksLeft wrote:
        | Thankfully our land and sea borders only total about 312
        | yards or so, two squads of border control could keep eyes
        | on it at all times, and shut that stuff down.
        | 
        | Oops, my bad. Nope, it's 2000 miles or so.
 
      | minsc_and_boo wrote:
      | Even with legal sales, there are still black markets for
      | drugs, as is evident with marijuana:
      | https://apnews.com/article/business-california-los-
      | angeles-m...
 
        | brightlancer wrote:
        | The same thing is true for tobacco - while it is legally
        | to sell and consume (by super-adults, 21+) in every US
        | state, they've taxed it so highly that there is a
        | fantastic black market.
        | 
        | And Eric Garner is a great example of how the government
        | with murder you on the _suspicion_ that you aren't paying
        | your taxes. Garner commonly sold individual cigarettes
        | ("loosies") which were usually untaxed; it does not
        | appear he was selling on the day he was choked to death
        | by the NYPD, but rather that he was targeted as a usual
        | suspect.
        | 
        | So we should legalize all of this stuff for adults AND
        | keep the taxes low enough to avoid black markets. Sadly,
        | the folks in favor of "legalization" are often wetting
        | themselves at the thought of the tax revenue.
 
        | NoMoreNicksLeft wrote:
        | What are the sizes of those black markets? They're tiny,
        | and limit the violence they do (since customers are
        | willing to pay a slight premium for peace).
        | 
        | Hell, if it was legalized, we could limit the price by
        | law... cost + 2% (or whatever margin the pharmaceutical
        | companies would need to not refuse). They would out-
        | compete the cartels in weeks.
        | 
        | Pretending that the black markets would remain to any
        | great degree is just disingenuous.
 
        | patrickmay wrote:
        | That demonstrates that California did a very bad job at
        | legalization. The black market arises when the taxes on a
        | good exceed the risk of getting caught. If California had
        | legalized marijuana and treated it like liquor, there
        | would be no black market.
 
  | anon84873628 wrote:
  | That's probably true. Decriminalization is an imperfect first
  | step that can be taken unilaterally by the executive branch
  | while the legislative is deadlocked. In time society grows
  | accustomed to decriminalization and the true legalization is
  | more feasible.
  | 
  | In California the decriminalization of magic mushrooms has
  | caused lots more people to start growing them, so price,
  | quality, and diversity are better than ever. That probably
  | wouldn't be the case with other drugs that aren't as easy to
  | produce just anywhere. Although opium poppy field or coca
  | greenhouses are definitely possible.
 
  | willi59549879 wrote:
  | i think the only way it would work is to make it completely
  | legal (also selling and production) with a lot of control on
  | sales. I am not sure what would be best to control sales, guess
  | it would need to be stricter than the control for tobacco and
  | alcohol. But that way the government could at least get taxes
  | from the sales of the drugs.
  | 
  | If only possession is legal then more people might try hard
  | drugs that would have been scared away but drugs still have to
  | be smuggled in. This also means that there is no quality
  | control on the substances.
 
  | randerson wrote:
  | I wonder: would be better or worse if states started giving out
  | medical-grade Heroin to those who seek it? Perhaps with a
  | prescription where one has to pick up a 1 day supply each day
  | (less likely to OD) and the prescription gradually tapers off
  | down to zero. It would put a dent in the illicit markets and
  | reduce deaths of existing addicts, but could be too tempting
  | for new people to try it out.
 
    | Herodotus38 wrote:
    | If you tried such a method people would probably be opposed
    | to it because of concerns people would be tempted to obtain
    | it and sell.
    | 
    | One would probably model it off of methadone clinics. In most
    | clinics the methadone has to be taken by the person on site
    | and witnessed to prevent issues of diversion. However a lot
    | of places allow people to graduate to be able to pick up a
    | multiple day supply after they have shown stability, etc...
 
    | tenebrisalietum wrote:
    | To prevent new people from doing heroin, just have them
    | search for "Kensington Philadelphia" on YouTube and watch 1
    | to 3 videos.
 
    | classichasclass wrote:
    | This is basically the methadone approach, but when I was in
    | general practice, just try weaning people off anything they
    | have a dependence on that they're not motivated to stop
    | using.
    | 
    | Plus, harm reduction like syringe services (i.e., needle
    | exchange) is already hugely controversial for "encouraging
    | drug use." That sentiment is at best arguable and at worst a
    | reductionist distortion, but it becomes even harder to argue
    | against when you're in the business of handing out better
    | dope.
 
  | alphazard wrote:
  | As you mentioned, decriminalization is not enough. The effort
  | that was spent on enforcement needs to be repurposed on quality
  | control. It's much easier to enforce laws on businesses who
  | want to sell their products openly than on individuals
  | consuming substances in private.
  | 
  | The FDA and DEA should be entirely repurposed to randomly
  | testing all food and drug products and ensuring that the
  | ingredients list is accurate to within a certain margin. Having
  | a single arbiter of good and bad substances has proven to be a
  | failure again and again (remember the Food Pyramid?). I would
  | much rather have access to everything, and know that it is
  | labeled correctly, than have some dysfunctional bureaucracy
  | "looking out for me".
 
  | kelnos wrote:
  | I'm not sure that's exactly true. I do agree with you that some
  | people will start using because they lose the fear of being
  | caught, though I'm not convinced this is as large a problem as
  | you might think it is.
  | 
  | Either way, there are also undoubtedly people with substance
  | abuse problems who are afraid to get help due to the
  | possibility of incarceration. Removing that fear can lead to
  | more people getting into treatment programs.
 
    | Alupis wrote:
    | > though I'm not convinced this is as large a problem as you
    | might think it is
    | 
    | Several states have legalized marijuana, and surprise,
    | marijuana usage is at an all-time high (no pun intended).
    | People who would have never tried it before now do so because
    | the stigma is gone, and it's trivial to get.
    | 
    | This part is always lost on the "legalize everything" crowd.
    | While marijuana might be relatively benign, other drugs are
    | not. Removing the stigma and making it easy to get harder
    | drugs is going to be a net-negative thing for society as a
    | hole.
    | 
    | We can see this in-action already. Places like California
    | have effectively de-criminalized most/all drug use if you are
    | part of the homeless population. Surprise again - there's
    | more drug use within that community than ever before. It's
    | difficult to walk through the down-town area without seeing
    | overt drug use these-days.
    | 
    | It would be better to not throw people in prison for drug use
    | - but instead have mandatory rehab or something... while
    | keeping drug use out of reach for the average person.
 
      | anon84873628 wrote:
      | Personally I think marijuana is a bit unique, more similar
      | to alcohol in how it can fit into daily life for some
      | people. Sure the use has probably gone up but that's just
      | social norms changing, not necessarily for better or worse.
      | (If it displaces alcohol or other drug use it's probably
      | for the better). Every culture has different ideas about
      | what drugs are acceptable.
      | 
      | Maybe legalizing cocaine would also see occasional
      | recreational use go up - that's not necessarily a problem
      | either.
 
      | mcphage wrote:
      | > People who would have never tried it before now do so
      | because the stigma is gone, and it's trivial to get. This
      | part is always lost on the "legalize everything" crowd.
      | While marijuana might be relatively benign, other drugs are
      | not. Removing the stigma and making it easy to get harder
      | drugs is going to be a net-negative thing for society as a
      | hole.
      | 
      | That doesn't entirely follow. Marijuana is widely known to
      | be benign, and so it's not much of a surprise that usage
      | rose with legalization. Other drugs are known to _not_ be
      | benign, so you 're not going to find a ton of people going
      | "hey, why not try some heroin?"
 
      | tastyfreeze wrote:
      | > Several states have legalized marijuana, and surprise,
      | marijuana usage is at an all-time high
      | 
      | That may be a result of measurement. People that used prior
      | to legalization kept it secret. The stereotypical "stoners"
      | are a fraction of cannabis users. After legalization people
      | tend to be more open about their cannabis use.
      | 
      | If the measurement is based on surveys there will be an
      | obvious increase after legalization as the legal
      | consequences of admitting use have been removed.
      | 
      | If the measurement is based on sales there will also be an
      | obvious increase after legalization as the majority of
      | sales are recorded. Prior to legalization the majority of
      | sales were illegal and the only sampling of the actual
      | market size is from police seizures.
      | 
      | Yes, there will be a growth in the market when the legality
      | is changed and stigma is reduced over time. That is people
      | finding cannabis useful for themselves and no fear of being
      | judged for that choice (same as alcohol is for many
      | people).
      | 
      | There will always be a portion of the population that use
      | drugs in excess to the detriment of their health or will
      | compromise their morals to use. There is also a larger
      | portion of the population that uses drugs regardless of
      | legality and participates in society. You would never know
      | the second cohort.
      | 
      | The problem with the first cohort is breaking other laws to
      | satisfy their desire to use. Their drug use isn't the
      | problem. Drugs didn't make them do anything. They should be
      | punished for their other behavior not their consumption
      | habits.
 
      | akira2501 wrote:
      | California didn't just decriminalize use, they
      | decriminalized sales and open air drug markets. The two are
      | technically different policy outcomes. The state was just
      | exceptionally lazy in it's implementation, which was
      | somewhat driven by the early response to COVID.
 
      | [deleted]
 
      | brightlancer wrote:
      | > Several states have legalized marijuana, and surprise,
      | marijuana usage is at an all-time high (no pun intended).
      | 
      | There is some evidence (not conclusive yet) that legal
      | access to marijuana reduces abuse of opioids.
      | 
      | I've never used marijuana, I don't like the smell of
      | marijuana, and so I'm not keen on folks using it around me
      | -- but in the grand scheme, pot smokers are not the ones
      | breaking into cars and threatening folks on the train.
      | 
      | > It would be better to not throw people in prison for drug
      | use - but instead have mandatory rehab or something...
      | while keeping drug use out of reach for the average person.
      | 
      | Are we going to do that for alcohol _use_? What about
      | caffeine _USE_? Caffeine is the most widely abused drug in
      | the US and thousands of auto fatalities every year are due
      | to fatigue, which caffeine perpetuates.
      | 
      | I don't care about drug use. I care about the assaults, the
      | robberies, and the street people who block sidewalks and
      | harass pedestrians and transit users. I'm not keen on
      | excusing their behavior because of their substance _abuse_.
 
      | Demotooodo wrote:
      | It's a novelty right now.
      | 
      | In Amsterdam when you go to a music festival you will not
      | see a lot of pod heads. I was one of the few and I'm a
      | German!
      | 
      | Look at Portugals drug history. Legalization saved that
      | country!
 
        | vondur wrote:
        | It looks like Portugal is having some serious issues with
        | decriminalization.
        | 
        | https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/07/07/portugal-
        | dru...
 
        | CorrectHorseBat wrote:
        | > After years of economic crisis, Portugal decentralized
        | its drug oversight operation in 2012. A funding drop from
        | 76 million euros ($82.7 million) to 16 million euros
        | ($17.4 million) forced Portugal's main institution to
        | outsource work previously done by the state to nonprofit
        | groups, including the street teams that engage with
        | people who use drugs.
 
        | jokowueu wrote:
        | >cuts funding >Decriminalization doesn't work ! >not
        | shocked
 
        | Alupis wrote:
        | And the US is immune to such problems?
        | 
        | This, "but we'll do it better" argument seems to fall
        | flat universally. Everybody thinks they can do it better,
        | but nobody actually does...
 
        | xienze wrote:
        | Isn't the whole point of decriminalization that we won't
        | have to spend as much money enforcing laws and locking
        | people up? Funny how you never hear anyone sound the
        | alarm about lack of funding in the early stages when
        | everyone's talking about what a success decriminalization
        | is, only when the dark side of such policies start
        | showing. "We knew this would happen all along!"
 
        | IX-103 wrote:
        | Would you prefer to spend the money on arresting people
        | and keeping a large prison population or would you rather
        | spend money on rehabilitation programs? Either way you're
        | going to spend money, but I think that the latter
        | approach would help more people.
 
        | jokowueu wrote:
        | No that's not the whole point not even close ,
        | decriminalization works in reducing human suffering by
        | using the money spent of emprisioning humans and spending
        | it on programs etc .
 
        | chefandy wrote:
        | The problem here isn't with decriminalization-- it's with
        | lack of commitment to what they originally replaced
        | enforcement with. From that article:
        | 
        | " _Experts argue that drug policy focused on jail time is
        | still more harmful to society than decriminalization.
        | While the slipping results here suggest the fragility of
        | decriminalization's benefits, they point to how funding
        | and encouragement into rehabilitation programs have
        | ebbed. The number of users being funneled into drug
        | treatment in Portugal, for instance, has sharply fallen,
        | going from a peak of 1,150 in 2015 to 352 in 2021, the
        | most recent year available.
        | 
        | Joao Goulao -- head of Portugal's national institute on
        | drug use and the architect of decriminalization --
        | admitted to the local press in December that "what we
        | have today no longer serves as an example to anyone."
        | Rather than fault the policy, however, he blames a lack
        | of funding._"
        | 
        | It was working great while they were committed to funding
        | treatment programs and pushing users towards them.
 
        | Alupis wrote:
        | > In Amsterdam when you go to a music festival you will
        | not see a lot of pod heads
        | 
        | I could be wrong, but I don't believe marijuana is as-
        | legal in Amsterdam as it is in California for example. In
        | CA, there's very few enforced restrictions of where you
        | can get it and where you can use it.
        | 
        | > Look at Portugals drug history. Legalization saved that
        | country!
        | 
        | It doesn't appear so[1]. It appears they are struggling
        | with the same issues - dramatic rise in drug use.
        | 
        | It's not really effective to just simply legalize all
        | drugs. I agree with most, we shouldn't throw people in
        | prison for drug use. No, instead we need to throw them
        | into mandatory rehabilitation programs.
        | 
        | The goals of a decriminalization program shouldn't be to
        | increase average citizen's drug use. But that's what
        | happens without some sort of rehab/treatment program.
        | 
        | [1]
        | https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/07/07/portugal-
        | dru...
 
        | TylerE wrote:
        | Disagree. Much more societal harm comes from the supply
        | side (cartels, street gangs) than users, and much of the
        | harm for/from users goes away if prices adjust to what
        | they actually cost to produce (a tiny fraction of street
        | price), and if the products are lab tested for potency
        | and purity.
 
        | vuln wrote:
        | > if prices adjust to what they actually cost to produce
        | (a tiny fraction of street price)
        | 
        | Nothing. Absolutely nothing is priced at "actual costs to
        | produce." Nothing. I wish it were the case though maybe
        | one day.
 
        | TylerE wrote:
        | Sorry, I was imprecise in my wording... obviously there
        | has to be profit, but not the 10,000%+ margins hard drugs
        | "enjoy".
 
        | Alupis wrote:
        | This pitched scenario has played out in exactly zero
        | markets around the world, including all of the legal-
        | marijuana states right here in the US.
 
        | TylerE wrote:
        | Cartels aren't generally dealing in marijuana, it's small
        | potatoes.
 
        | Alupis wrote:
        | It's not just cartels in the classical sense.
        | 
        | In CA, it's cheaper to buy illegal marijuana than going
        | to one of the licensed stores, for a whole variety of
        | reasons.
        | 
        | That "market arbitrage" opens the door for a lot of
        | things to occur - all things proponents of legalization
        | promised would go away.
 
        | TylerE wrote:
        | The market for hard drugs and marijuana are totally
        | different.
 
        | Alupis wrote:
        | Little bit of a straw man there. Nobody said they weren't
        | different things.
        | 
        | The promises of the legalize-marijuana crowd have not
        | become true. There is still crime revolving around
        | marijuana in CA, it's more expensive than it was before
        | legalization, and the tax revenue is a drop in the bucket
        | for CA.
        | 
        | So all we "gained" was a bunch more people using
        | marijuana...
 
        | TylerE wrote:
        | You kinda did by talking about marijuana exclusively
        | while I was talking about hard drugs.
 
        | Ajay-p wrote:
        | I am not a consumer of marijuana but in my observations
        | of habitual users is nowhere near the same as someone
        | addicted to heroin, and the severe physical and mental
        | impact it has on their bodies. One could say alcohol and
        | nicotine have such harmful effects, but not as dramatic
        | and sudden as harder narcotics.
 
        | TylerE wrote:
        | How do you see wether someone has eaten edibles?
 
        | Demotooodo wrote:
        | That's not common in Amsterdam
 
      | ClumsyPilot wrote:
      | > drug use if you are part of the homeless population.
      | 
      | Maybe. homeless are the main issue, rather than drugs?
      | 
      | Like if I had to choose between regular cocaine habbit, and
      | bein homeless, i'd rather be a cokehead.
 
        | treeman79 wrote:
        | Meet people that have have done a lot of drugs? Some can
        | still function. Others, just can't. Had an owner of a
        | successful tech company see it fall apart because he
        | couldn't make decisions anymore.
        | 
        | Was a really nice guy, but by the end I might hire him to
        | sweep the floors, but only with supervision. Not sure how
        | he's doing now, but I imagine he'll be homeless by some
        | point.
        | 
        | He enjoyed going to burning man a lot.
 
      | S_A_P wrote:
      | Legalize everything!= Everyone should be using drugs. This
      | is just one step in what should be a public health approach
      | to drug use/abuse. Take away the lock them up because they
      | are weak minded degenerates approach to drug use. I don't
      | see any dissonance in saying that drugs should be
      | decriminalized and or legal in some cases but I also don't
      | think most people should use drugs regularly. If someone is
      | abusing drugs it should certainly be cheaper to provide
      | them with mental health care than locking them up in jail.
      | Hard drugs like heroin and cocaine would be safer if they
      | were not sold on the black market. I think that is a net
      | positive vs the status quo- which is a game of "Is It
      | Fentanyl?!?"(tm) currently. Should people be using those
      | drugs? I don't know. I personally wouldn't want to even if
      | I could buy them from a store. As for cannabis, I'm
      | convinced that for 90+% of the populous* it's safer than
      | alcohol.
      | 
      | *I think anyone with family history of schizophrenia should
      | avoid weed and probably all intoxicants.
 
      | patrickmay wrote:
      | It would be very hard for the effects of allowing people to
      | choose what they consume to be worse than the effects of
      | prohibition.
      | 
      | The homeless issue is multidimensional and, surprise,
      | people were already getting drugs before they were
      | decriminalized.
      | 
      | Legalization is morally correct and eliminates the gangs,
      | violence, and high costs of prohibition.
 
      | chronofar wrote:
      | > This part is always lost on the "legalize everything"
      | crowd.
      | 
      | These types of generalizations are usually built of straw
      | and mud, but I'll go ahead and respond as someone in said
      | crowd with a "no it's not." There's an implicit assumption
      | here that increased usage is worse than the effects of
      | prohibition, but that's at minimum highly debatable. I tend
      | to think increased usage of a regulated and taxable
      | substance by a well educated and supported populous is
      | significantly preferable to prohibition and scare tactics,
      | to say nothing of the wide swath of wide reaching knock on
      | effects the latter has like powerful cartels/gangs,
      | militarized police actions in response, people being
      | groomed as convicts for their use, etc.
      | 
      | I'm not at all inclined to sweep the dangers of hard drugs
      | under the rug, I'm all for looking at their effects and
      | impacts head on, and indeed I think the legalization route
      | is the best route to do so. I think individuals should be
      | given sole stewardship of their own conscious experience,
      | by endogenous or exogenous means, and society's best chance
      | of maximizing those individual choices is through well
      | thought education, regulation, and support (which is likely
      | to all be cheaper and more tractable than prohibition is).
 
        | andybak wrote:
        | I can think of few things likely to befall a drug user
        | that are more devastating and costly to society than a
        | long period of incarceration.
 
        | [deleted]
 
        | ozim wrote:
        | Example 20 year old experimenting with drugs:
        | 
        | Going to jail for a year breaks any career chances or
        | most of the job opportunities plus messes up his mind by
        | staying with other convicts.
        | 
        | Letting him experiment with drugs, he might mess up his
        | health but also he has still a chance to continue rather
        | normal life.
 
        | culopatin wrote:
        | If he manages to get out. Gets addicted to meth, can't
        | work, needs more meth, what does he do?
 
        | araes wrote:
        | One point people don't tend to know, is that a lot of
        | folks actually get drugs in jail, and often prefer them.
        | There's quite a few opioid replacements that get offered
        | to anyone who can show addiction withdrawl, and many
        | folks say they're actually a better, longer high than the
        | street stuff.
        | 
        | There's also some revolving door, and 'Shawshank' style
        | issues, where folks rotate out for a couple months in the
        | spring / summer, do whatever on the street, and then
        | rotate back in the fall / winter with some dumb crime.
        | Eat, rest, stay warm, get the opioid replacements, then
        | head back out. Kind of a homeless shelter where you just
        | have to do some 3-month misdemeanor stint to get room /
        | board.
        | 
        | Although long incarceration can definitely be an issue,
        | there are also some folks who've made it a lifestyle.
 
        | bostonsre wrote:
        | > I tend to think increased usage of a regulated and
        | taxable substance by a well educated and supported
        | populous is significantly preferable to prohibition and
        | scare tactics
        | 
        | The problem is opioids and other hard drugs aren't
        | regulated, they are just made legal.
        | 
        | Human thought when addicted to hard drugs is not logical.
        | Giving people the freedom to consume them has the effect
        | of allowing them to forfeit their freedom from choice
        | when they become addicted. Making them even more widely
        | available will just cause more to become ensnared in
        | their web.
        | 
        | We are organic machines developed without the influence
        | of hard drugs over millions of years. We don't have
        | complete control over our actions or thoughts. Why do you
        | like sex? Why do you like men or women? Our programming
        | controls this and drug addiction is a similar irrational
        | control loop.
 
        | ska wrote:
        | (most) Opiods are already legal and regulate - they are
        | mostly medical useful drugs.
        | 
        | The current opiod crisis was largely created by over-
        | prescription of legal, regulated opiods and subsequent
        | rejection of further prescription; something that led
        | many addicts to search out alternative sources, which
        | grew a market for gray and black market opiods, which
        | grew into whatever you want to call what we have now -
        | tons of unregulated and often 'dirty' fentanyl and
        | carfentanil flooding the system and ending up in
        | everything.
        | 
        | I guess I'm saying I know where you are coming from, and
        | increasing usage isn't going to be a great idea. On the
        | other hand, felonization of it and the halo effect of
        | street crime etc. absolutely is causing massive harm,
        | arguably worse than the scenario you describe. It's not
        | an easy problem to make real progress with.
 
        | chronofar wrote:
        | > The problem is opioids and other hard drugs aren't
        | regulated, they are just made legal.
        | 
        | So let's regulate them! (though as someone else pointed
        | out they are indeed currently regulated, just not well)
        | 
        | > Human thought when addicted to hard drugs is not
        | logical. Giving people the freedom to consume them has
        | the effect of allowing them to forfeit their freedom from
        | choice when they become addicted. Making them even more
        | widely available will just cause more to become ensnared
        | in their web.
        | 
        | I frankly find it bizarre when people venture down this
        | train of thought. Should we eliminate all potential
        | sources of illogical behavior? You mentioned sex, should
        | we regulate that? Sugar? Groups (which inspire
        | groupthink)? What even is the threshold for you for
        | "logical?"
        | 
        | If we assume consenting adults are capable of making
        | decisions and we value their freedom in doing so, drug
        | prohibition is directly counter to that value.
        | 
        | Now if you truly want to venture down the road of
        | restricting freedom to what is "logical" or some such
        | thing, that actually is a road I think you could
        | reasonably trod down (it's not a popular argument and I
        | think it's pretty hard to make work but I can see a
        | possible world with very little individual freedom but
        | high degrees of flourishing, the problem is it's much
        | more likely when you remove freedom flourishing also
        | suffers b/c the possibilities narrow towards the needs of
        | whomever still holds freedom, ie those in power), but I
        | doubt that actually is where you were headed, drugs just
        | tends to get this kind of double speak for historical
        | reasons.
 
        | bostonsre wrote:
        | > Should we eliminate all potential sources of illogical
        | behavior?
        | 
        | How about we try to avoid the really harmful stuff that
        | ruins lives and kills people like drug addiction? We
        | place plenty of limits on stuff that can kill people.
        | This is not some slippery slope thing, allowing it to
        | flourish in our society is not in the long term best
        | interest of literally anyone.
        | 
        | > If we assume consenting adults are capable of making
        | decisions and we value their freedom in doing so, drug
        | prohibition is directly counter to that value
        | 
        | That is the problem, we cannot assume that adults in the
        | throws of addiction are capable of making decisions that
        | are in their best interests. Your thought process is not
        | logical when addicted and maximizes getting high at the
        | cost of everything else.
 
      | antisyzygy wrote:
      | Alcohol is one of the most harmful drugs ever. It leads to
      | all sorts of societal problems like early deaths, domestic
      | abuse, traffic accidents, workplace accidents, even murder
      | because it reduces inhibitions.
      | 
      | But somehow we're ok with selling unlimited quantities to
      | people.
      | 
      | Most opiates are downright docile by comparison. A person
      | passes out and can't harm anyone anymore.
      | 
      | Legalization would mean opiates are regulated. You can only
      | get a certain strength. You can only buy so much per visit.
      | Purity is regulated so you wouldn't accidentally get
      | Fentanyl laced stuff and die.
      | 
      | There should be treatment options, of course, because it's
      | the right thing to do, and it's also much cheaper than
      | fixing the damage addicts can do, and also cheaper than the
      | cost throwing them in prison.
      | 
      | Generally speaking drug addicts are actually self-
      | medicating something anyway, it's like a slow suicide
      | attempt due to some mental trauma or other mental illness
      | like schizophrenia.
      | 
      | The OP is right. Decriminalization is the worst of both
      | worlds.
      | 
      | For a long time we got use to not seeing as many drug
      | addicts because a lot of them were thrown in prison where
      | you don't see them anymore. Each one costing tax payers a
      | full time wage, 35k per year per prisoner.
      | 
      | Decriminalization means you see more addicts out on the
      | streets, but they're still getting overly strong, even
      | laced stuff on the black market and are taken advantage of
      | by predators.
      | 
      | Where marijuana legalization occurred there are purity
      | limits on things like edibles. And you can only buy so much
      | at once. It hasn't lead to really any problems but of
      | course marijuana is one of the least harmful drugs out
      | there. It's far less harmful than alcohol, so it might not
      | be the best example.
      | 
      | I'd say alcohol is a better comparison to opiates and other
      | hard drugs.
      | 
      | Legalization is the better path. We already should know
      | better via our exercise in alcohol prohibition.
 
      | TheCoelacanth wrote:
      | Is the stigma going away because it's legal or is it being
      | legalized because the stigma is going away?
 
      | treeman79 wrote:
      | I have yet to meet a person. Whose personality didn't
      | completely changed after being on marijuana for a while.
      | 
      | Every single one of them said it didn't affect them.
 
      | mrbabbage wrote:
      | > We can see this in-action already. Places like California
      | have effectively de-criminalized most/all drug use if you
      | are part of the homeless population. Surprise again -
      | there's more drug use within that community than ever
      | before. It's difficult to walk through the down-town area
      | without seeing overt drug use these-days.
      | 
      | Is this unique to CA? The street level suffering you see in
      | CA cities is overwhelmingly related to fentanyl, an opioid.
      | Infamously, the US is in the midst of the opioid crisis,
      | with deaths continuing to rise unabated [1]. Places with
      | harsher drug policing are also seeing rises in opioid
      | deaths.
      | 
      | And while San Francisco is a top location for opioid
      | deaths, the other top counties by death rates (Mendocino,
      | Trinity, Alpine, Lake, Inyo, Humboldt, Nevada) are all very
      | rural [2].
      | 
      | [1] https://nida.nih.gov/research-topics/trends-
      | statistics/overd...
      | 
      | [2] https://skylab.cdph.ca.gov/ODdash/?tab=CA
 
    | seanmcdirmid wrote:
    | > Either way, there are also undoubtedly people with
    | substance abuse problems who are afraid to get help due to
    | the possibility of incarceration. Removing that fear can lead
    | to more people getting into treatment programs.
    | 
    | There are also people that only get help due to the threat of
    | incarceration (e.g. the judge says go to drug treatment or go
    | to jail). Removing that fear can lead to more people not
    | getting into treatment programs.
 
      | akira2501 wrote:
      | "We might have to operate in a cruel and unusual fashion,
      | otherwise, some users might not actually be afraid enough
      | of violence from the state to get help."
      | 
      | This is an unfortunate binary we've backed ourselves into.
      | I can imagine tons of other methods the state could use to
      | drive compliance other than outright incarceration and the
      | threat of entirely destroying your life.
 
        | seanmcdirmid wrote:
        | > the threat of entirely destroying your life.
        | 
        | What do you mean? Since this is fentanyl, they are
        | already destroying their lives, they will be lucky to
        | still be alive a couple of years if something drastic
        | isn't done.
 
| mulmen wrote:
| Would we expect early results to be encouraging? There's a lot of
| inertia in something like this. The damage is already done for
| anyone locked up on a drug charge. And reallocating resources
| from prisons to diversionary programs will take at least a
| generation.
 
| AbrahamParangi wrote:
| The thing that's craziest to me is that the people who believe in
| decriminalization are typically _totally against_ deregulating
| pharmaceutical drugs, but all the arguments in favor of one are
| in favor of the other as well! My body, my choice? Applies
| equally to experimental cancer therapies and to crack. You might
| say  "oh well the pharma companies are manipulative, they're
| liars, they can't be trusted" - dear reader, do we really think
| the street dealers _are better_?
 
| porkbeer wrote:
| Legalizing theft was the problem. So much actual crime is
| happening, the drugs are not the primary issue here.
 
| Thoeu388 wrote:
| > the first of its kind in any state, are now coming into view
| 
| Lets hope Oregon will be shining beacon of inclusivity for all
| drug users, anywhere in US! We should not rush into any
| conslusions for at least 30 years!!!
 
  | dang wrote:
  | We've banned this account for posting unsubstantive and/or
  | flamebait comments.
  | 
  | Can you please not create accounts to break HN's rules with?
  | It's not in your interest to vandalize this place, for the same
  | reason one doesn't throw trash in a city park, or leave fires
  | burning in dry forests, or pee in swimming pools: it destroys
  | what makes the place worth visiting in the first place.
  | 
  | If you'd please review
  | https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html and stick to
  | the rules when posting here, we'd appreciate it.
 
| schnable wrote:
| [flagged]
 
  | dang wrote:
  | Maybe so, but please don't post unsubstantive comments to
  | Hacker News.
 
| jeffrom wrote:
| Is Oregon leading the US fentanyl crisis? At a glance, it doesn't
| look like it. Has West Virginia decriminalized as well?
| 
| https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/pressroom/sosmap/drug_poisoning_mor...
 
| 71a54xd wrote:
| I recently visited Portland and is was shocking. Sad because
| aside from stunning homelessness and crime out in the open it's
| actually a beautiful quirky city. 1br luxury apts / condos are
| well designed and reasonably priced. Restaraunts and culture are
| incredible and feel deeply grounded in community - a far cry from
| what Austin (my home town) now considers "weird" or cool.
| 
| I'd live there in a second if the state / city cleared up the
| nutty violent "activists" and homeless all over the place.
 
  | [deleted]
 
  | nemo44x wrote:
  | The activists make a living on it though. There are massive
  | funds allocated for these programs that don't solve the
  | problems but rather manage them. In fact, a larger customer
  | base will only increase their funding.
 
| hitpointdrew wrote:
| Decriminalization is mostly pointless step and won't work to fix
| the "drug" issue. It only solves one piece of the puzzle, jailing
| non-violent people. You still have black markets, you still have
| stigmatization, you still have unknown and mystery substances
| (users don't know what they are actually getting).
| 
| To "solve" the drug issue we need full legalization and
| regulation of all drugs, and safe centers/locations where drugs
| can be used under medical supervision.
 
  | adamredwoods wrote:
  | I partially agree with this. Not all drugs should be legalized,
  | but rather, handled differently. In Seattle, the latest "drug
  | enforcement" failed because the judicial system knew they
  | didn't have the people-power to process the inflow of repeat
  | offenders, who are cycled through the system and let go, only
  | to repeat again. It may keep them off the streets for a bit,
  | but it doesn't solve anything.
  | 
  | Police should be able to enforce drug abuse, but it's a
  | different path.
  | 
  | https://www.kuow.org/stories/what-s-next-for-seattle-drug-la...
 
  | code_runner wrote:
  | There will always be black markets for the people who don't
  | trust the government and certainly for people who don't want to
  | go to some supervised location.
  | 
  | Perfect shouldn't be the enemy of good etc, but some of it
  | feels like just make the gov't complicit in people absolutely
  | ruining their own lives. Its a tough nut to crack.
 
| wonderwonder wrote:
| If you decriminalize hard drugs, all that happens is that addicts
| stay addicts, have a higher likely hood of becoming homeless and
| higher chance of dying. Hard drugs for the most part outside of
| controlled environments have almost no positive qualities. Drugs
| like cannabis have medical attributes and can provide benefits.
| 
| People addicted to hard drugs require treatment, leaving them to
| their own devices is likely to have negative results. Problem is,
| who is going to pay for that treatment and for how long? On top
| of that, is it ok for Bob the local heroine addict to shoot up in
| front of peoples homes in a local residential community or
| school? Do we really want to worry about Bob dropping his needles
| on the ground?
| 
| I'm not a fan of sending people to jail for drug use but when
| balanced against the very real repercussions to peoples lives
| regarding hard drug use and the affect on communities, not sure
| what the alternative is. Rendering down town areas unwalkable due
| to an infestation of addicts, and the associated uptick in
| property crime and robbery is not acceptable either.
| 
| Plus once drugs are legal, its very likely the first thing to be
| chopped in a budget crunch is going to be treatment programs as
| illustrated in Portugal.
| 
| Not sure what the answer is but just waving a wand and making
| hard drugs legal is not it.
 
  | taeric wrote:
  | Referencing Portugal feels weird. Most reports I see are still
  | very favorable to the outcomes they are seeing, is that
  | changing?
  | 
  | Decriminalizing doesn't change people with a drug problem into
  | not having a drug problem, true. It does, at least, free them
  | from also having a legal problem. Idea being that they can seek
  | and get treatment for their drug problem, now. Something they
  | can't do when it is criminal. (Indeed, reading the Wikipedia
  | page for Portugal shows increased treatments as their first
  | bullet in favor.)
  | 
  | I'd also guess that it makes it easier for treatments to be
  | offered. As, right now, offering help there is basically aiding
  | illegal activity.
 
    | fragmede wrote:
    | Once hailed for decriminalizing drugs, Portugal is now having
    | doubts
    | 
    | https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/07/07/portugal-
    | dru...
    | 
    | discussed at https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36638752
 
      | taeric wrote:
      | Thanks for the link, I'll try and take a deeper dive later.
      | Cursory read is not favorable to the article, though.
      | Problems include,                 * Having to concede that
      | Portugal is still doing better than most of Europe.       *
      | Leaning on pandemic years for a lot of the excess growth.
      | * A passing discussion of funding and other costs.
      | 
      | I see most of this was covered in the discussion here. Will
      | see what else is mentioned.
 
  | 01100011 wrote:
  | I hate to be that HN guy who nitpicks an otherwise spot-on
  | comment, but anyway...
  | 
  | One correction: many opiate users, yes, even heroin users, can
  | be functional members of society. There are many folks you
  | would never know use H, at least until they accidentally get
  | some fentanyl and die.
  | 
  | Same thing with meth(which is actually a prescription
  | medication). I'll say that there is always a very high
  | probability that some life stress transforms a casual usage
  | pattern into full-blown addiction though. I've seen it first
  | hand with a family member who used meth for years "on the
  | weekends, to get things done" until some stress in their
  | mid-40s turned them into a hallucinating IV meth user.
  | 
  | More or less though, I think we should maintain criminalization
  | of public usage of most drugs, but I'm open to whatever
  | pragmatic approach maximizes public health and safety while
  | lowering crime.
 
    | goatlover wrote:
    | You're ignoring the right of someone to do with their body as
    | they see fit, in favor of giving power to governments over
    | people's bodies. Prohibition didn't work for alcohol
    | despite's its negative effects. Doesn't work for prostitution
    | or gambling either.
 
      | wonderwonder wrote:
      | Sure, as long as those people don't negatively affect
      | others. Who cleans up after the addict? Who pays for their
      | property crimes or aggression? Who has to clean up their
      | body after an OD or discover it?
      | 
      | I'm open to decriminalizing everything, start with
      | steroids. As long as there are harsh punishments for public
      | intoxication, property damage, theft and all the adjacent
      | crimes that addiction causes, have at it. It can't result
      | in a wasteland of addicts in every down town though
 
    | brightlancer wrote:
    | To add, I've known many folks who were infrequent users of
    | cocaine, about once or twice a year during holidays or
    | parties or the like.
    | 
    | I also knew one person who worked in finance and EVERYONE did
    | coke; he wasn't addicted and stopped using when he switched
    | fields (he hated the 80h weeks).
    | 
    | These anecdotes contrasted heavily with my experience in the
    | Bronx in the 80s, where drug users were overwhelmingly drug
    | abusers and generally awful people. I still won't use
    | recreational drugs (other than caffeine and alcohol) but I
    | don't judge people who do.
 
      | wonderwonder wrote:
      | It is very possible to use hard drugs and not be addicted .
      | I used to use cocaine socially before kids but I think back
      | and really no positives. Going to bars and in and out of
      | bathrooms in groups. Was really just asking to get arrested
      | for possession. Problem with drugs like that is you think
      | you are invincible but really at least in my case I was
      | just being stupid and lucky.
 
    | wonderwonder wrote:
    | Fair point. This I think goes along with the idea of a
    | functional alcoholic. People can be functional and fine for a
    | very long time, until they aren't. This likely has less
    | affect on the community during their 'functional' phase. I am
    | for the most part against public use and intoxication.
 
  | chronofar wrote:
  | > Not sure what the answer is but just waving a wand and making
  | hard drugs legal is not it.
  | 
  | Make them actually legal (and thus more safe), tax them
  | heavily, use a portion of said taxation to educate properly and
  | then support and rehabilitate those who need it. Don't allow
  | unsafe activities in public places that cause an unsafe
  | environment.
  | 
  | This really isn't that complicated, we've just been under the
  | spell of prohibition for so long waking up can be a bit
  | disorienting.
 
    | hcks wrote:
    | Yeah, it's not complicated when you can make up stuff with 0
    | evidence and have no responsability anyway.
 
      | chronofar wrote:
      | What did I make up and what did I say that requires
      | evidence? And what responsibility do you imagine I'd
      | require to have the opinion I relayed?
      | 
      | Of course nothing is simple if given a close enough look,
      | but there are also rather straightforward solutions here
      | such that we shouldn't feel just totally stumped about what
      | to do.
 
  | ikrenji wrote:
  | problem with this kind of reasoning is that there is very
  | little real data on a world where drugs are decriminalised /
  | legal. while the things you listed could all be negative
  | consequences of such a world, since it was never tried we don't
  | know and its just a conjecture...
 
    | wonderwonder wrote:
    | There's also a genie out of the bottle problem. Once you
    | decriminalize drugs and people start using them it's very
    | hard to flip a switch and make them stop. To get the data
    | could very well require a massive sacrifice if it turns out
    | to be a very bad idea
 
      | ikrenji wrote:
      | Possibly. On the other hand - all drugs started out
      | decriminalised and the reasons for the criminalisation were
      | not always or even usually out of concern for the well
      | being of the user, but racism against the chinese (opium)
      | and black people (marijuana)
 
  | api wrote:
  | My take is that we're going from a criminalization based "screw
  | them, warehouse them in jail and ruin their lives with felony
  | convictions" policy to a laissez-faire "screw them, let them
  | die on the street" policy.
  | 
  | The part that hasn't changed is "screw them." Nobody really
  | cares about these people. They're viewed as an inconvenience
  | and the debate is over the least costly way to either warehouse
  | them or shove them aside somewhere. Most people view addiction
  | as a moral failing and think addicts deserve whatever they get.
  | 
  | I've never been in favor of drug criminalization except
  | _possibly_ in the case of the most addictive and deadly hard
  | drugs (crystal meth, fentanyl, concentrated opiates), but I
  | always hoped that legalization would come with a redirection of
  | funding from prisons and police into treatment. The latter part
  | just isn 't happening, or isn't happening with any
  | effectiveness. My take is that nobody gives a damn and
  | decriminalization is more about saving money than freedom or
  | better treatment approaches.
 
    | collaborative wrote:
    | The problem as I see it is that any "treatment" requires the
    | addict wanting to be treated
    | 
    | You could argue that the Taliban are the government that
    | cares the most about addicts, because they are actually
    | making addicts change the way a parent corrects a child
    | 
    | But addicts are grown ups with free will
 
      | ddingus wrote:
      | Truth and I would change that statement just a bit:
      | 
      | Any * successful * treatment requires the patient to want
      | treatment.
      | 
      | In addition, the triggers for it all need to be addressed.
      | 
      | Those can be:
      | 
      | Simple pain, trauma
      | 
      | More complex financial issues, housing, etc...
      | 
      | PTSD of various kinds, war, abuse and the like.
      | 
      | Without a plan to address triggers and desire to be done
      | with it all, treatment success is extremely unlikely.
 
        | collaborative wrote:
        | I agree but I find it is actually harder to recover when
        | the focus is on finding the reasons for addiction
        | 
        | We are fallen creatures and simply accepting our fallen
        | nature might be more productive
 
    | foobarian wrote:
    | The movie Traffic already said it. "Treatment of addiction?
    | Addicts treat themselves. They overdose and then there's one
    | less to worry about."
 
  | soligern wrote:
  | They should couple decriminalization with stringent arrests for
  | public use and public intoxication. It's so damn simple, why
  | won't they do it. Set a limit above which you're not allowed to
  | be loitering on the streets like they do with alcohol.
 
    | anon84873628 wrote:
    | That's one of the interesting things I noticed about
    | Amsterdam. It is notorious for the availability of cannabis,
    | but it's very clear that you don't consume in public or
    | around the neighborhood. (Modulo a group of teens I saw
    | passing a joint around in the park). The coffeeshops are
    | clearly intended to contain the drug use. Unlike California
    | where you smell weed everywhere.
 
      | 1letterunixname wrote:
      | There is so much absurd regulation of marijuana in
      | California, that the gray and black markets are still
      | thriving. There is too much demand and not enough legal
      | supply because of bullshit red tape. Making it easier to
      | grow legally is the path to taking organized crime and
      | violence out of it.
 
    | wonderwonder wrote:
    | This is definitely part of the answer. Walking through the
    | streets of San Francisco a while ago with my kids I was
    | shocked to see people just lying on the side walk in pools of
    | their own vomit. Also was very protective of my kids walking
    | past people that were obviously on drugs and out of their
    | minds. These people became not so much people but just a
    | threat. It seemed inhumane to just leave them like that. With
    | that said, I would not want the job of dealing with them for
    | what I am sure is a relatively low salary with the reward of
    | seeing most people you help back on drugs the next week.
 
      | 1letterunixname wrote:
      | What did you do to help these people who were suffering?
      | Did you just glare and step over them?
 
        | wonderwonder wrote:
        | Yes. What would you like me to do? Walk up to each one I
        | came across, my little kids in tow and try to have an
        | intelligent conversation with them? Give them all my
        | money? Invite them back with me to my hotel like the pied
        | Piper of addicts?
        | 
        | I want them out of the way and far away from my kids. I
        | was pretty clear that I perceived them as a threat.
 
        | barbs wrote:
        | How are they a threat? They're lying in a pool of vomit,
        | it's pretty clear they need help. Maybe teach your kids a
        | bit of compassion?
 
        | wonderwonder wrote:
        | Again, I refer you to my parent comment, how should I
        | provide help & compassion? Which option should I select?
        | 
        | As far as how are they a threat, really?
        | 
        | The internet is overflowing with articles like this.
        | https://www.foxla.com/news/lapd-woman-stabbed-in-head-
        | scisso...
 
      | skyyler wrote:
      | >These people became not so much people but just a threat.
      | 
      | This is part of the problem. They are a threat, but they're
      | also still people.
 
        | wonderwonder wrote:
        | Sure but I very much value my kids over strangers
        | engaging in destructive behavior on the street. Why risk
        | myself and my family for them?
 
        | skyyler wrote:
        | Don't value them over your family.
        | 
        | Just don't think of them as less than human.
 
        | wonderwonder wrote:
        | Thats the thing, I don't. With that said, there is almost
        | nothing more dangerous to a human than another human. I
        | wish them nothing but happiness in life but I am also not
        | going to ignore the fact that they are on drugs and
        | potentially mentally compromised. A danger to themselves
        | and others.
 
| richardanaya wrote:
| Oregon enabled public drug use is the problem, just like drunk
| driving and public intoxication, it should be made illegal.
 
| jiggyjace wrote:
| > "We're building the plane as we fly it," Haven Wheelock, a
| program supervisor at a homeless-services provider in Portland
| who helped put Measure 110 on the ballot, told me. "We tried the
| War on Drugs for 50 years, and it didn't work ... It hurts my
| heart every time someone says we need to repeal this before we
| even give it a chance."
| 
| Saying this is not the logical conclusion one might think it is.
| It's not a problem where there are only two solutions.
 
| Thoeu388 wrote:
| [flagged]
 
| [deleted]
 
| richardanaya wrote:
| Oregon enabled public use of drugs is the problem without
| consequence, just like drunk driving and public intoxication, it
| should be made illegal.
 
| squarefoot wrote:
| Decriminalization has nothing to do with limiting the use of
| drugs. The main purpose is to bring down costs so that criminal
| cartels will see their profits eroded through competition. This
| will also reduce _other_ crimes, especially violent ones, because
| less people will need for example to rob a shop to buy drugs. Of
| course more easy drugs around mean that initially more people
| will use them, however that is just the immediate result of
| having at hand something that once was harder to find. Give it
| time. We all know that whoever is on drugs won 't stop searching
| for them, no matter the cost, and no matter if that cost is on
| someone else's life; the choice is between prohibiting something
| that can't be prohibited effectively, or destroying profits for
| criminals, which can be very effective.
| 
| And then there's the stance by some politicians furiously in
| favor of prohibition, which smells of conflict of interests to
| say the least, but that's another story.
 
  | bozhark wrote:
  | That only happens when the source becomes cheaper than black
  | market.
  | 
  | The only way that happens is gov. Subsidies.
  | 
  | It's why CO and WA and others still have such a large black
  | market for weed.
 
| rationalfaith wrote:
| [dead]
 
| kepler1 wrote:
| I maintain now (as I did when Measure 110 passed in Oregon, and
| in the discussions here in HN) that decriminalizing drugs would
| lead the state, and especially Portland of course, to a terrible
| and predictable outcome. Many supporters of the measure believed
| that it was the objectively right choice. Decriminalize, and get
| people to treatment instead of locking them up.
| 
| The sad thing is that you can make all the piecewise-correct A/B
| choices yet still end up having destroyed your city.
| 
| Yes, giving someone a ticket for using drugs and offering them
| treatment instead of locking them up might be temporarily more
| productive / more sensible. Yes, maybe it makes sense to put more
| resources to mental health.
| 
| Yet one day, you wake up and your city is unlivable and your
| block is terrorized by drug addicts.
| 
| Somehow, people forgot that once in a while there is a legitimate
| role for hard authority to punish people for doing things you
| don't want them to do. Lest your society go down some lawless
| path which step by step looked like the kind and charitable
| course to follow.
 
  | local_issues wrote:
  | The people I fear the most are people who are 100% sure they're
  | doing the right thing. This comment section is full of that -
  | "no, this is a good policy and it's just the implementation
  | that's wrong."
  | 
  | Sure, maybe? But maybe it's just a bad policy? Maybe we could
  | adjust the implementation? Maybe we can look at other places
  | were things are better?
  | 
  | Maybe a bit of shame could be helpful, too. SF and Portland
  | have turned into a national punch line. That's shameful.
 
    | kepler1 wrote:
    | Agreed.
    | 
    | If a policy requires nearly perfect implementation, and
    | follow through, and good behavior of the people, in order to
    | succeed, and you rarely achieve / sustain the follow through
    | by the community or police, etc. _then it is not a good
    | policy_. Even though the concept was nice.
    | 
    | A policy is everything, start to finish. You can't just say a
    | policy was good except for the implementation. No matter how
    | good it makes you feel that you got the idea right, it just
    | wasn't carried out the way you thought.
 
  | NegativeLatency wrote:
  | > your city is unlivable and your block is terrorized by drug
  | addicts
  | 
  | This is hyperbole, I live in one of the rougher neighborhoods.
  | The city gov especially the mayor and his cronies have done
  | nothing to actually fix problems, they just do expensive sweeps
  | and cleanup without addressing root causes.
 
    | retrac wrote:
    | I'm not sure about in the United States, but here in Canada,
    | we barely even have "good" and "bad" neighbourhoods. My city
    | is quite well-mixed together economically. Somehow, despite
    | that, the recent dysfunction of society -- the sharp increase
    | in the number of homeless and the number of publicly
    | intoxicated people -- seems to fall entirely on the poor as a
    | consequence. They're the ones suffering it day to day. A
    | relative's apartment building is a 10 minute walk away. He is
    | dealing with people passed out in vomit in the stairwells,
    | smashing the first and second floor windows regularly,
    | pulling the fire alarms and setting small fires regularly.
    | All of this is quite new. And it's so absent from my upper-
    | middle-class community half a kilometre away -- we're so
    | insulated -- that a lot of my peers seem to be unaware
    | there's even anything going on. None of that is happening on
    | my street.
 
      | HDMI_Cable wrote:
      | > I'm not sure about in the United States, but here in
      | Canada, we barely even have "good" and "bad"
      | neighbourhoods. My city is quite well-mixed together
      | economically.
      | 
      | This is a joke, right? Like, either you live in a small
      | town not large enough to _have_ distinct neighbourhoods, or
      | you are so isolated as to not see the abject poverty that
      | many live here. Take Toronto, for example. Right on Mt.
      | Pleasant Rd. and St. Clair you have Rosedale, one of the
      | wealthiest neighbourhoods in all of Canada. If you walk
      | down a street there, you won 't find a person making less
      | than $100K. You'll have perfectly maintained roads, bike
      | lanes, and very good private schools (like Upper Canada
      | College), where every kid there pays $50K a year. Go down
      | Mt. Pleasant until it becomes Jarvis St., and continue
      | going down until you hit Dundas St., where the average
      | person makes minimum wage and can barely afford their
      | apartment. And that's just a 2km difference!
      | 
      | Ask anyone whether they would rather live in Forest Hill
      | (again, Toronto) or on Jane and Finch, and you'll get the
      | same answer any time. For Montreal, ask anyone whether they
      | would live in Westmount, or in Sainte-Marie, and again,
      | you'll get the same answer. There absolutely are "good" and
      | "bad" neighbourhoods in Canada, and in some cases, they're
      | just as bad as in the United States (speaking from
      | experience here).
 
        | retrac wrote:
        | You are forgetting that it's a 10 minute walk from Forest
        | Hill to one of Toronto's poorest communities. They are
        | part of the same community geographically. Same with
        | Jane/Finch -- within walking distance of very wealthy
        | detached suburban homes. It's even more jutted up against
        | each other south of Bloor/Yonge, with some of the
        | wealthiest high-rise condos directly against some of the
        | poorest public housing and tent cities. I am not denying
        | the existence of the divide -- it's very real and very
        | stark -- I am however fascinated that it occurs _on the
        | same block_. It 's not a different part of town. It's the
        | same geographic area sliced differently. That the two
        | worlds are so separate, when literally next to each
        | other, is what I was trying to point out.
 
      | anon291 wrote:
      | Oh goodness... you can't be serious? Have you been to
      | vancouver?
      | 
      | As for being insulated in your upper middle class
      | community. I mean... every country has that. my
      | neighborhood which is a mile and a half from downtown
      | Portland had private security during the entirety of the
      | riots of 2020. These are far left people (which I know
      | based on conversations with my neighbors, yard signs, and
      | who they vocally proclaim they're voting for) and they all
      | collectively decided to hire private companies to ensure
      | the rif-raf doesn't get in. It's exactly like that now. In
      | my own neighborhood, there's nothing, but if you cross the
      | street to the 'wrong side of the tracks' so to speak, it's
      | like an apocalypse (getting better thankfully, due to the
      | recent increase in policing)
 
| RyanAdamas wrote:
| A lot of these drugs are used to get people into the sex trade;
| once you get someone on drugs to do things with/to their body
| they otherwise wouldn't the cycle of shame begins that often
| traps these people in the escape through drug induced pleasure.
| Just the sad truth.
 
| gspencley wrote:
| It's working just fine.
| 
| I guess if you want drug use to go down, or to reduce deaths etc.
| if those specific metrics are you goals, and nothing else
| matters, that's one thing. Maybe it is not "working" by those
| standards.
| 
| But I don't want a government having any opinion on what people
| put into their own bodies. It is a health/medical issue and, in a
| broader context, a liberty issue. It is not a legal issue in my
| opinion. Regardless of drug use statistics, no one belongs in
| jail or with a criminal record for no reason other than
| possessing and/or consuming an intoxicant. I don't even care if
| drug use goes up with decrminalization or legalization. In my
| opinion it is simply outside of the proper moral scope of a
| government to concern itself with such matters. Feel free to
| disagree. This is my personal political view.
 
  | davorak wrote:
  | > Feel free to disagree. This is my personal political view.
  | 
  | How do you address the argument that drug users go on to be a
  | burden to society?
  | 
  | > But I don't want a government having any opinion on what
  | people put into their own bodies.
  | 
  | It seems like it should if the result is a burden on society,
  | though there are many potential solution to ameliorate the
  | problem other than outlawing or restricting substances.
 
    | Rapzid wrote:
    | > How do you address the argument that drug users go on to be
    | a burden to society?
    | 
    | I think there are point of views that are a much larger
    | burden on society, and yet people are free to have them.
 
      | davorak wrote:
      | > I think there are point of views that are a much larger
      | burden on society, and yet people are free to have them.
      | 
      | I claim this is an apples to oranges comparison.
      | Controlling peoples views is an attempt at mind control vs
      | regulating substances directly or indirectly which is a
      | common practice, not putting lead into gas for example. Or
      | indirectly regulated, eating of highly radioactive
      | substances.
 
  | urmish wrote:
  | Why do you think everyone should get voting rights if there is
  | a section of the society who want to actively harm themselves.
  | What are their votes reflective of?
 
    | ikrenji wrote:
    | why do you want to create a policy for everyone based on
    | actions of the few? the tails should be disregarded. so what
    | if 5-10% of the people abuse a system that otherwise benefits
    | the other 80-90% ? cost of doing business
 
    | tenebrisalietum wrote:
    | Anyone who consumes sugar, trans fat or smokes cigarettes
    | should be unable to vote as well?
 
      | brightlancer wrote:
      | Anyone who disagrees with me should be unable to vote.
      | 
      | The paradox of tolerance says I should not tolerate anyone
      | who is intolerant, and if they disagree with me then they
      | are intolerant and we should not tolerate them.
      | 
      | Checkmate, fascists.
 
    | gspencley wrote:
    | Why are you assuming what I think about voting rights? I
    | never brought that up.
 
    | andybak wrote:
    | This is quite frankly, a bizarre take that shows little
    | understanding of drug use or society.
 
  | the_cat_kittles wrote:
  | i agree with no criminal penalties for drugs, but your
  | justification seems ignorant of the negative externalities. i
  | think a better justification is simply that the tradeoffs from
  | legalization are worth it
 
  | fragmede wrote:
  | I _absolutely_ want my government to have an opinion on what
  | people put into their bodies. If I go to the store and buy a
  | loaf of bread, and instead I get a loaf with a high
  | concentration of bleach, used to clean the machines at the
  | factory, and it kills me, I think the government should have an
  | opinion on it. I think they should do what it can to prevent
  | that from happening. I do want a government that regulates
  | drugs so that if I buy Tylenol, I 'm going to get Tylenol and
  | not melamine pills. If someone is selling a pill and says it
  | makes me lose weight or regrow hair, I want the government to
  | have the opinion that if they make that claim, they must have
  | scientifically run studies to back that up. I'm not saying the
  | FDA is perfect, far from it! But the government's duty is to
  | its people, so I, personally, think that government should play
  | _some_ role in what goes into people 's bodies, to make sure
  | people know what they're getting, and they're getting what they
  | paid for.
  | 
  | That the government has extended their reach to criminalize
  | things people choose to put into their bodies, and the
  | resulting problems that's caused and causing, is a travesty,
  | but I think saying the government should have _no_ opinion on
  | that is going too far.
 
  | mitthrowaway2 wrote:
  | > But I don't want a government having any opinion on what
  | people put into their own bodies.
  | 
  | I agree with this in principle, but only to an extent. It's not
  | the government's business to intervene when people fill their
  | bodies with, say, ice cream, which makes them happy but has
  | some health consequences borne by the individual. But on the
  | other hand, the government should certainly not permit people
  | to fill their bodies full of explosive substances like
  | nitroglycerin, which might detonate when they are outside
  | walking around public spaces, taking out innocent bystanders.
  | 
  | Hard drugs fall somewhere in between these extremes, because in
  | addition to their first-order effects on the user's health and
  | happiness, they also seem to cause second-order consequences on
  | innocent bystanders. Under the influence of drugs, some users
  | can become aggressive and violent, and lose control of and --
  | importantly -- responsibility for their actions. Under the
  | influence of addiction, some users also resort to robbery or
  | theft to fund their habits. Many also end up unable to care for
  | themselves. Statistically, this occurs with enough likelihood
  | that it's a predictable, although not inevitable, consequence
  | of substance abuse. Punishing the crimes committed under the
  | influence of drugs does not act as an effective deterrent. Much
  | of the harm from hard drugs does fall on people with no direct
  | relationship to the drug users themselves, and they will have a
  | strong and legitimate self-interest in having these substances
  | banned.
 
  | nemo44x wrote:
  | > But I don't want a government having any opinion on what
  | people put into their own bodies.
  | 
  | Because we invest in people. We pay money to educate them, in
  | many cases feed, shelter, and clothe them and in a variety of
  | other ways. We expect citizens to contribute back into society.
  | Having millions of zombies interested in nothing else than
  | getting high is self destructive not only for the individuals
  | we have invested in but also to our societies general longterm
  | health.
  | 
  | So yes, government does have an active interest in having a
  | healthy populace.
 
    | ddtaylor wrote:
    | By that same logic more people are dying or ruining their
    | lives from poor diet and lack of exercise. Should the
    | government be mandating diet and enforcing exercise quotas?
 
      | nemo44x wrote:
      | That doesn't follow at all. People who eat poorly and/or
      | don't exercise are not a drain on society like drug addicts
      | sleeping on the street, stealing to fund their addiction,
      | and contributing nothing. There's big differences and it's
      | not even really nuanced. It's obvious these are different
      | things.
      | 
      | Saying that we should encourage healthy lifestyles.
 
        | fragmede wrote:
        | A food addict doesn't hold up a corner store to get their
        | fix in a pack of candy, but their costs to the healthcare
        | system are significant. The estimated annual medical cost
        | of obesity in the United States was nearly $173 billion
        | in 2019 dollars. Medical costs for adults who had obesity
        | were $1,861 higher than medical costs for people with
        | healthy weight*. High functioning drug addicts contribute
        | plenty to society, much like there are high functioning
        | obese people. What about the obese who don't contribute
        | to society and sit around and play video games all day?
        | The stereotype of a homeless drug addict is a very
        | visible type of addict, but what of the wall street
        | investment banker hooked on cocaine? 41.9% of Americans
        | were obese (as of March 2020, same cdc link as above).
        | They _are_ a drain on society, and it 's a bigger problem
        | than you think. It's more insidious because it's less in
        | your face than being mugged at gunpoint so it seems more
        | benign, but it's causing massive issues.
        | 
        | * https://www.cdc.gov/obesity/data/adult.html
 
        | nemo44x wrote:
        | When you're passed out in the streets laying in your own
        | shit then your business has become my business and we
        | shouldn't encourage that. You just keep comparing
        | unrelated things.
        | 
        | You support the government encouraging (via incentives)
        | drug addicts in the streets.
 
        | fragmede wrote:
        | Don't put words in my mouth. What I said is that obesity
        | is a bigger problem than you think.
 
  | thegrim33 wrote:
  | A thought experiment I think about is along the lines of: what
  | would society look like, say, 10,000 years in the future, if
  | everybody somehow magically had an Einstein-level of
  | intelligence and rationality. In such a society, sure, the
  | government probably wouldn't need to step in; the vast, vast
  | majority of the population would either have little interest in
  | the drugs in the first place, or, if they did, could be trusted
  | to partake responsibly.
  | 
  | However, that's not the world we live in. We share our cities
  | with fairly unintelligent, irrational people, that have no
  | interest in higher ideals. Our cities are being destroyed and
  | made unsafe by these people that are just out of their minds on
  | drugs / mental issues, completely disconnected from society,
  | vandalizing, breaking and entering, hurting other people. They
  | obviously, demonstrably, can't be trusted to partake
  | responsibly.
  | 
  | I guess the debate is to what level the government needs to
  | step in to control such people and the actions they take. I'd
  | say that since they've already demonstrated they can't be
  | trusted to coexist with peaceful society, that some level of
  | action needs to be taken. But it's tough because in an _ideal_
  | society I 'd say the correct thing is for the government to
  | stay out of it. But we live in a far from ideal society.
 
    | zmgsabst wrote:
    | Regulate the anti-social behavior, not the substance.
    | 
    | The problem is the places which legalized drugs also
    | legalized anti-social behavior.
 
      | Lx1oG-AWb6h_ZG0 wrote:
      | The substance is causing the anti-social behavior though,
      | it's putting people in a state where they're not able to
      | control their behavior or reason rationally about how it
      | affects them and the people around them. In such a
      | situation, you cannot just focus on the outcomes, you need
      | to control the inputs as well.
 
  | joefigura wrote:
  | A person who becomes addicted to opiods, methamphetamine, or
  | other "hard" drugs will with some probability require medical
  | treatment, and and some people who uses those drugs will cause
  | other costs to society. I don't know what those percentages
  | are, but for opiods it's definitely not negligible. Many people
  | begin using opiods and become addicted without intending to,
  | and later need medical assistance. So there is a public
  | interest in how much these substances are used, and it's
  | legitimate for government to regulate them.
  | 
  | In other words, there's a tradeoff between the autonomy to do
  | things to your body and the real costs that drug addiction
  | imposes on others.
 
| runjake wrote:
| From the areas I live and work, Measure 110 has, at best, made no
| difference whatsoever.
| 
| The current situation with hard drug use is that there are far
| more drugged out people in public, and far more open drug use in
| public since 2020. The exact causes, I'll leave to experts to
| determine. Measure 110 has certainly played a part, though.
 
  | j_walter wrote:
  | Don't forget that many of those people are fueling their drug
  | habits with theft...theft that has gone largely unchecked.
  | Oregon became a destination for addicts where they didn't have
  | to worry about legal troubles that came along with drug use.
  | All
 
    | runjake wrote:
    | This is an important point. While drugs are decriminalized,
    | crimes such as theft are not.
    | 
    | Pro-drug decriminalization people often argue that stuff like
    | theft is still illegal. However, there are _so many_ drug-
    | related thefts that our particular district attorney is
    | unwilling to prosecute them.
    | 
    | As a result, law enforcement won't even take them to jail,
    | let alone show up, most of the time. Typically, you file a
    | self-report on your LE's website and then never hear about it
    | again. The thieves know this, of course. (For myself, n=3
    | since 2020. Though, I did recover a stolen iPhone last week
    | because I acquired enough evidence/telemetry/etc to warrant a
    | response.)
 
      | j_walter wrote:
      | Every retail store with a 20 mile radius of Portland has
      | put theft deterrent devices on even the most basic items.
      | Home depot locks up almost everything other than lumber now
      | because theft is so prolific. It's frustrating for your
      | average joe trying to shop anymore.
      | 
      | Multnomah DA is an a$$hole and moron...he doesn't care
      | about the people he is supposed to serve.
 
| 9g3890fj2 wrote:
| https://archive.today/rznQr
 
| abotsis wrote:
| I'm not familiar with the bill and specifics, does anyone know if
| it improved access to rehabilitation if sought?
 
| [deleted]
 
| nicup12345689 wrote:
| [flagged]
 
| badlucklottery wrote:
| So Oregon started a two-pronged approach (reduced criminalization
| coupled with low-/no-cost treatment centers) and weren't able to
| actually get the treatment side of it working.
| 
| Statistically jail is a very bad drug treatment center. But it's
| likely better than no treatment at all.
 
| jeffbee wrote:
| This article has severe methodological errors. It fails to
| consider the Oregon stats in the context of other states.
| Oregon's change in OD rates have not been exceptional, and have
| more or less followed the trend of other states, while being
| greatly better compared to states like W. Virginia.
| 
| As always, states that are "tough on drugs" get a free pass
| regardless of how bad their outcomes are, and states that
| legalize it are scrutinized even when their outcomes are no
| worse.
 
  | anon291 wrote:
  | > while being greatly better compared to states like W.
  | Virginia.
  | 
  | Typical Oregon response comparing Oregon, a fairly rich state,
  | with West Virginia, one of the poorest states. If you can't do
  | better than a poor state with your high taxes and high median
  | incomes... that's not a good reflection on the state. Yet, most
  | Oregonians seem to get some satisfaction that they do better
  | than Mississippi, Alabama, and West Virginia, even if they're
  | #49 in the ranking. It's gross.
  | 
  | I mean, Oregon has Intel, Nike, Adidas, a well-developed tech
  | sector, etc, and West Virginia has coal mining, yet we're
  | actually comparing ourselves to them.
  | 
  | I really wish people in this state would strive for something
  | actually better.
 
    | jeffbee wrote:
    | But see that is _exactly_ what I am talking about. You cannot
    | -- _cannot_ -- attribute a change in overdose rate to state
    | policy without examining and controlling for the factors that
    | we know influence overdoses: personal income, homelessness,
    | etc. This article completely fails to examine whether Oregon
    | 's changes can be due to a shift in the income among its
    | population.
 
      | anon291 wrote:
      | I'm pretty sure being on the streets as a drug addict also
      | causes loss of income, so you really can't take that into
      | account without taking in cyclic effects.
 
        | jeffbee wrote:
        | And yet you have for some reason assigned causality in
        | the case of WV.
 
  | mattzito wrote:
  | The article seems to hit that straight on:
  | 
  | "The consequences of Measure 110's shortcomings have fallen
  | most heavily on Oregon's drug users. In the two years after the
  | law took effect, the number of annual overdoses in the state
  | rose by 61 percent, compared with a 13 percent increase
  | nationwide, according to the Centers for Disease Control and
  | Prevention. In neighboring Idaho and California, where drug
  | possession remains subject to prosecution, the rate of increase
  | was significantly lower than Oregon's. (The spike in Washington
  | State was similar to Oregon's, but that comparison is more
  | complicated because Washington's drug policy has fluctuated
  | since 2021.) Other states once notorious for drug deaths,
  | including West Virginia, Indiana, and Arkansas, are now
  | experiencing declines in overdose rates."
 
    | jeffbee wrote:
    | That is a highly misleading discussion though. The existing
    | rate in WV is quadruple that in Oregon. Oregon was up a bit
    | on a low denominator. WV was down slightly on a ludicrous
    | prior rate. Fails to mention that other states with similar
    | trends compared to Oregon are Wyoming, Maine, and Texas.
    | https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/drug-overdose-data.htm
 
      | seizethecheese wrote:
      | misleading it what sense? The article is about the impact
      | of a recent policy change.
 
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