Oregon Legislators Overwhelmingly Vote To Recriminalize Low-Level Drug Possession
The reversal of a landmark reform was driven by unrealistic expectations and unproven assertions.

Oregon legislators last week overwhelmingly approved recriminalization of low-level drug possession, reversing a landmark reform that voters endorsed when they passed Measure 110 in 2020. Gov. Tina Kotek has indicated that she is inclined to sign the bill, ratifying a regression driven by unrealistic expectations and unproven assertions.
"With this bill," Senate Majority Leader Kate Lieber (D–Portland) claims, "we are doubling down on our commitment to make sure Oregonians have access to the treatment and care that they need." But Oregon is not merely making sure that people "have access" to treatment; it is foisting "help" on people who do not want it by threatening them with incarceration.
H.B. 4002 makes drug possession a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in jail. A defendant can avoid that outcome by enrolling in a treatment program.
Under Measure 110, by contrast, drug possession became a Class E violation punishable by a $100 fine. Drug users could avoid the fine by completing a "health assessment" at an "addiction recovery center." The initiative said the assessment should "prioritize the self-identified needs of the client" and refer him to appropriate services. But Measure 110 did not make agreement to those services mandatory.
The initiative's supporters argued that coercive treatment is both less effective and more ethically problematic than voluntary treatment. "Research suggests that, except in certain circumstances where drug users are uniquely self‐motivated (such as doctors and commercial airline pilots who fear losing their licenses), coercive treatment is futile at best and may increase the likelihood of overdose in people who relapse after release from treatment," Jeffrey Singer notes in a Cato Institute blog post.
The policy embodied by H.B. 4002 is notably different from the legal approach to alcohol abusers, who generally cannot be forced into treatment unless they commit crimes such as driving while intoxicated. Measure 110's supporters argued that abuse of those substances likewise should be treated as a health issue rather than a criminal matter.
Over 58 percent of voters agreed. But a continuing increase in opioid-related deaths, coupled with nuisances related to public drug use, soured Oregonians on Measure 110. By last August, at which point the initiative had been in effect for only a year and a half, an Emerson College poll found that 64 percent of Oregon voters favored reinstating criminal penalties for possession.
It is not surprising that opioid-related deaths continued to climb after Measure 110 took effect in February 2021, because the initiative did nothing to address the iffy quality and unpredictable potency of black-market drugs. That problem is created by drug prohibition and aggravated by attempts to enforce it. The government's crackdown on pain pills replaced legally produced, reliably dosed pharmaceuticals with illegal drugs of unknown provenance and composition. The deadly impact of that shift was magnified by the emergence of fentanyl as a heroin booster and replacement—a phenomenon that also was driven by prohibition, which favors highly potent drugs that are easier to conceal and smuggle.
"Oregon voters were mistaken if they believed that decriminalization alone would reduce overdose deaths," Singer writes. "Decriminalizing is not the same as legalizing. If people who use drugs need to get them on the black market, they can never be sure of the dose or purity of what they are buying or if it is the drug they think they are buying."
While Measure 110 demonstrably did not reverse the upward trend in drug-related deaths, there is little reason to think it accelerated that trend. The numbers from Oregon are instead consistent with a fentanyl-fueled rise in fatal overdoses that has played out in different parts of the country at different times.
"Overdose mortality rates started climbing in [the] Northeast, South, and Midwest in 2014 as the percent of deaths related to fentanyl increased," RTI International epidemiologist Alex Kral noted at a January 22 conference in Salem, Oregon. "Overdose mortality rates in Western states did not start rising until 2020, during COVID and a year after the introduction of fentanyl."
That lag explains why Oregon has seen a sharper rise in opioid-related deaths than most of the country since 2020. But so have California, Nevada, and Washington, neighboring states where drug possession remained a crime.
A 2023 Journal of Health Economics study estimated that decriminalization in Oregon was associated with a 23 percent increase in "unintentional drug overdose deaths" that year. But "after adjusting for the rapid escalation of fentanyl," Brown University public health researcher Brandon del Pozo reported at the Salem conference, "analysis found no association between [Measure 110] and fatal drug overdose rates."
Kral concurred, saying "there is no evidence that increases in overdose mortality in Oregon are due to" decriminalization. That is consistent with the results of a 2023 JAMA Psychiatry study, which found "no evidence" that Measure 110 was "associated with changes in fatal drug overdose rates" during the first year.
Critics of Measure 110 argued that it encouraged drug use. Yet an RTI International study of 468 drug users in eight Oregon counties found that just 1.5 percent of them had begun using drugs since Measure 110 took effect. And contrary to the claim that decriminalization had attracted hordes of drug users to the state, the subjects' median length of residence in Oregon was 24 years.
The Associated Press says H.B. 4002 "enables police to confiscate the drugs and crack down on their use on sidewalks and in parks." Yet as with alcohol, public consumption that alarms or discommodes people is distinct from mere possession. Just as it is possible to address public drunkenness and disorderly behavior without making consumption of alcohol a crime, it is possible to address nuisances related to other kinds of drug use without threatening to jail people for consuming politically disfavored intoxicants, no matter the circumstances.
Public disenchantment with Measure 110 seems to be based at least partly on unrealistic expectations that may have been encouraged by its supporters' rhetoric. "The idea behind this groundbreaking effort is simple," Theshia Naidoo, managing director of criminal justice law and policy at Drug Policy Action, said in 2020. "People suffering from addiction need help, not criminal punishments. Instead of arresting and jailing people for using drugs, the measure would fund a range of services to help people get their lives back on track."
Those services were slow to materialize, however. Kassandra Frederique, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, complains that Oregon politicians "blamed an innovative policy in its infancy for decades of their own ineffectiveness." While "drug decriminalization worked to reduce the harms of criminalization," she says, "chronic underfunding of affordable housing, effective addiction services and accessible health care are to blame for the heartbreaking public suffering seen in Oregon's streets."
Frederique adds that "there is not a shred of evidence supporting claims that Measure 110 increased homelessness, overdose or crime rates." Recriminalization, she says, is "a false promise of change to distract from politicians' incompetence as they approach reelection." State Sen. Lew Frederick (D–Portland) likewise warns that H.B. 4002 "reinforce[s] the punishment narrative that has failed for 50 years."
Oregon legislators "didn't give decriminalization combined with harm reduction a chance to work," Singer says. "They are delusional if they think going back to the formula that caused countless avoidable overdose deaths and filled our prisons is going to work now when it has never worked before."
At bottom, Measure 110 stood for the proposition that drug use, which violates no one's rights, should not be treated as a crime. Its opponents have yet to offer a persuasive moral justification for rejecting that proposition.
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We must have punishments!
You can’t have legal drugs in a woke environment where scumbag addicts are shielded for the consequences of their shitty addict behavior. While at the same time criminalizing the God given right to self defense for their victims.
Fix those leftist distortions and legal drugs work a whole lot better.
sounds a lot like - "you cant have open borders AND a social safety net for everyone in the country, illegally or not"
Both correct.
Thats the big problem with selling individual liberty. There is such a morass of laws passed to deal with the unintended consequences of other laws that were passed. There isn’t one simple thread to pull to unravel the mess, there are so many to untangle there is always a “but you need to untangle this Gordian knot before doing that” you spend a lifetime trying to do one small change.
That’s why I am an anarchist. I say take the sword to the pile of knots and let the chips fall where they may. It can’t be worse than the fucked up mess we have now.
Legalizing murder as an institution and shooting all non-paupers is the key to solving all problems. Anarcho-communists and anarcho-fascists try to sell this to libertarians because we are the only ones who do not knock their teeth out at the third repetition. That part of the NAP needs to be revisited. This anarco-sockpuppet just went on the Moot Lewser list with the Trumpanzees, snake jugglers, girl-bulliers and other MAGAts.
So a looter Kleptocracy attracts looters, especially after exporting prohibition laws to wreck THEIR economies elsewhere. What an astounding discovery!
Have you tried the decafinated brands? Many have the full rich flavor you've become accustomed to.
You always want the maximum setence for the minimum crime,doubt anyone takes you seriously, a hyper-reacationary fascist
Maybe they should have started with actually enforcing all the laws against actual crimes with victims and everything. When you do decriminalization in the stupidest possible way while at the same time allowing all kinds of other crimes to go unpunished, of course things are going to turn to shit.
But prohibition, like socialism, will totally work this time.
See what I wrote above.
Choose one:
1) a liberal drug possession policy
2) restorative justice where assaults and crimes aren't prosecuted.
Combining the two will always lead for people being against 1. When drug use drives up assaults and property theft but the state doesn't response to the crimes, the chaos will be tied to drug use.
Combining the two will always lead for people being against 1.
Which was, of course, the entire point. It is not enough to fear Big Brother, you must surrender to him.
No, it would logically be the opposite. Since laws respond to crime.
You are to fear doing the crime, and somebody must be in charge of that, call that authority any name you want.
I would say that in many cases we have the opposite of Big Brother. Take the Trump court win, I would say that 90% of those who are neither hillary lovers or trump haters ever thought differently than the Court opinion.
Liberal state decriminalizes drugs.
Liberal state fails at enforcing public order so public has to deal with self-medicated people on the sidewalks.
Liberal state recriminalizes drugs.
Sounds about right. How about enforcing laws against loitering, camping, and public intoxication instead? And not taxing the legalized drugs so heavily that the criminal black market persists?
What I find hillarious is this will solve nothing at all.
Like everyone else said if you don't enforce the law in the case of real crimes with real victims then blaming everything wrong on the victimless crimes won't get real shit done.
But then, its Oregon. Those morons could fuck up a wet dream.
Like everything else, the real problem is democrats and their stupid, lame ideas.
Oh don't be tossing all this at the feet of one side. Sure Oregon is run by Democrats oozing with the pus of the woke infection but this all didn't happen last week. It's been building from a mess of bad decisions and power grabs from left and right that go back to the War of Northern Agression.
Fuck off with that demented "both sides" bullshit, just own up to recognizing who is in fact pushing the policy that does not and cannot work.
he had to go all the way back to the 'northern war of aggression' to both-sidez it! THATS desperation!
No, I go back to that point because that is when the national government officially stopped being the foreign department and began getting more and more intrusive in domestic issues.
The War on Drugs was ramped up by Nixon and thrown into overdrive by Reagan. What party did they belong to again?
Yeah, this is one issue where both sides definitely take the blame. You want to talk about policies that don't and can't work, let's start with prohibition itself. The real problem here is not holding people accountable and responsible for their own actions. In general, Democrats are more guilty of that for sure. But prohibition is the grand-daddy of nanny state, blame shifting policy and has definitely been driven by both sides.
Prohibition was a bipartisan effort from a time when the politicians still did a bit more than pay lip service to the Constitution. People wanted booze to be illegal and the feds said we can't do that without an amendment. So an amendment was passed. Again, fill blame falls on both sides of the aisle.
Now there's a falsity
WHO WAS J EDGAR HOOVER SERVING UNDER
Lots of Dems, tons of Dems...another stupid mindless data-free post from Mr 'say anything you want"
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Harry S. Truman
Dwight D. Eisenhower
John F. Kennedy
Lyndon B. Johnson
All presidents from before we started to think people had rights and should not be deprived of them just because the cops suspected you of something. All of those asshats were before the Miranda ruling. They are from a time when people foolishly trusted their governments to do the right thing. Nixon was when we started to distrust our government.
Correct. If the problem is public nuisances caused by drug addicts in public, the solution is NOT to criminalize drug use but, rather, to criminalize public nuisances. If the problem is drug overdose deaths, the solution is NOT to criminalize drug possession or sale but, rather, to ignore it and let the problem take care of itself or, at the very least, to make sure that people who want to go into remission have the opportunity to get that help. If Oregonians want to fill up prison camps (there's no room left in the prisons or jails for all those drug addicts) with drug addicts, drug salesmen and public nuisances I say, "Let them!" And if drug addicts want to kill themselves slowly or quickly I say, "Let them!"
The Jews say 'the man who doesn't teach his son a trade, teaches him to steal"
AND
Technological society leads to increasing numbers of people who cannot adapt to the inhuman rhythm of modern life with its emphasis on specialization. A class of people is growing up who are unexploitable because they are not worth employing even for the minimum wage. Technological progress makes whole categories of people useless without making it possible to support them with the wealth produced by the progress.
Jacques Ellul
LEADING INEVITABLY TO
" As Princeton economists Anne Case and Angus Deaton first pointed out in a 2015 paper, working-age white men and women without four-year college degrees were dying of suicide, drug overdoses, and alcohol-related liver disease — what Case and Deaton termed “deaths of despair” — at unprecedented rates. In 2017 alone, there were 158,000 deaths of despair in the US: the equivalent of “three fully loaded Boeing 737 MAX jets falling out of the sky every day for a year.”"\
And all that from a godly look at what is 🙂
Maybe because things got worse?
Are the 'unrealistic expectations' that things *wouldn't get worse* with decriminilazrion?
lol. Let’s not forget the “unproven assertions”, which is generally all Team Sullum has to offer
Next-Up …. Criminalizing skiing, rock climbing, camping, all motorsports, bungee-cord jumping, being out after 10PM, etc, etc, etc, etc…….
Think of how ‘good’ it will be! /s
If only those Gov-Guns would poke-people MORE, MORE, MORE!!!! /s
The left in Oregon just sold-off one of their only playing cards left in under a year. Course they always do that.
Bungee jumping's already criminalized in all the good places for it. Jacob managed to do it before The Man caught on.
If the law drives up overdose deaths—what's the down side?
All the harrassment, assault and property crime before that.
All the harassment, assault and property crime *is a crime* whether drugs are in possession or not. Do you think just because the last person who you saw carrying a gun committed a gun crime that every gun is a crime?
Hey shit for brains, you might want to look at the local enforcement of these other crimes. If you won't stop those but offer to stop the addiction crimes then that is the solution people will take.
“then that is the solution people will take” … against much wiser approaches. You just as well be taking the solution of making the look of their car a crime.
Let the buyer beware.
So how'd they manage to keep decriminalization stably in Portugal?
Basically by looting. Portugal's cops seize dope for resale on the black market, just like everywhere else. But they do it politely, catch and release. Then when THEIR dope is broken down for retail, the market is healthy and operating smoothly with no economic convulsions. They tried letting Christians torture and kill everyone centuries ago with bad results. So they quit doing that. MAGAts will doubtless insist on a couple of centuries of PROPER torture and death just to make sure.
Roberta , you seem to rely on laziness in your readers, a LOT
The Washington Post
https://www.washingtonpost.com › world › 2023/07/07
Jul 7, 2023 — Once hailed for decriminalizing drugs, Portugal is now having doubts ...
I mean, Roberta, this is the Washington Post.
Got reading ?
First, quoting median to say most users are long term is not statistically valid unless it's a right biased or evenly distributed population. It very well may be but to support the assertion both median and mean should be stated, as well as SEM (mode may also be valuable). Secondly, looking at the reference, it's a presentation not the actual study, and the map indicates it covers only a small geographic region, albeit higher populated counties. Just a couple of thoughts on this reference.
The graphic definitely supports this being a right biased (e.g. long term residents) population. I am just pointing out that the omission of mean and SEM in both the story and the referenced presentation is somewhat suspect. Additionally, a single study is not conclusive in and of itself. It could be this a representative population or that it's a product of sampling bias.
Additionally, some other red flags is that the population was reached through advocacy groups that provide resources to drug users, e.g. it's double voluntary selection. First, people who volunteer to associate with these groups and then agree/volunteer to participate in the study. Further, the very nature of the research partners suggest a high probability of view based bias. Thus, the study has a high probability of suffering from self selection bias.
Further, it is entirely possible that newer residential drug users are either less familiar or less likely to associate with these groups, and thus will be undersampled. Further raising the probability of a self selection bias. If I were per reviewing this presentation, these are all points I would feel the researchers need to address to strengthen their findings validity.
And I've been a peer reviewer, so I do have familiarity with the process.
Who would have thought that a bunch of junkie zombies shuffling and shambling throughout the streets and piles of OD'd corpses stacking up would be such a buzzkill.
Oh, right, everyone with a functioning brain.
Friggin' leftists always have to learn everything the hardest way possible, and insist on destroying everything they can along the way.
If people want to OD and shamble about stoned on drugs, then let them. It's not the government's responsibility to protect them from themselves.
It's not about the zombies. It's about everyone else who then has to live among them. And since it's not legal to render their zombie skulls in two with a machete, everyone else gets really sick of that garbage real quick.
Libertarians don't seem to understand this simple fact: EVERYBODY hates drug addicts. They hate 'em. They see no meaningful difference between the casual stoner, the track-marked heroin junkie, Hunter Biden, or the yuppie snorting coke off a hooker's fake tits. It's all the same to normal America. And normal America does see it as the government's responsibility to protect them from these worthless useless junkies taking over their streets.
The State does not exist to protect the individual from himself. In that we are total agreement. But the State is entirely justified - in fact, it's its only legitimate purpose - to keep the worst among us from establishing themselves as the status quo.
Which is what happened in Oregon. Which is why they're now yanking back on the reigns at neck-snapping speed.
Wrong. Its legitimate purpose is to ensure Individual Liberty and Justice for all. Not to lock-up everyone who isn't "normal" and frankly your belief that that is its purpose is really disgusting.
If you're being harassed by others then fine. Justice is about forcefully stopping that unwanted harassment but no-one deserves any right to just lock-up those they don't like.
Individual and Liberty and Justice For All has a meaning. It's why we have laws and a justice system.
Your "right" to do a bunch of meth and shuffle about in the streets doesn't come at the expense of the rights of everyone else to go about their day unmolested by shambling degenerates.
Shambling drunks have been around for centuries. Only when prohibition and asset forfeiture crash and wreck the economy do they blossom into God's Own Prohibitionist Hoovervilles. South Americans chewed coca millennia before radio priests and caudillo televangelists brought prohibition. Now there are Hoovervilles everywhere, but the locals--who don't know any better--call them cracolândias.
America has only been around for about two and a half centuries. The societies that pre-existed it and their respective citizenry are irrelevant to the conversation.
As for "shambling drunks" - I mean, people keep trying to equate that with drug users, but it's not even a close comparison. Like I said earlier - comparing alcohol use to drug use is like comparing apples and zebras.
Show us where the meth molested/touched you...
Your over-indulgent sensitivity and run for Gov-Guns *is* the problem.
So this will reduce vagrancy, property crime, and OD's, right?
One cause has many effects, one effect has many causes.
It needn't do one thing you mention to be the right thing to do.
OK then, why is it the right thing to do?
I just answered that with a lot of effort. But I will say this to your specific post : We must strengthen the family, stop cheapening life,
teach children enough to be employable, etc. --- all things you can mock for being too general but you can't reason as our stupid and lazy President does about,say, guns. If you take a gun away from a person who would gladly kill young children indiscriminately YOU STILL HAVE A MAN WHO WOULD GLADLY KILL CHILDREN INDISCRIMINATELY and he isn't that way because B vitamin deficiency. Education, family, sacredness of life, part of the multiple causes that end in this gruesome effect
What’s that have to do with drug laws?
Strengthening family should be the responsibility of the family and of the culture, not the government.
^BINGO^ - government Gun-Forces to keep perspective of what that 'tool' really is.
Funny how you mentioned the "casual stoner" and intentionally omitted booze consumers.
This is how you discredit your argument. Making exceptions YOU approve of.
You rarely hear about even the most hardcore alcoholics breaking into somebody's house to steal stuff that they can fence for money to buy whiskey with.
Wino burglaries happened every day from June 1919 through March 1933. During that time opiates were available from Rum Row and gained market share steadily. By the time Quakers, Methodists, the Klan and snake-jugglers quit robbing and shooting people over beer, there were lots of addicts and crime was organized and diversified. See "Three on a Match," with Ayn Rand's husband Frank O'Connor and Bette Davis.
Same with pot smokers.
But that illogically isolates one kind of abuse from its progeny.
"Alcohol abuse often goes hand in hand with the misuse of other substances, such as prescription or illicit drugs. Mixing alcohol with drugs can have severe consequences, including side effects that can be life-threatening. Individuals with alcohol use disorders are more likely to engage in nonmedical use of prescription drugs."
Pre-conceived notions should definitely control 'guns' against those 'icky' people. /s
ANYONE breaking into somebody's house to steal stuff belongs in prison ... ANYONE. Their *personal* habits only has anything to do with that by your own pre-conceived prejudices. Yes; It is possible for someone doing drugs to NOT break into houses and steal stuff.
The plus side for you is the relationship between the two will land more of your prejudice 'icky' people in prison anyways but whats the idea of trying to lock'em up before a crime is ever committed?
Booze doesn't cause even slightly the amount of (or degree of) problems that drug use does.
It was omitted on purpose, because comparing alcohol use to drug use is like comparing apples and zebras.
The argument from ignorance and intimidation is still circulating, I see. Scientifically there are nonaddictive, non-toxic drugs like LSD, Mescaline, MMDA and MDMA tryptamines and whatnot. God told Reagan, Nignew, Bush² and The Don they were Satan. Observe that no lie is too fantastic nor is there force too deadly to employ witchhunting them. Weed troubles the opiate producers. Delegates from India to the League of Nations sought its ban. Opiates are cheap anesthetics but they, like religion, attract feeble-minded abusers. The key is to decriminalize LSD as competition. Nobody uses opiates if they can get acid, just as nobody takes meth if they can get South American cocaine.
What the fuck are you talking about? Alcohol use causes enormous problems. Far more than cannabis, at least. When cheap distilled spirits became widely available it was just as much if not more of a problem than opioids, for example, are today. Alcohol abuse is just much more widely distributed and socially tolerated.
I've had to deal with serious junkies and alcoholics in my life and I can't say I'd pick one over the other as worse, either to deal with or in effects on the person with the problem.
Language.
Also, you're flat out incorrect. And you're disingenuously isolating it to individual users in an attempt to distort the reality of widespread drug use. Do you know why terms like "crack den" and "meth house" exist? Because - for a variety of reasons (one big one being that drug users feed off each other's addictions) drugs users love to congregate.
Even with a legitimate "liquor store" - you don't see large crowds of drunks zombbed out there. Willy Wino may stumble out with his paper bag filled with MD20/20 and then go sleep it off in an alley or on a park bench after his 18th day of not showering - but they generally don't turn into the swarms of cockroaches that junkies do.
Drug advocates LOVE to paint the picture as Joe Freshman harmlessly hitting a bong in his dorm room. But the reality of wide-spread drug tolerance isn't that. It's the the streets of Oregon.
The fact that they're even doing this - in Oregon, of all places! - should tell you how bad drug problems are compared to alcohol problems.
Even with a legitimate “liquor store” – you don’t see large crowds of drunks zombbed out there. Willy Wino may stumble out with his paper bag filled with MD20/20 and then go sleep it off in an alley or on a park bench after his 18th day of not showering – but they generally don’t turn into the swarms of cockroaches that junkies do.
Ahem...bars...?
Yea, that too. You don't ever see the same kind of thing in bars that you see in drug dens. Thanks for pointing out another clear distinction.
Also, SF just took a red pill on the drug/crime/welfare subject too. Turns out nobody likes drug addicts infesting their streets. And when you've lost Frisco...
Maybe the drug-using losers time to admit that they're wrong?
you are shading legitmate dirinking into illicit drug taking.
Common sense tells you there must be an underlying moral problem common to BOTH. A young alcoholic might not be able to get drugs with the ease that he can get alcohol. YOu must compare the two uses because drug users who never drink and alcohol abusers who don't abuse drugs are fairy tale 'cohorts'
You can eg abuse alcohol and with age move on to drugs but it is your initial abuse that explains BOTH.
Only opiates and barbiturates are addictive. Stimulants are not, neither is alcohol. Superstitious bigots have expanded the word to enclose eating too much, falling for people the wrong age, using anything other than cigarettes and gin and ALSO using cigarettes or gin. To mystical bigots, "addict" now means "possessed by Satan." Since bigots control funding, the parasitical medical profession recites any lie the mystics want to hear. Observe that nobody has EVER died of an LSD or mescaline overdose, yet those non-toxic, habit-CURING medicines are at the top of the shoot-to-kill list.
“…..falling for people the wrong age….”
Um, wait, did hank just come out in defense of pedos? Gross, dude.
YOu need spiritual help.
Given the rates of alcohol and cannabis use, I'm not so sure that "normal America" can be said to hate all druggies (which by any reasonable standard has to include drinkers).
Stupid, to say 'has to include drinkers'
"Most Americans (86%) are confident they drink responsibly, with close to half (45%) reporting extreme confidence (rating of “10” on a 0-10 scale)."
And if more other drugs were legal, there would be lots of people who report that their use of other drugs is responsible. It's the same with pretty much any drug. A minority of users are seriously problematic and get the attention. Alcohol is just looked at differently because it has been normal for most of human history.
Have you ever seen the "Please drink responsibly" admonishment on alcohol products or advertisements?
Do you know why you never see "Please do meth responsibly" admonishments?
Because its a CONTRADICTION.
No, you just want to include drinkers because you have no argument for the notion that "widespread drug legalization is a good thing" without that making that equivocating comparison.
Normal America: "Hey, we legalized drugs and now the number of OD'ing junkies has more than tripled and is taxing our emergency services to breaking points - where do you think we went wrong?"
Druggie-defending Degenerates: "YeA, bUt AlCoHoL iS jUsT aS bAd."
No it's not, you know it's not - but it's the only straw you have to grasp. And it's a pathetically transparent one.
The wrong argument that alcohol is bad but we can pretend it isn't, whereas "drugs" justify killing every man, woman and child on the planet to abolish is in Franklin Fabian's "What Prohibition Has Done to America." I converted and uploaded it to Gutenberg.org (donations welcome) about a decade ago. In effect, Fabian hoped sinners would prefer beer to heroin if they could get beer. Experience has demonstrated that psychedelics help break drug habits. This is reason enough for opiate peddlers to brainwash the feeble-minded into banning safe alternatives.
Nick has, so far, been real quiet about this.
China demanded a total monopoly on production of addictive opiates beginning in 1930, and backed the Hoover Limitation Convention that caused German pharma to fund Hitler's party in July 1931. If I were a Chicom dictator I would take special pains to flood Oregon and Washington with heroin and its addictive imitations to give mystical MAGAts an excuse for wrecking the economy with prohibition and asset forfeiture. That reliably causes crashes, as in 1893, 1907, 1914, 1920, 1923 Germany, 1929, 1931 Germany, 1971, 1987 and 2008. Conservatives avidly help China convince the world that legalization is death.
There is no possible excuse to use “overdose deaths” to justify criminalization of drugs. I fail to see the difference between mandating that terminally ill patients be allowed to kill themselves (or be killed by licensed healthcare providers) and drug addicts killing themselves with an overdose – in the SAME STATE! At the very least it shows an impressive level of confusion by Oregonians and the people they elect. There might be some justification to regulate drug possession or use because of public nuisances the drug addicts represent, if not for the fact that public nuisance law enforcement was previously abandoned and will apparently not be renewed by the latest drug laws. So much for “democracy” – The People (TM) obviously cannot even be trusted to vote for sane representatives.
Well, you are right there , you do fail to see !!!!!!!!!!
Your argument assumes the morality of euthanasis to be the basis for the immorality of criminalizing drug use.
It is spiritual, much as Reason and Libertarians proscribe even the word
This “deaths-from-despair” mortality rate has not slowed since: in 2022 more than 200,000 people died from alcohol, drugs or suicide, equivalent to a Boeing 747 falling out of the sky every day with no survivors
Will you break out in hives if you have to use the word 'immoral" or 'ungodly' or 'vice' ??
I don't want drug use in my community.
From the book that convinced me to get married !!
" Poverty, for instance, stems
from the destruction of the family when unmarried parents are abandoned by
their lovers or older women are divorced because society approves of their
husbands' younger girlfriends."
"Drug Addiction, lack of education, welfare, children in poverty, violence, unemployment, single-parent homes-these critical problems facing our country today. Many ideas have been presented regarding the cause of these problems, but only George Gilder speaks directly and with authority about their one undeniable source: the disintegration of the American family."