The problem is getting the public to accept this.
I'm not sure it's possible to get a majority of the public to agree that using Substance D is acceptable, but I don't think that's so much the point. It's getting the public to accept that it's an individual's choice, even if it's a terrible one, to try things if they want and accept the consequences (good or bad) and live their own lives w/o coercion.
The current schema is "drug users choose to take drugs", as a lifestyle choice.
Of course using drugs is a choice, and for many users of the harder-reinforcing compounds, it doesn't seem like a choice but it is (everything from the first usage of a compound that one could/should* know is a very dangerous choice to use, to the continued usage)
[*"should" is, sadly, a bad word to use there, but w/ the internet it is becoming increasingly easy to learn these things. A large part of the problem is that a kid has some drinks, smokes some bud or trips on acid, and has a great time - or even a bad time - but realizes it's not remotely as bad as they were taught, not something that's remotely warranting of caging a person. Subconsciously, they reason that the "drugs r bad" thing is farce - which it is in respects to SOME drugs - and they use other drugs, the ones that are truly bad, the ones that nobody in their right mind would like to see in existence. Then, after having used some times, well.....this is bluelight, I think we all know how seemingly impossible it can be/feel to get oneself out of the clutches of an addiction, it's w/o a doubt the hardest experience many addicts will ever go through. It's almost "appropriate" or 'balanced' in the context of what drugs offer (I'm of the opinion that some drugs can evoke experiences that are the best in one's life, experiences unparalleled in any sober state), but w/ distortions like the war on drugs, gross misinformation/lack of information, and the conflation of all psychoactive compounds into the monolithic category "drugs", it's very easy for ppl to fall into the trap. Marijuana usage, ecstasy, psychedelics, can be of immense value to the human experience. It's only very very small % of humanity who can benefit from things like opiods/meth, but the line of demarcation(sp?) is not only blurry/hidden/misleading to many, but many are unaware that there even is much difference because as mentioned "drugs" tend to just be viewed as a homogenous category when they are anything but)
/apologies for spelling/ranting, am crazy hungover
