Burnt Offerings
Bluelight Crew
If someone offered to give me a ride somewhere, then mentioned that there was something of a 20-30% chance that I'd be seriously injured or killed in a car accident, I probably wouldn't take the ride with them. That's how I look at the issue...so, the answer to the question posed in the OP title is, again, unequivocably "no".
However, it's also true that, if you were to take a snapshot of the overall using population at any given time, the large majority of users are not addicts. And it's also true that the distortions in the socioeconomic context created by prohibition are so immense that it's difficult to make reliable assessments of diamorphine's addictive potential or social harm outside of the context that use occurs in. So in that sense I feel like the heterodox, HR-affiliated voices on the issue like Mate, Hari, Peele, Hart etc. (all of whom I originally heard of through this website) contribute something valuable to the discourse, other than just triple-underlining how terrible this or that drug is with the requisite junkie sob stories. Does anyone believe that such stories actually prevent people from trying a drug? Think about your own personal experience when answering that question. I don't look down on anyone for whatever they choose to do with their own body and their own life, how could I, I did all that dumb stuff in my past and I'm not going to throw any stones from my massive glass mansion...and, if anyone cared to ask for my opinion, I would clearly and in no uncertain terms urge them to not consume potentially addictive/destructive illegal drugs...but some of the issues that have been brought up recently are very real and are worthy of serious discussion (although they may not be so appropriate for the focus of this particular thread, I'm willing to admit), and I don't think it's good to assume bad faith on the part of whoever you're debating with on this topic.
However, it's also true that, if you were to take a snapshot of the overall using population at any given time, the large majority of users are not addicts. And it's also true that the distortions in the socioeconomic context created by prohibition are so immense that it's difficult to make reliable assessments of diamorphine's addictive potential or social harm outside of the context that use occurs in. So in that sense I feel like the heterodox, HR-affiliated voices on the issue like Mate, Hari, Peele, Hart etc. (all of whom I originally heard of through this website) contribute something valuable to the discourse, other than just triple-underlining how terrible this or that drug is with the requisite junkie sob stories. Does anyone believe that such stories actually prevent people from trying a drug? Think about your own personal experience when answering that question. I don't look down on anyone for whatever they choose to do with their own body and their own life, how could I, I did all that dumb stuff in my past and I'm not going to throw any stones from my massive glass mansion...and, if anyone cared to ask for my opinion, I would clearly and in no uncertain terms urge them to not consume potentially addictive/destructive illegal drugs...but some of the issues that have been brought up recently are very real and are worthy of serious discussion (although they may not be so appropriate for the focus of this particular thread, I'm willing to admit), and I don't think it's good to assume bad faith on the part of whoever you're debating with on this topic.