Very true indeed. It's all a numbers game and there are a huge amount of factors to be taken into account because of the complexity of the market. You know shit like this can happen when you do drugs and aren't careful. And what happened happened, so it's pointless to start throwing around blame anyway, nobody relevant will read this and the guy the story is about stays dead just the same
I just cringed a bit when reading statements that he dealer should not be blamed as he was (probably) unaware of what he was selling. The dealer is the last link in the chain between manufacture and consumption. In a way he is the one that causes the most direct damage to the user. Up until the drugs reached him they caused no harm to anyone apart from harm caused by the drug trade itself, though the manufacturer and anyone altering the drugs along the way know that they will cause harm at some point. Furthermore he is aware of what adulterated drugs are capable of doing to users, more so than the manufacturer because he sees it up close or even experienced it himself once. He also knows how heavily contaminated the supply chain is. This creates an automatic obligation in my opinion, more so because he gets paid for it. Following this logic I think that he is very much to blame, almost as much as the manufacturer and more than the end user
If dealers decide to test and be honest they become a force that nullifies the malafide actions of an entire supply chain, without any quality control needed higher up the chain, by only doing something what I deem to be a dealers' responsibility and a drug users' right, bought with the money he paid for the drugs
As you say a perfect scenario would be quality control at every link in the chain, but in reality if just the dealers would do this, there would be absolutely no cases of people ingesting some other psychoactive substance than they were expecting and suffering because of it
The only reason that the drug world is the drug world, is because some ass-wipe wrote on a piece of paper that drugs are illegal. Why does that automatically mean that we should treat this any different than any other matter that is not illegal? I just do not get why illegality to a manufacturer/supplier/dealer automatically means "let's forget our humanity". You can call me naive and you would probably be right, but I have thought about this concept to great lengths and I just do not get why the fact that drugs are illegal means that as long as you make a profit, nobody will think twice about you knowingly causing physical harm to other people. Because "such is the way of the drug world". Blegh!
Sorry for this long reply. It is the weed speaking
