Certain substances both illegal and legal are addictive and it is misnomer to say it is a victimless crimes...I’m in totally agreement that every individual should be held responsible for their actions. The questions is then how does one go about doing that? There has to be laws, and accepted behavior. Likewise there has to be enforcement of those laws with a penalty for those who break the law otherwise what is the point?
The medical community will say...”addiction is a complex disease of the brain and body that involves compulsive use of one or more substances despite serious health and social consequences. Addiction disrupts regions of the brain that are responsible for reward, motivation, learning, judgment and memory.” So if you are in that camp and believe addiction is a disease you need to ask yourself what caused it? The simple fact is that the individual made a choice. Heart disease, diabetes and some forms of cancer involve personal choices like diet, exercise, sun exposure, etc. A disease is what happens in the body as a result of those choices.
Folks make bad choices so what should be done about it? It is a very slippery slope to start legalizing everything and then justifying doing so by saying somehow the problem will decrease and or that there will be more money for treatment. If people have free access to more drugs then how is that going to help the problem? The government will surely have the answer in that it will see the need to regulate the sale and add taxes etc. How has legalized gambling with the lottery helped those who are addicted to gambling? Anyone that thinks if all drugs are deemed legal then the government is going magically then use monies they were spending now on jails or enforcing drug laws into treatment programs is just dreaming. Question: Should it be the government's responsibility to have government run programs to treat people for drug abuse? A 1991 article read: "Federal expenditures for drug treatment have risen by 341 percent since 1986 -- 20 percent faster than the total drug budget, 30 percent faster than spending for drug law enforcement and 700 percent faster than overall federal spending. This year, the federal government will spend more than $1.1 billion on treatment."
Source:
http://www.heritage.org/budget-and-spen ... -treatmentIf you legalize drugs then what about prostitution? Proponents of legalizing prostitution believe it would reduce crime, improve public health, increase tax revenue, help people out of poverty, get prostitutes off the streets, and allow consenting adults to make their own choices. They contend that prostitution is a victimless crime, especially in the 11 Nevada counties where it remains legal. Opponents believe that legalizing prostitution would lead to increases in sexually transmitted diseases such as AIDS, global human trafficking, and violent crime including rape and homicide. They contend that prostitution is inherently immoral, commercially exploitative, empowers the criminal underworld, and promotes the repression of women by men.
So goes the slippery slope to total decay and collapse...