@@mralexjbishop that's usually a byproduct of the illegality. They either don't know what they're getting, how much they're getting, or aren't informed of effects and expectations. Not all, if course, but a vast majority. This is still a part of harm reduction
You don't seem to understand how those words work. Just because something is factually dangerous, doesn't mean it isn't potentially dangerous, for example drinking once glass is not dangerous but drinking multiple is potentially.
@@mrgarchomp5418 I know. I've been a heroin addict for over 20 years and I've wished I were dead during withdrawal but I know you won't die from it. I'm in a residential program right now and I've been clean for a little over a year now. Keeping my fingers crossed.
Honestly idk what everyone is so worried about... how could legalizing drugs possibly be worse than what we’ve already experienced the last 40 years under the current strategy?
@@MaggotMuseum handing out 10-20 year prison sentences for minor possession of cocaine and crack is absurd too. I don’t see how throwing away someone’s life is helping anyone, helping society, or helping the overall problem
@@BostonsF1nest Also the economic and social cost of imprisoning people for 10 years is insane. Even if you don't care about the human per se there are no valid arguments for that kind of practice. That person does not pay taxes, doesn't raise their kids, don't contribute to society in any way and have to be fed, sheltered and given something to do in an environment where they automatically develop criminal knowledge, contacts and motive. It's not like prisons are drug free anyway.
I'm not sure. As much as I love the idea of it, I can't sit here honestly and say my drug use wouldn't increase dramatically. Ease of access is the main thing that prevents me from taking a lot.
On November 4th I'll have a year clean after roughly 12 years of opiates, 3 years with crystal and benzos, and have has to live on the streets 3 times for roughly 4-7 months at a time, and trust me being addicted to something that makes you sick as fck if you don't have it while laying on the wet ground under a real-estate sign, with it being 28 degrees while it's snowing/raining you haven't eaten anything in two days, have no way of getting water, not to mention again that you feel like dying and can't barely walk because of the withdrawals wearing just a long sleeve shirt with no gloves, no hat, and just jeans on, and you're all alone... yeah it's absolutely the worst
But Oregon didn't legalize it. They decriminalized it. That doesn't mean a safer legal market is forming to replace the black market. They've just stopped punishing people for engaging in the black market. It's kind of the worst of both worlds.
I agree with this 1000%. Yes i have a children and im also a recovering heroin addict. It wasnt heroin itself that almost killed me, it was the homeless lifestyle and being in the streets. My heart goes out to everyone suffering and helpless.
@iLoveJackingOn Can guarantee a lot of these fucking mayors and cops are definitely on the payroll to look the other way with known traffickers and heavy moevers.
I had a few days in Interlaken, Lugano and Basel a few years ago on the way back from Italy. Switzerland is an absolute paradise (expensive, paradise mind you).
Meanwhile in the county that I grew up & live in in TX, they tried to give a guy who had gone to the same school that I had attended 99 years for one batch of pot brownies. Edit: this didn’t take place at school, this took place at his dad’s apartment when he was 19. According to the story I’ve heard, the fire department was evacuating the complex due to an unrelated small kitchen fire. They knocked on his door, & they smelled weed when he opened it, so that gave probable cause for police to come & bust the door down. After I believe 8 months in county jail, his case became a national outcry & received the attention of some higher tier lawyers who came in & somehow got him out of county jail. He then fled to California where the weed community welcomed him with open arms, and he’s likely never coming back to TX.
You could even gate access to legal drugs behind, say a 2-day seminar. This would mean there is still a barrier to entry into drug use and it would ensure users know safer-use and the effects of the drug on them, allowing them to make educated decisions.
Drug education should be mandatory in schools. And im not talking about the current bullshit thats in schools (all drugs are evil, weed is a gateway drug, etc), because that does more harm than good. Im talking about explaining the effects of each drug, side-effects, risks (hallucinogens if mental problems run in your family for example), how to do them safely, testing kits for fentanyl, etc.
@@electrifiedrhythm5426 exactly people are gonna be addicted regardless so you cut out the black market by legalizing all drugs and then all the crime associated with selling drugs goes away if people just go to pharmacies to get their drugs instead. You’re missing the entire point...
@electrified rhythm You're misinformed. Go research, please. And do it with an open mind. Maybe smoke a little weed. I know a lot of people who use drugs responsibly. There is no reason to punish people. It's always better to be informed. The truth is out there. You just need to not be hypocritical. I bet you have you're own vice yet you think it's fine. Coffee or soda is what comes to my mind. Sugar and caffeine are just two of the most addictive substances in the world yet i dont see many that mention it. Time to wake up and smell the coffee.
If the young are willing to start voting for politicians willing to push these changes there may be a move forward. Nothing will happen if 80% of the oldest hit the polls while only 40% of the youngest do.
I quit oxy cold turkey after 5 years of abuse thanks to my doctor I got up to a 250mg dose a day to stay normal I haven’t relapsed because I don’t want that life anymore you can quit too you just have to want it and be willing to deal with the withdrawal it’s not easy stay strong
I suggest posting sources on where people can go to fight against the war in drugs so that our passion for this moment doesn't die at the beginning of the next video that happens to play..
Ex drug addict here, currently on subaxone, love everything about this, I almost cried thinking about my past and how it could of been different on so many levels it drugs were legal. Such a sad topic for me.
don't dwell on what could of been, you have a new path in front of you, your still hear. don't live in the minute, but plan your day from the second you open your eyes in the morning. stay strong an aware. whatever you do dont take up drinking because you have stopped taking drugs. i have known far more people to die from replacing one addiction to another.
Me too. 24 years working to feed my heroin habit. Back on methadone maintenance again. For some addicts it's too late. I have spent 4 years plus half my life on drugs. Heroin and methadone. I cant function without one or the other and I always relapse when I have managed to detox. I would rather buy my gear from a pharmaceutical company that's been taxed and is clean rather than dirty smack that's been smuggled inside dead animals across the pakistan and Afghanistan borders.
@@jld7779 I think younger people wouldn't get into it if it was legal and regulated. They would have to already have an addiction to start to qualify for pharmaceutical drugs
@@jld7779 that's better though, you would feel safe because you would be safe. The problem isn't really people doing drugs, the problem is the HARM people get due to doing drugs. In a legalized and safe environment, the harm is ought to decrease substantially. And it would also narrow the possibility of people getting 'hooked' on whatever drug they are doing.
You are physically addicted to an extremely powerful synthetic opioid and you are calling yourself an ex drug addict? I understand the language in recovery can be confusing but don't you feel any sense of hypocrisy when you say that? I'm on methadone and have struggled on and off for years. I'm an addict and so are you.
Imagine being transparent and allowing people to have access to safety, a house, mental health care. These are people and I think we often forget that when we see them on the street. They are fighting something we can’t see and I think that’s the hardest part for them :(
I have found on many occasions It’s not the drug or the user it’s the demons they are possessed by with out any help or intervention prior to using a drug or while trying a drug they never realised you could get high by being happy
A friend of mine 22 years old gave me this speach in our last conversation together, he had argued my concerns by stating "i know what i can handle, and as long as i know what im getting I'm fine" he died 2 days later from fetynol...
War on drugs is killing more than what the drugs would kill by overdose in many areas! Maybe this might be the solution. We have bars and hotels serving tea, and coffee, to alcohol and weed, but it doesn't mean we go there if we don't need or want it. It's upto the person.🥱 Great video and great topic.👍
Legalize it , tax it to fund rehab and education programs completely with the goal to combat addiction properly with qualified therapists, doctors and social workers not with armed police and prison
that would be too effective and too good of a solution for society. Prison system is privately funded. They want healthy criminals that don't drain their precious free in house healthcare.
I recommend everyone to watch a film called "pleasure unwoven". it's a great medical film explaining how alcohol and drugs work in the brain. Talks about the lymbic system, midbrain, GABA, ETC... And best part it's not boring! 😀
When ever I think about this issue the only way to “solve” the problem is legalization, we should inform people on how dangerous this drugs are but at the same time if some chose to use them ( they obviously do) at least they get them from a safe environment and not fueling criminal organizations
We already do this and it doesn't work. People know damn well what the drugs do, not one person in this world grew up never seeing a crack head. Drugs are not a disease they are a choice with consequences, any one saying they can't get off them it's a disease it's that it's this are just bullshiting it's them they don't want help. The people that want help get help and stay off. The ones that are in and out of rehab are just being pushed to go but really they want to be left alone to get high.
@@ghettogrower3499 hun hate to say this, but you're terribly incorrect. read up on scholarly articles about the changes that happen to a individuals brain when substance abuse is present. if you even wanna try to say it's a choice, that's your opinion. what about all these children being born addicted with proven & observable brain changes that make them predisposed to a life of substance abuse?? maybe a little more empathy & medical evaluation/assistance could be the solution to lowering addiction rates; obviously what we're doing now isn't working.
@@karimbelba5597 as a pharm. tech trainee I can say that doctors are sooo careless & I see so many control 2's sold everyday.. It's hard to see our patients prescribed to so many dangerous drugs, but doctors just do whatever they want IG 🙆♀️0🤷🏻♀️ 🤷🏻♀️
In the USA drug dealers already file taxes sometimes. You can say your money came from "other sources" and then pay taxes which makes the taxman happy.
This needs to get out to more people man.. personally I got a single heroin charge at 23 and while driving.. “stupid decision” and I now have 2 felony’s been on parole for 5 years and went to jail for two months plus had to do rehab. I’ve been clean for all five years thank the lord but it’s absolutely ruined my life.
The problem with all of the legalization talk is you’re looking at the situation as a problem that needs to be solved, when the government sees it as a feature rather than a bug. The war on drugs helps the government and law enforcement more than any other single policy in the history of the United States. Ruining the lives of people with drug problems, or just casual drug users, funds the police and a large portion of the government. They need to keep those prisons full to keep their pockets full, and nothing fills prisons like the war on drugs. Turning huge swaths of the population into criminals with the stroke of a pen made it so that prisons are a booming industry, and then you factor in all the fines and fees associated with arrests, probation, drug diversion, etc. you see that this isn’t a problem in the eyes of the government, it’s a major revenue stream. If we legalized drugs we would have to seriously rethink law enforcement as well, and as we have seen recently that’s something that the government is absolutely unwilling to do right now.
@@theomaiklem3413 no they love the poor, that’s where they get the folks to fill their prisons and who funds the police force with the myriad fees associated with arrest, court, probation/parole, drug diversion programs, etc. They absolutely adore the poor, so much they do everything possible to ensure the poor remain poor, because they’re the easiest group to pick on.
I like this "host," he makes me want to pierce my left ear, get a tracksuit, bottle of cider and top it all off with a Burberry hat on some random corner of a dimly lit estate in Rochdale surrounded by the soothing sounds of roaring citroens.
We hardly have legal CBD in France... Red Bull was still prohibited 20 years ago. Thermo-industrial civilization will collapse before we get legal weed.
Such a great video!! Very well done, well presented and I couldn't agree more with the message. The War on Drugs is a complete failure. Drugs need to be regulated and controlled. We also shouldn't judge addicts as having some kind of moral failure. They are people that need help and compassion.
They did fail at some point or in some way in life if they are "addicts" Being a drug addict shouldn't be taken lightly, drug addicts do not have such a bad reputation out of no where.
...or, in a legal drugs setting, even getting prescription drugs without prescription: you sign a waiver in which you declare that you take full responsability for what you'll do with them... Hand me ten oxys plus three or four xanax, doc, please. Than you move to the proper hemp/smart shop shop and buy a couple of ganja spliffs, last stop to the sueprmarket for buying a couple of beers: i'll do it in days, not in a single night, BECAUSE I KNOW THAT TEN OXYS AND FOUR XANAX ALL AT ONCE CAN KILL ME! SELF - RESPOSABILITY!!! On the same level, if you buy alcohol, you receive an instruction paper on how to safely drink, same for tobacco products and coffe/caffeinated beverages, you firm a waiver where you take responsability for your behaviour, and then you go on your way! Ketamine in England and Salvia Divinorum in Italy in the early 2000's were legal, BTW. Some fucked their bladder up, which is sad enough, some had a good time of self knowledge and universe exploring. With salvia, some freaked the hell out, some discovered parallel universes. With them being illegal ,the situation remains the same, or gets worse. WAR ON PROHIBITION!!! REGULAMENTATION AND LEGALIZATION RIGHT NOW!!!
How exactly do you legalize Fentanyl, Carfentanil and heroin, when very little of a dose is fatal?? If you're going to limit doses, then you aren't changing anything, as dealers will fill that void. The only solution is to destroy the drug cartels with military airstrikes. I'm the only one saying the truth that no one wants to hear.
@@douche8980 did u watch the video? tell me what drugs are too harmful bc its most likely they are dangerous bc of cuts or contaminants, and not the drug itself.
Nothing will change. Here in Canada it's much cheaper to get your marijuana off your local dealer or through the internet. The government stores are expensive and the quality is notoriously low.
@@Cbd_7ohm You sound stupid af advocating drug addiction. Just because the war is massively unsuccessful we're supposed to embrace drug addiction instead of fighting against it? Drugs are drugs because they are substances people enjoy themselves with, they aren't just substances you can put in your body because "it's your right". And more importantly, they are substances you enjoy that literally kill you if you keep enjoying it. So hell no, attack addiction instead of welcoming it.
This is a ridiculous proposition. There will never be a full decriminalization of hard drugs nor should there ever be. We simply need to decriminalize all drugs for the user's sake, not the producer's.
I’m a recovering heroin addict and all my charges are stemmed from my addiction I’ve done over 3 years. I’d love to see some type of resolution. I live in Akron Ohio and I’m pretty sure we are the 2nd state for overdoses. I love seeing a video like this. Locking me up just makes me a better criminal when I come out
Cleveland here. Ive done alot to help raise awareness about harm reduction. I try to explain to people the importance of safe injection sights, how legalizing and regulating drugs helps lower crime rate and addiction rates and lowers the stigma. All some people here is 'letting druggies have access to their fix' and think it will make things wore, even though I present them with facts and studies that show the complete opposite. I'm like 'how it that *war on drugs* goin for ya'? People can be so ignorant.
@@jef9635 yea man the people who don’t want the education about it or are very ignorant to it and look like at us like what u said about just wanting the fix. There is 100% proof harm reduction works. 9/10 too people who aren’t addicts have still been effected by an addict(s) in some way and to not want the education sickens me fr I went thru hell and back to get where I am now
I was a heroin addict a long time ago and the only thing that helped was injectable methadone I was addicted to the rush of it rushing into my brain . It takes the criminal element out of it the stealing, scoring ect I was so stable I ran a successful business for 9 years . then suddenly the government was saying NO its too expensive yet its more expensive now with crime ect oral methadone just don't work aswel ..I lost everything.... I have now been clean 13 years this summer ...
Yes know a few ppl who where on injectable meth. Let's not 4get the infamous smack ciggies from the chemist or the diamorphine (heroin) tablets ppl used 2 get from UK pharmacies
Can I ask what country you are from and when this was? I have never heard of injectable methadone! So interesting. I can say that methadone probably saved my life, and it has been an invaluable tool in my recovery. 15 years in recovery, even longer than that off of heroin. It's absolutely possible, for anyone who is still struggling.
I remember as a kid growing up, the DARE presentations, at school and the boys and girls club. The adults I grew up around provided clear info on the effects of illegal drugs, and of the before and after of people addicted. Honestly, scary stuff. Being around informative, honest adults really influenced what is most important to me- my health. This video really puts it out there too. Everyone deserves to have good health. Health is wealth.
DARE was a joke. At least when the presentation was given at my school they went all in on All Drugs Are Bad Yes We Mean Everything-- when I told the person doing the presentation I was on drugs to regulate my seizure disorder they got really flustered and you could see them start to visibly sweat that this ten year old just threw a massive wrench in their big "uplifting" talk. I thought this had to have been an isolated incident until I started to meet other people my age on the internet who said the same things.
I've thought this was the way to go for over 30 years but not many will listen to the reasoning. My uncle is a missionary in Portugal (a very conservative man) and even he admits the benefits he's seen since decriminalization in 2001.
All studies coming out of Portugal are so promising. Rehabilitation for abusers, not making them criminals, because they have an addiction health issue. It’s not a choice. There is a good TEDx talk about this and they go over Portugal 💪🏻❤️
@@KimSkid2k What about people that are occasionally using softer drugs like psychedelics or mdma and are never addicted, manage to live healthy and productive life?
But in the US if you get caught with anything on you your still going to jail, it's still criminalized they are just SAYING that it's not criminalized but it still is, at least it is in Wisconsin where I live. People are still being arrested for overdoses. A friend of mine had a seizure after doing some " supposed heroin" it wasn't an overdose it was a seizure but her boyfriend thought she was overdosing and gave her narcan and called 911. A detective came with the EMTs and apparently the detective was searching her pockets while she was still having a seizure and even looked inside her bra but her boyfriend took the drugs off her before they got there. And the boyfriend tripped out on the detective when he pulled her open. And then he asked him where's the needle she used and he said I got rid of it already and the detective was pissed and said that was evidence. All the detective cared about was trying to find a way to get her charged criminally but he didn't have anything. Now this is a very smart girl so even though she had to let them take her to the ER she knew that the ER couldn't make her stay so they could do a blood drug test on her for her to be charged with internal possession. So as soon as the doctor came in she said I'm fine and I don't need to be here give me my discharge papers and they did. By the time she was walking out the door her boyfriend had called a friend for a ride and was walking up to the hospital doors. Then the detective pulled in and jumped out of his car and said "hey where do you think your going? And she said "back home you dick"!!!! Lol 😂🤣 and he asked her did they do a blood test?" She said no I refused treatment and I left" apparently this detective was so pissed off that she knew her rights and he didn't have anything to charge her with and this was only like 3 years ago now. So trust and believe that they are still trying to criminalize any kind of drug use even going as far as to go to the hospital to find out what was all in her system so that they could charge her with internal possession. So even though they are saying their not they still are 😡🤬.
5:21 just like a drug dealer can sell pot and heroin or cocaine, or both, or more, a doctor can push treatment. and if your dealer is trying to get you off of drugs, instead of on them, and trying to get you functional, instead of letting you beg, you and society as a whole are probably in a better position to thrive.
I've sold for awhile and when people buy too much, I start to let them know that they should chill out or maybe flat out stop. I let them know what's in it and what it's doing to them and alot of addicts just dont care, they just want to feel numb. Im happy to see Alot of them have stopped but I agree that legalizing it would decrease users. People wouldn't hide it as much and people would deal with it like you deal with Alcoholics. (never meth, crack, or heroin) Selling someone one of those is the same as killing them
@@PunisherFord what a horrible argument to make. This is youtube so I won't focus on statistics; but if you are bored, delve into the dramatic rise of lover disease, and more specifically that which is a result of alcohol abuse.. I'm all for the first amendment, but peelike you should have an asterisk when providing "data".
@@PunisherFord it is a difficult and subtle issue, one that can be better dealt with in the light of day than in the darkness of an alley. i typed another comment and deleted it because of fear of misunderstanding, it is that much of a mess. hell, we can even go to the violence that dealers deal with and in, what recourse do they have if someone robs them? this issue just bounces back and forth with those who try to stand above saying "just don't do it" while taking vicodin or some crap like that to relax. it is a giant mess, and the only solution is sunlight.
Legalisation will also not only reduce harm for users, but also for all the people in countries like mexico, colombia and brazil! hundreds of thousands of people die at the hands of the cartels, both people involved and people who had no involvement. Legalisation would also reduce insane amounts of corruption in countries where cartels have a heavy influence!
I am currently reading Ioan Grillo’s new book “Blood, Gun, Money”. It is about the iron river of guns going from the USA and south across the border. Very interesting and easy to read.
@@camillapalmer82 what the hell are you on about... He said when it was somewhat legal to do heroin which hasn't been since the 20s and the way he said it made it sound like he'd visibly seen the addicts 100 years ago. As if you tried to explain what the UK was...
@@ilovedogs2642 did you not watch the video? They talked about this and that is what he is referring to. The British system was in place into the 60s where anyone who needed it could get a prescription for heroin and they had a fraction of the users and diseases and safety issues as the US during that time.
I doubt it people dont care about drugs when they got work and Bill's to pay, oregon has low unemployment this would affect only poor communities in the south
The video which truly opens discuss and tackles it a serious way. Honestly, living in Argentina, I see how drugdealing is destroying our societies, they are gaining so much power. Having said that, I do not think there is another solution about of legalizing.
As an addict in recovery, I can tell you for sure if we make things legal and in the open, it will help bring down the numbers of addicts and abuse. Secrecy plays a huge role in addiction
I'm in recovery too. It would of been harder to stay off drugs if I can go to the store and get them. I can delete dealers numbers, I can't get rid of a store. Also I never made it to aa without being forced by the state. Just something to think about. There are a lot of solid arguments for legalization as well.it might help to legalize.🤷
@@stevejones8550 if legalization means drugs can be sell in stores, and you say that being in recovery is harder when the drugs are being sold in stores, so how is legalization helping recovery anyway?
@@progunjack5556 I'm saying it's possible that legalization of drugs might not help people in recovery. In certain countries llike Denmark it seems like legalization of drugs is helping. More people are getting clean, deaths are down, transfer of desease is down, and drug use is down. However... I'm saying that might not be the case in America. It might help, it might not. I just know I probably wouldn't be in recovery if the legal system didn't push me towards it.
Legalizing would help because instead of spending money keeping people in jail it could go towards treatment that's currently underfunded and not widely available
Always remember: Correlation does not equal Causation. People talk about gateway drugs but every hard drug user has eaten food so with gateway logic food > drugs
Well done journalism here; fair, straightforward and a clear proposal for governments everywhere to recognize, and hopefully consider adding to their dockets…
Not really great to completely legalize it, I know so many people who fall for temptations, now your telling me you want kids to share cocaine instead of cigs/alcohol at a young age... If its legalized it would have to be extremely limited and reviewed depending on how strong/dangerous the drug is. Crystal Meth is not Marijuana for example.
Definately on board with harm reduction as someone who has been on &off drugs my whole life I know for a fact that if we had policies based on harm reduction my family and friends & myself would have had completely different lives and less shameful results for future decision making and lifestyle choices
Try 🍄s instead🤣 Most ecstasy will be cut with methamphetamine. Street drugs are usually cut. Real prescription drugs are pure but people sell fakes as well. If you want to experiment, be safe and responsible. Stick to the plant homies though 🌳 and 🍄s
@@tylerstrippin9630 I'm only 21, but in all my years being around drugs I've never seen a user or a dealer use a substance test kit. They completely should! But I feel like its safer to just stick to plant homies 🌳🍄
@@JJ-me4yu you obviously are partying with complete fucking idiots.... by the age of 16 I had seen more tester kits then I could count.......... there 75$ online dude........
0:56....Rocky Mountain High Dispensary!!!! I've been there before!! June 2017, I drove from Toledo to the Big Basin state park in California and I stopped in Denver for a week. Garden of the Gods, Colorado Rockies baseball and watched MetallicA at Mile High! Picture next to my comments is me at the Denver show.
It's about time someone has started this type of awareness. I'm just concerned that giving over the power of this stuff to the government is that they will have limits as to how much they can give you per day and the amount needed is going to be different for everyone and for the people who have been getting fentanyl instead of actual heroin, real heroin won't be strong enough for that person, period, that person is going to need to be able to get fentanyl. Especially if they have been doing that for a couple years now.
I’m pretty sure that under the constitution states are allowed to make these things called laws. Everything isn’t about the constitution, it just makes you seem like one of those people that regurgitate talking points from fox. Instead use actual facts like harm reduction is proven to actually work
@@reidyo5404 it's called the 10th amendment not a talking point it's a fact the war on drugs on a federal level is unconstitutional if you understand law and how it's supposed to be applied it should be the state's right to set law in each individual State the fed has been overstepping its authority for the last 75 years
I would love to be able to buy pure heroin or MDMA instead of worrying about a possible deadly cutting agent. I wouldn't have to test my stash anymore.
I accidentally bought fake MDMA once and it was hell. Thankfully I was okay but for 48 hours I was just a mess and couldn't stop vomiting. I don't understand how anyone would be willing to sell fake/laced drugs but I guess profit comes before anything else for some people.
My only hangup on the sale of these drugs for everyone is ive listened to a lot of people say things like if someone offered me heroin id take it even after years of sobreity. They no longer put themselves in situations where they see people who use or go to areas that you can easily get it. What do they do when they could easily get it off the market? There's no natural high on earth thats comparable to these drugs. Its hard for me to get on board with it because of that reason.
Idk what to say about someone offering you drugs, but as for buying them a system could be put in place where you inform the pharmacies of your past addiction and ask them to permanently blacklist you from buying certain drugs. I do agree with you that it’s a dangerous thing for recovering addicts, but I am sure that there is a viable approach that minimizes harm and promotes education and healthy use. Also congratulations on your sobriety!
@@joshlentz7468 Perhaps that would be a good solution, and it was a hypothetical. Thank you but i've never been addicted to any substance other than my vape haha.
Alcohol is well-regulated (if perhaps a bit too strictly) in Norway. You can only buy wine and spirits at the governmental wine monopoloy, but beer under 4.7% at supermarkets. Commercials for alcohol and tobaco are completely illegal.
That’s great and all but I live in Canada and weed is legal and I still by off the black market. It’s cheaper and they deliver to your door. I can’t see the black market ever going away
The regulated market is still in its infancy. You’ve had a fair few teething problems, not least adequate supply and cost. These things will iron out eventually. It will likely get to the point where the black market won’t be able to compete. Even if that day never comes, at least you have the option. That option is an even greater necessity for drugs like MDMA and Heroin.
I was disappointed when I went to Vancouver and didn't see a single dispensary. Where I live in California I can order from one of several Cannabis dispensaries that deliver. The only people who use the black market are teenagers.
The black market will never go away but, the makers of this video are socialists and they don't understand economics. Still, they want the state to be involved. State involvement is precisely what created this mess from the very beginning! They need to stop worrying about what everyone else is doing.
This was a great doco. I've thought about this for decades. I'm an ex junkie, manufacturer and chemist myself. It's scary to think all those years ago what we would either put into things or what we would find in things. Scarier still even when I knew we didn't have the equipment to refine or process products correctly and would consume it anyway. What other option is there? The war on drugs is just looking more and more like a sham. From drugs to guns to even phone scamming now all prohibition has achieved is incarceration and death.
@@cloudymusic Thanks, Cloudy! We keep working at it over here. 18 songs recorded for Soul Twin Messiah and 14 more in teh works. Plus I've got darn near 30 of my solo songs for #TheBlueRocker! Tons of good stuff coming soon. Thanks for your support! ✌
@@EmmaDeFazio5938 I'd disagree, the leading cause of death right now in American for 18-45 year olds is Fentanyl overdose Most of those people are dying from fentanyl contaminated heroin, if there's any heroin in it at all. People are also dying from fentanyl in cocaine and meth. The main reason for legalizing these drugs is for harm reduction, you aim to keep people from dying or getting diseases, and offer them help so maybe they don't completely ruin their lives or end up dead. In my opinion none of them should be allowed to be advertised, there should be a 21 year old age restriction, aside from special cases if prescribed by a doctor, and they'd be under very thorough regulations to ensure the products are clean and of a known potency. At first there might be an increase in drug use, but all the other examples in the world show that the drug use actually decreases from the amount there was during prohibition, plus thousands of people lives could be saved, children, parents, siblings. Also, think of all the tax dollars that could be made to spend on rebuilding infrastructure, giving opportunities to neighborhoods that were most negatively affected by the drug war, there's so much positive that could come out of it. People are going to do drugs, regardless of their legal status. We need to accept that, and focus on harm reduction.
great video and I totally agree to some extent(because I have never tried any illegal drugs), But the real question is can I have one of those old CRT TVs?
Think about how many lives could be saved and how less money would have to go to an unending war. I'm no expert, but I can imagine that, as a result to legalization, the prices of (now illegal) drugs will plumit, and more money can be directed towards better goals, like more affordable housing. Surely first there will be a period of many people becoming curious and become addicted from trying drugs. But much of that "wanting to try" is also because it is prohibited, it wont be such a 'cool' thing if it is legal and in their younger years, only the 'cool guys' use it. People just need to be informed about what they are taking in, and (most of) the consequences will be for themselves. Long term I imagine, to name a few: - more money for other things, which will become more problematic if we dont act now. - less need for i.e. large scale expensive agressive operations. - less need for imprisonment, which leads to less (expensive) prisons. - less people need to work for big drug lords, more over all happyness across the world. - less deaths, not just because it becomes less popular, but also because there wont be as much accidents as a result. How I think it should be regulated, is mainly throughout pharmacies and declaration on passports that people use certain drugs. People who currently work in the drug business can seek jobs in places where drug control might be extra important, so they wont be without a job. In short: there should be a while new reshuffle on how people see drugs. Because as it is right now it is just a waste of money, resources and time.
I’m so glad vice has gone back to their roots for covering badass topics.
Vice and badass do not belong in the same hemisphere
@@jungxehuin9404 when they do videos like this they do..
@@littlecozettescrew6818 Facts. Their investigative journalism 5-10 years ago fantastic.
@@littlecozettescrew6818 you find this badass?
@@jungxehuin9404 Yep Incredibly badass
those testing tents at festivals for xtc or any drug you are planning to take is an absolute MUST ! good people !
Imagine taking a pill just to enjoy yourself... How contrived
Imagine worrying about other peoples choices or what they put in their own bodies.
@@user47362 what's the weather like up there on that big ol' horse of yours?
@@demarais2424 its when their behavior while on such drugs starts to become everyone else's problem.
@@mralexjbishop that's usually a byproduct of the illegality. They either don't know what they're getting, how much they're getting, or aren't informed of effects and expectations. Not all, if course, but a vast majority. This is still a part of harm reduction
I’ve been addicted to heroin for about 11 years, but psilocybin mushroom has helped me stay clean. 2 years clean now.
@@angelinacorine7544Yes, cole.shroomm!*
On instagrm
The trips I’ve been having have really helped me a lot.
Psychedelics are great remedies for mental health illness. Really works.
I never had a bad trip with DMT
how to end the war on drugs™:
stop buying coca-cola products until they put the good stuff back in
@DOMMEX ya how to not be white or some like that
🤣
@DOMMEX excellent opportunity to support south american farmers
😂😂
Lmfao you trademarked it 🤣
He said alcohol and tobacco are potentially dangerous. No, they're factually dangerous.
You don't seem to understand how those words work. Just because something is factually dangerous, doesn't mean it isn't potentially dangerous, for example drinking once glass is not dangerous but drinking multiple is potentially.
Alcohol and benzos are the only main drugs to cause death from withdrawal. Most of the rest of from reckless using and overdose.
@@mrgarchomp5418 I know. I've been a heroin addict for over 20 years and I've wished I were dead during withdrawal but I know you won't die from it. I'm in a residential program right now and I've been clean for a little over a year now. Keeping my fingers crossed.
Bro my grandma is 90 and has been smoking since she was 13 smoking a pack a day since she was 30
@@thomasanguita6568 well your grandma has lungs of steel, jesus.
Honestly idk what everyone is so worried about... how could legalizing drugs possibly be worse than what we’ve already experienced the last 40 years under the current strategy?
That is actually a very good point.
@@MaggotMuseum handing out 10-20 year prison sentences for minor possession of cocaine and crack is absurd too. I don’t see how throwing away someone’s life is helping anyone, helping society, or helping the overall problem
@@BostonsF1nest Also the economic and social cost of imprisoning people for 10 years is insane. Even if you don't care about the human per se there are no valid arguments for that kind of practice. That person does not pay taxes, doesn't raise their kids, don't contribute to society in any way and have to be fed, sheltered and given something to do in an environment where they automatically develop criminal knowledge, contacts and motive. It's not like prisons are drug free anyway.
It would be much worse. Imagine a world where heroin is as widespread as alcohol.
I'm not sure. As much as I love the idea of it, I can't sit here honestly and say my drug use wouldn't increase dramatically. Ease of access is the main thing that prevents me from taking a lot.
Alcohol and tobacco are just dangeous, without "potentially"
Yea
No they are potentially....Not everyone has a bad experience using them, and that's a fact.
@@MiggsMultiple Most people don't have an issue with doing ecstasy or psychedelics, but they're portrayed as dangerous for some reason.
So grateful I got clean and don't have to live that anymore... The high cost of living ain't nothing like the cost of living high.
@RyanCoomer Just don't take anything today... If you don't get loaded today you'll wake up clean. Then do the same thing all over again.
So u support legalisation?
@@cobidbeksin5200 No... I don't. I used to.
That's good song Clifton Collins
On November 4th I'll have a year clean after roughly 12 years of opiates, 3 years with crystal and benzos, and have has to live on the streets 3 times for roughly 4-7 months at a time, and trust me being addicted to something that makes you sick as fck if you don't have it while laying on the wet ground under a real-estate sign, with it being 28 degrees while it's snowing/raining you haven't eaten anything in two days, have no way of getting water, not to mention again that you feel like dying and can't barely walk because of the withdrawals wearing just a long sleeve shirt with no gloves, no hat, and just jeans on, and you're all alone... yeah it's absolutely the worst
" we can't legalize all the drugs, that's illegal."
Oregon: hold my bong.
😂😂😂😂😂😂❤️
Very accurate!
We out here in Bend Or. rn puffing tough as we watch this 😂😭
@Hairless Xoloitscuintle I have lived in Oregon for 30 years, it has been going downhill fast the last 10.
But Oregon didn't legalize it. They decriminalized it. That doesn't mean a safer legal market is forming to replace the black market. They've just stopped punishing people for engaging in the black market. It's kind of the worst of both worlds.
@@alexneuge665 The latest statement of the new drug politican was that cannabis is not broccoli.
Harm reduction is crucial especially here on CZcams as most teens are searching for advice on this very platform!
Stop stealing my culture you dam theif
@@americansniper1641 dude💀
Miss your videos man!!!
See this mug commenting on Vice all the time. Everyone forgetting when this guy got underage fans drunk and slept with em? Na just me?
With his big hair and his feminine personality he only attracted 14 year old scene girls to his channel so no wonder he took advantage
I agree with this 1000%. Yes i have a children and im also a recovering heroin addict. It wasnt heroin itself that almost killed me, it was the homeless lifestyle and being in the streets. My heart goes out to everyone suffering and helpless.
You have kids but took smack?
SCUMBAG.
How embarrassing for your kids.
I wouldn't wish addiction on my worst enemy.
I wouldn't wish sobriety on my worst enemy
It would definitely prevent prostitution and people going flat broke. I used to love the GTA radio ad for “vote yes to medicinal cocaine”
@iLoveJackingOn , That would more encourage young women to take up a (terrible) position. Sex work is dangerous.
@iLoveJackingOn Because more than likely politicians make quite the dime from things being "illegal", if you ask me.
@iLoveJackingOn Can guarantee a lot of these fucking mayors and cops are definitely on the payroll to look the other way with known traffickers and heavy moevers.
Medicinal cocaine lol
Nothing will ever prevent prostitution and it should be legal
Living in Switzerland, I can say that drug and homeless issues are taken care of very well here.
Swiss cocain bombs actually
Well, it doesn't hurt being one of the wealthiest nations on earth.
Keeping South America above water and fueling use of Swiss franc. Too sad.
@@LtKharn America is the richest nation in the history of Earth, and it hasn't helped them at all.
I had a few days in Interlaken, Lugano and Basel a few years ago on the way back from Italy. Switzerland is an absolute paradise (expensive, paradise mind you).
Meanwhile in the county that I grew up & live in in TX, they tried to give a guy who had gone to the same school that I had attended 99 years for one batch of pot brownies.
Edit: this didn’t take place at school, this took place at his dad’s apartment when he was 19. According to the story I’ve heard, the fire department was evacuating the complex due to an unrelated small kitchen fire. They knocked on his door, & they smelled weed when he opened it, so that gave probable cause for police to come & bust the door down.
After I believe 8 months in county jail, his case became a national outcry & received the attention of some higher tier lawyers who came in & somehow got him out of county jail. He then fled to California where the weed community welcomed him with open arms, and he’s likely never coming back to TX.
They gotta have been damn good then
I'm sure they were delicious, but that's a very long time!
Non violent drug crime. There are murderers that receive 20 years.
Ridiculous!
I'm in dallas, they probably were going off the fact it was at "School", and distribution
You could even gate access to legal drugs behind, say a 2-day seminar. This would mean there is still a barrier to entry into drug use and it would ensure users know safer-use and the effects of the drug on them, allowing them to make educated decisions.
Drug education should be mandatory in schools. And im not talking about the current bullshit thats in schools (all drugs are evil, weed is a gateway drug, etc), because that does more harm than good. Im talking about explaining the effects of each drug, side-effects, risks (hallucinogens if mental problems run in your family for example), how to do them safely, testing kits for fentanyl, etc.
War on drugs will end when you explain to the citizens how much it costs and how much you can tax if drugs were legal.
That will just push them back to the black market, you don't get it people are always gonna be addicted to drugs it's never going anywhere
@@electrifiedrhythm5426 exactly people are gonna be addicted regardless so you cut out the black market by legalizing all drugs and then all the crime associated with selling drugs goes away if people just go to pharmacies to get their drugs instead. You’re missing the entire point...
@@electrifiedrhythm5426 No, it won't, look at weed prices in the usa, look how much they have dropped since they are legal.
Vice still doesn't know the war on drugs was never meant to be won, but to gain money.
@electrified rhythm You're misinformed. Go research, please. And do it with an open mind. Maybe smoke a little weed. I know a lot of people who use drugs responsibly. There is no reason to punish people. It's always better to be informed. The truth is out there. You just need to not be hypocritical. I bet you have you're own vice yet you think it's fine. Coffee or soda is what comes to my mind. Sugar and caffeine are just two of the most addictive substances in the world yet i dont see many that mention it. Time to wake up and smell the coffee.
I could safely and responsibly live in the world you're describing.
It is objectively better than this one.
Let's do this.
If the young are willing to start voting for politicians willing to push these changes there may be a move forward. Nothing will happen if 80% of the oldest hit the polls while only 40% of the youngest do.
@@noxis93 Hmm sounds an awful lot like brexit - wait what?
HAHAHAHA....BRODHA I GET IT WHAT U MEANT N WHAT U HAVE IMAGINED ABOUT THIS TOPIC MIGHT B WHEN U WAS HIGH ON LSD HAHAHA....
"Objectively better"
But there is a big problem...There is no way to return the same society where we are living now !!
I've been addicted to opiates for 17/18 years, and I'm only 32. It's like a living hell.
Love your name mate. Good luck kicking that habit.
Hope you are doing better
I quit oxy cold turkey after 5 years of abuse thanks to my doctor I got up to a 250mg dose a day to stay normal I haven’t relapsed because I don’t want that life anymore you can quit too you just have to want it and be willing to deal with the withdrawal it’s not easy stay strong
"1234 we can end the drug war" I've been waiting a long time to hear that
Here's a story all about why drugs should be legalised czcams.com/video/lrZOSwLK-ds/video.html
I suggest posting sources on where people can go to fight against the war in drugs so that our passion for this moment doesn't die at the beginning of the next video that happens to play..
ROE V WADE...HER BODY?
@@moonpeach4684 I always found that ironic. Abortion being legalized because “my body my choice” but shouldn’t drugs also be labeled like that?
Ex drug addict here, currently on subaxone, love everything about this, I almost cried thinking about my past and how it could of been different on so many levels it drugs were legal. Such a sad topic for me.
don't dwell on what could of been, you have a new path in front of you, your still hear. don't live in the minute, but plan your day from the second you open your eyes in the morning. stay strong an aware. whatever you do dont take up drinking because you have stopped taking drugs. i have known far more people to die from replacing one addiction to another.
Me too. 24 years working to feed my heroin habit. Back on methadone maintenance again. For some addicts it's too late. I have spent 4 years plus half my life on drugs. Heroin and methadone. I cant function without one or the other and I always relapse when I have managed to detox. I would rather buy my gear from a pharmaceutical company that's been taxed and is clean rather than dirty smack that's been smuggled inside dead animals across the pakistan and Afghanistan borders.
@@jld7779 I think younger people wouldn't get into it if it was legal and regulated. They would have to already have an addiction to start to qualify for pharmaceutical drugs
@@jld7779 that's better though, you would feel safe because you would be safe. The problem isn't really people doing drugs, the problem is the HARM people get due to doing drugs. In a legalized and safe environment, the harm is ought to decrease substantially. And it would also narrow the possibility of people getting 'hooked' on whatever drug they are doing.
You are physically addicted to an extremely powerful synthetic opioid and you are calling yourself an ex drug addict? I understand the language in recovery can be confusing but don't you feel any sense of hypocrisy when you say that? I'm on methadone and have struggled on and off for years. I'm an addict and so are you.
This should have way more than half a million views!
Gracias, Carnales. Quite interesting reports, educational
Imagine being transparent and allowing people to have access to safety, a house, mental health care. These are people and I think we often forget that when we see them on the street. They are fighting something we can’t see and I think that’s the hardest part for them :(
I hope more people will have compassion for people with mental health issues especially since we are all facing that during a pandemic.
I hear "I wouldnt wish dopesick on my worst enemy" but I would wish it on those that look down their nose at addicts...
Behind every addict is almost always trauma
I have found on many occasions It’s not the drug or the user it’s the demons they are possessed by with out any help or intervention prior to using a drug or while trying a drug they never realised you could get high by being happy
@@Trublumatt I think there is alot of truth to that
A friend of mine 22 years old gave me this speach in our last conversation together, he had argued my concerns by stating "i know what i can handle, and as long as i know what im getting I'm fine" he died 2 days later from fetynol...
@@SMR311SMR i should clarify i don't really think even heroin should be taken recreationally by anyone...but yeh thats what he intended to use....
If it was regulated he would have atleast had a damn label to read...
@@andrewmerk like Gorilla glue? 😀
ok maybe _not_ decriminalize fentanyl since it's like 1000x times stronger than heroin. but def start decriminalizing heroin, cocaine, MDMA, etc.
That's because he was a junkie
Thank you for this video!
War on drugs is killing more than what the drugs would kill by overdose in many areas! Maybe this might be the solution. We have bars and hotels serving tea, and coffee, to alcohol and weed, but it doesn't mean we go there if we don't need or want it. It's upto the person.🥱 Great video and great topic.👍
Also it basically probihition era
Here's a story all about why drugs should be legalised czcams.com/video/lrZOSwLK-ds/video.html
Nobody thats ever declared a war on drugs, has actually ever fought one.
Okay? The majority politicians that created any laws haven't been in any. You really thought you said something smart here?
@@superbtrack_6482 I think they meant a personal war/battle with drugs not just any sort of war.
@@superbtrack_6482 funny how your trying to hate when you didn't even understand what he said
@@sm0k1nmus1c lol ikr
Ronald reagan era.
Legalize it , tax it to fund rehab and education programs completely with the goal to combat addiction properly with qualified therapists, doctors and social workers not with armed police and prison
that would be too effective and too good of a solution for society. Prison system is privately funded. They want healthy criminals that don't drain their precious free in house healthcare.
That's very smart of you, that's why you have to repeat grade 9 twice hahahaha
From an ex addict.....combating addiction properly DOESNT exist. You CANNOT help someone who doesn’t want to help THEMSELVES. Never forget that.
@@k24civic No, just legalize it so that the whole country can become another california fill with junkies hahahahaha
Taxation is theft
Love this show, one of the last true informative programs out there.
This is the best video I’ve seen in the topic
tottally right about this, but also, I love how the host came straight out of a 95" Blur music video. lol
That is what drugs does to you... :D
See kids, this is Where Drugs can get you, hosting for Vice
Underrated comment
This is England bruv innit
That vibe is totally coming back in the UK/Europe
It would be the biggest blow to organized crime ever!
What an amazing doc thank you!!!
Loved. This episode. Thanks.
Best show to educate the public on drugs and clearing the demonized atmosphere surrounding the word drugs
I recommend everyone to watch a film called "pleasure unwoven". it's a great medical film explaining how alcohol and drugs work in the brain. Talks about the lymbic system, midbrain, GABA, ETC... And best part it's not boring! 😀
@@jessejames9149 as a med school student im excited to watch that.. thanks for the recommendation
Have a good trip on Netflix is great too
YES
When ever I think about this issue the only way to “solve” the problem is legalization, we should inform people on how dangerous this drugs are but at the same time if some chose to use them ( they obviously do) at least they get them from a safe environment and not fueling criminal organizations
We already do this and it doesn't work. People know damn well what the drugs do, not one person in this world grew up never seeing a crack head. Drugs are not a disease they are a choice with consequences, any one saying they can't get off them it's a disease it's that it's this are just bullshiting it's them they don't want help. The people that want help get help and stay off. The ones that are in and out of rehab are just being pushed to go but really they want to be left alone to get high.
@@ghettogrower3499 hun hate to say this, but you're terribly incorrect. read up on scholarly articles about the changes that happen to a individuals brain when substance abuse is present. if you even wanna try to say it's a choice, that's your opinion. what about all these children being born addicted with proven & observable brain changes that make them predisposed to a life of substance abuse?? maybe a little more empathy & medical evaluation/assistance could be the solution to lowering addiction rates; obviously what we're doing now isn't working.
Who do you think is going to manufacture these drugs? A way bigger, more powerful cartel. Pfizer + Government is a partnership from hell.
@@michaelhutchings8599 come on now, comparing pharmaceutical companies to drug cartels is a bit of a stretch
@@karimbelba5597 as a pharm. tech trainee I can say that doctors are sooo careless & I see so many control 2's sold everyday..
It's hard to see our patients prescribed to so many dangerous drugs, but doctors just do whatever they want IG 🙆♀️0🤷🏻♀️ 🤷🏻♀️
In the USA drug dealers already file taxes sometimes. You can say your money came from "other sources" and then pay taxes which makes the taxman happy.
This needs to get out to more people man.. personally I got a single heroin charge at 23 and while driving.. “stupid decision” and I now have 2 felony’s been on parole for 5 years and went to jail for two months plus had to do rehab. I’ve been clean for all five years thank the lord but it’s absolutely ruined my life.
The problem with all of the legalization talk is you’re looking at the situation as a problem that needs to be solved, when the government sees it as a feature rather than a bug. The war on drugs helps the government and law enforcement more than any other single policy in the history of the United States. Ruining the lives of people with drug problems, or just casual drug users, funds the police and a large portion of the government. They need to keep those prisons full to keep their pockets full, and nothing fills prisons like the war on drugs. Turning huge swaths of the population into criminals with the stroke of a pen made it so that prisons are a booming industry, and then you factor in all the fines and fees associated with arrests, probation, drug diversion, etc. you see that this isn’t a problem in the eyes of the government, it’s a major revenue stream.
If we legalized drugs we would have to seriously rethink law enforcement as well, and as we have seen recently that’s something that the government is absolutely unwilling to do right now.
Big Facts!!!💯..."Unfortunately"
Not only that but it disrupts poor communities, and the American government dislike no one more than the poor
@@theomaiklem3413 no they love the poor, that’s where they get the folks to fill their prisons and who funds the police force with the myriad fees associated with arrest, court, probation/parole, drug diversion programs, etc. They absolutely adore the poor, so much they do everything possible to ensure the poor remain poor, because they’re the easiest group to pick on.
@@brettc6132 Sad but true 😞
They could put taxes drugs.
There will probably be a lot less crime legalizing drugs
Great unbiased truthful video sir!
I’m so glad this conversation is becoming apart of a global discussion
I like this "host," he makes me want to pierce my left ear, get a tracksuit, bottle of cider and top it all off with a Burberry hat on some random corner of a dimly lit estate in Rochdale surrounded by the soothing sounds of roaring citroens.
Oddly specific comment lol
Clapped out Citroen Saxo
No drug dealer I know dresses like that lol
@@naysaynetwork5271 oooh
@@gladtobeattheexit7385 I don't think so- not unless he had hyoid bone augmentation.
Unfortunately the world isn’t ready to hear this
Yes it is. Weed will be federally legalised by the dems this year, mark my words.
YoungBlood
Maybe look around the world and don't be so myopic
We hardly have legal CBD in France...
Red Bull was still prohibited 20 years ago.
Thermo-industrial civilization will collapse before we get legal weed.
@@verzeda So glad Biden won. Bernie would've been a comforting sitting president, but Biden isn't that bad actually
Such a great video!! Very well done, well presented and I couldn't agree more with the message. The War on Drugs is a complete failure. Drugs need to be regulated and controlled. We also shouldn't judge addicts as having some kind of moral failure. They are people that need help and compassion.
Here's a story all about why drugs should be decriminalised czcams.com/video/lrZOSwLK-ds/video.html
They did fail at some point or in some way in life if they are "addicts"
Being a drug addict shouldn't be taken lightly, drug addicts do not have such a bad reputation out of no where.
Very good man :)
Imagine geekin out talking to a Pharmacist to get more coke😂 I'm ALL for it!
@Ab T 🤨🤨🤨 🤡
I rather be around gun owners than a bunch of junkies
@@spaceoutmisfit1738 you are surrounded by a bunch of junkies, that's why there are drugs... People are always going to use.
@Ab T Seriously what was the point of that? What made you feel the need to comment that and how do you think that changed the world for the better?
...or, in a legal drugs setting, even getting prescription drugs without prescription: you sign a waiver in which you declare that you take full responsability for what you'll do with them... Hand me ten oxys plus three or four xanax, doc, please. Than you move to the proper hemp/smart shop shop and buy a couple of ganja spliffs, last stop to the sueprmarket for buying a couple of beers: i'll do it in days, not in a single night, BECAUSE I KNOW THAT TEN OXYS AND FOUR XANAX ALL AT ONCE CAN KILL ME! SELF - RESPOSABILITY!!! On the same level, if you buy alcohol, you receive an instruction paper on how to safely drink, same for tobacco products and coffe/caffeinated beverages, you firm a waiver where you take responsability for your behaviour, and then you go on your way! Ketamine in England and Salvia Divinorum in Italy in the early 2000's were legal, BTW. Some fucked their bladder up, which is sad enough, some had a good time of self knowledge and universe exploring. With salvia, some freaked the hell out, some discovered parallel universes. With them being illegal ,the situation remains the same, or gets worse. WAR ON PROHIBITION!!! REGULAMENTATION AND LEGALIZATION RIGHT NOW!!!
"one two three four, we can end the drug war"
What a powerful message.
not sure if sarcasm
so deep
@@idek3881 hes not wrong
@@doyoumakeittotheclouddistr4132 he is tho
very wrong
I really hope in my lifetime a legal drug market is established. The human cost of prohibition is unacceptable
Cartels would be cruel to innocent civilians in México, if you're gonna legalized at leasts give us some time to kill all the scum
Not all drugs are equal and some are too harmful to be regulated and legalized by the government at all.
How exactly do you legalize Fentanyl, Carfentanil and heroin, when very little of a dose is fatal?? If you're going to limit doses, then you aren't changing anything, as dealers will fill that void. The only solution is to destroy the drug cartels with military airstrikes. I'm the only one saying the truth that no one wants to hear.
@@douche8980 did u watch the video? tell me what drugs are too harmful bc its most likely they are dangerous bc of cuts or contaminants, and not the drug itself.
@@douche8980 adults can make their own choices if they have no mental disabilities and not causing harm to society
Beautiful video :)
Nothing will change. Here in Canada it's much cheaper to get your marijuana off your local dealer or through the internet. The government stores are expensive and the quality is notoriously low.
Finally a government monopolistic program that doesn't impact the free market
Fr? I saw some good stuff from 4 to 12 dollars a gram online
@@irrelevant3464 “4 dollars a gram” and “good stuff” should not be in the same sentence
@@ansharyan710 It is better than 10 dollar a g street stuff.
Same thing in Colorado #makeweedillegal again I can’t stand the prices these dispensary’s throw at us
Ya can’t kill drugs, it’s like a hydra always respawning heads whenever they get chopped off.
Many people are too stupid to understand.
Well said
So let's give up and allow everyone to get as high as possible instead of attacking addiction and overdoses we embrace it! Shut up junkie
@@Cbd_7ohm You sound stupid af advocating drug addiction. Just because the war is massively unsuccessful we're supposed to embrace drug addiction instead of fighting against it? Drugs are drugs because they are substances people enjoy themselves with, they aren't just substances you can put in your body because "it's your right". And more importantly, they are substances you enjoy that literally kill you if you keep enjoying it. So hell no, attack addiction instead of welcoming it.
@@imfine6904 You're stupid. Attacking addiction doesn't work. That doesn't even make sense.
This is a ridiculous proposition. There will never be a full decriminalization of hard drugs nor should there ever be. We simply need to decriminalize all drugs for the user's sake, not the producer's.
Legalizing drugs means stop arresting vulnerable people who already have enough problems
I’m a recovering heroin addict and all my charges are stemmed from my addiction I’ve done over 3 years. I’d love to see some type of resolution. I live in Akron Ohio and I’m pretty sure we are the 2nd state for overdoses. I love seeing a video like this. Locking me up just makes me a better criminal when I come out
Cleveland here. Ive done alot to help raise awareness about harm reduction. I try to explain to people the importance of safe injection sights, how legalizing and regulating drugs helps lower crime rate and addiction rates and lowers the stigma. All some people here is 'letting druggies have access to their fix' and think it will make things wore, even though I present them with facts and studies that show the complete opposite. I'm like 'how it that *war on drugs* goin for ya'? People can be so ignorant.
@@jef9635 yea man the people who don’t want the education about it or are very ignorant to it and look like at us like what u said about just wanting the fix. There is 100% proof harm reduction works. 9/10 too people who aren’t addicts have still been effected by an addict(s) in some way and to not want the education sickens me fr I went thru hell and back to get where I am now
Or pissed at the world because lets face it the only person you hurt is yourself.
@@jef9635 Its a life time of pure propaganda. Its really not there fault they need to be educated insted of being propagandized.
Drug use is trash. As a former addict, tell me how to stop drug use and addiction not how to make drugs legal. That’s fu ck all in the battle
I was a heroin addict a long time ago and the only thing that helped was injectable methadone I was addicted to the rush of it rushing into my brain . It takes the criminal element out of it the stealing, scoring ect I was so stable I ran a successful business for 9 years .
then suddenly the government was saying NO its too expensive yet its more expensive now with crime ect oral methadone just don't work aswel ..I lost everything.... I have now been clean 13 years this summer ...
Yes know a few ppl who where on injectable meth. Let's not 4get the infamous smack ciggies from the chemist or the diamorphine (heroin) tablets ppl used 2 get from UK pharmacies
@@linzianna stick at it bro ... life's too short
If I was rich I would shoot for the rush forever.......omg the hydro pill rush, ,I'm on methadone now it sucks
Can I ask what country you are from and when this was? I have never heard of injectable methadone! So interesting. I can say that methadone probably saved my life, and it has been an invaluable tool in my recovery. 15 years in recovery, even longer than that off of heroin. It's absolutely possible, for anyone who is still struggling.
Was 20 years ago though and they was trying to come it down then . Especially after the death of Amy whinehouse
You jump straight into the old idea of "drug pushers" at 4:15. I've been around the block more than once and i've never-ever met a drug pusher.
I remember as a kid growing up, the DARE presentations, at school and the boys and girls club. The adults I grew up around provided clear info on the effects of illegal drugs, and of the before and after of people addicted. Honestly, scary stuff. Being around informative, honest adults really influenced what is most important to me- my health. This video really puts it out there too. Everyone deserves to have good health. Health is wealth.
DARE was a joke. At least when the presentation was given at my school they went all in on All Drugs Are Bad Yes We Mean Everything-- when I told the person doing the presentation I was on drugs to regulate my seizure disorder they got really flustered and you could see them start to visibly sweat that this ten year old just threw a massive wrench in their big "uplifting" talk. I thought this had to have been an isolated incident until I started to meet other people my age on the internet who said the same things.
DARE was a joke they only caused harm its about control and money and getting off having power
I've thought this was the way to go for over 30 years but not many will listen to the reasoning. My uncle is a missionary in Portugal (a very conservative man) and even he admits the benefits he's seen since decriminalization in 2001.
All studies coming out of Portugal are so promising. Rehabilitation for abusers, not making them criminals, because they have an addiction health issue. It’s not a choice.
There is a good TEDx talk about this and they go over Portugal 💪🏻❤️
@@KimSkid2k What about people that are occasionally using softer drugs like psychedelics or mdma and are never addicted, manage to live healthy and productive life?
But in the US if you get caught with anything on you your still going to jail, it's still criminalized they are just SAYING that it's not criminalized but it still is, at least it is in Wisconsin where I live. People are still being arrested for overdoses. A friend of mine had a seizure after doing some " supposed heroin" it wasn't an overdose it was a seizure but her boyfriend thought she was overdosing and gave her narcan and called 911. A detective came with the EMTs and apparently the detective was searching her pockets while she was still having a seizure and even looked inside her bra but her boyfriend took the drugs off her before they got there. And the boyfriend tripped out on the detective when he pulled her open. And then he asked him where's the needle she used and he said I got rid of it already and the detective was pissed and said that was evidence. All the detective cared about was trying to find a way to get her charged criminally but he didn't have anything. Now this is a very smart girl so even though she had to let them take her to the ER she knew that the ER couldn't make her stay so they could do a blood drug test on her for her to be charged with internal possession. So as soon as the doctor came in she said I'm fine and I don't need to be here give me my discharge papers and they did. By the time she was walking out the door her boyfriend had called a friend for a ride and was walking up to the hospital doors. Then the detective pulled in and jumped out of his car and said "hey where do you think your going? And she said "back home you dick"!!!! Lol 😂🤣 and he asked her did they do a blood test?" She said no I refused treatment and I left" apparently this detective was so pissed off that she knew her rights and he didn't have anything to charge her with and this was only like 3 years ago now. So trust and believe that they are still trying to criminalize any kind of drug use even going as far as to go to the hospital to find out what was all in her system so that they could charge her with internal possession. So even though they are saying their not they still are 😡🤬.
5:21 just like a drug dealer can sell pot and heroin or cocaine, or both, or more, a doctor can push treatment. and if your dealer is trying to get you off of drugs, instead of on them, and trying to get you functional, instead of letting you beg, you and society as a whole are probably in a better position to thrive.
Also I think few addicts want to be addicts.
So the fact that help is available with no fear of jail is good
@@conradkorbol agreed
I've sold for awhile and when people buy too much, I start to let them know that they should chill out or maybe flat out stop. I let them know what's in it and what it's doing to them and alot of addicts just dont care, they just want to feel numb. Im happy to see Alot of them have stopped but I agree that legalizing it would decrease users. People wouldn't hide it as much and people would deal with it like you deal with Alcoholics. (never meth, crack, or heroin) Selling someone one of those is the same as killing them
@@PunisherFord what a horrible argument to make. This is youtube so I won't focus on statistics; but if you are bored, delve into the dramatic rise of lover disease, and more specifically that which is a result of alcohol abuse..
I'm all for the first amendment, but peelike you should have an asterisk when providing "data".
@@PunisherFord it is a difficult and subtle issue, one that can be better dealt with in the light of day than in the darkness of an alley. i typed another comment and deleted it because of fear of misunderstanding, it is that much of a mess. hell, we can even go to the violence that dealers deal with and in, what recourse do they have if someone robs them? this issue just bounces back and forth with those who try to stand above saying "just don't do it" while taking vicodin or some crap like that to relax. it is a giant mess, and the only solution is sunlight.
Legalisation will also not only reduce harm for users, but also for all the people in countries like mexico, colombia and brazil! hundreds of thousands of people die at the hands of the cartels, both people involved and people who had no involvement. Legalisation would also reduce insane amounts of corruption in countries where cartels have a heavy influence!
I am currently reading Ioan Grillo’s new book “Blood, Gun, Money”. It is about the iron river of guns going from the USA and south across the border. Very interesting and easy to read.
Seeing the addicts in the UK when it was somewhat legal to do heroine compared to the US really makes me think this could potentially work
it would definitely work better than the current system
How old are you? Wasn't the UK in the 1920s???
@@ilovedogs2642 how old are you? The UK is the United Kingdom and consists of England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales.
@@camillapalmer82 what the hell are you on about... He said when it was somewhat legal to do heroin which hasn't been since the 20s and the way he said it made it sound like he'd visibly seen the addicts 100 years ago. As if you tried to explain what the UK was...
@@ilovedogs2642 did you not watch the video? They talked about this and that is what he is referring to. The British system was in place into the 60s where anyone who needed it could get a prescription for heroin and they had a fraction of the users and diseases and safety issues as the US during that time.
I’m all for it, but I can image waiting 10 hours just to get into pharmacy
Lol.
I doubt it people dont care about drugs when they got work and Bill's to pay, oregon has low unemployment this would affect only poor communities in the south
@@waflletoast11 you assume too much. Silicon Valley is known for its psychedelic use(micro dosing) in the tech industry.
@@jjackson4727 exactly.
Lol yes going be a long line
The video which truly opens discuss and tackles it a serious way. Honestly, living in Argentina, I see how drugdealing is destroying our societies, they are gaining so much power. Having said that, I do not think there is another solution about of legalizing.
man these are the good good documentaries vice makes. stuff like this i think a lot of people agree with
As an addict in recovery, I can tell you for sure if we make things legal and in the open, it will help bring down the numbers of addicts and abuse. Secrecy plays a huge role in addiction
Best of luck in your recovery dude. With some public education and political will I reckon we can kill the war on drugs eventually
I'm in recovery too. It would of been harder to stay off drugs if I can go to the store and get them. I can delete dealers numbers, I can't get rid of a store. Also I never made it to aa without being forced by the state. Just something to think about. There are a lot of solid arguments for legalization as well.it might help to legalize.🤷
@@stevejones8550 if legalization means drugs can be sell in stores, and you say that being in recovery is harder when the drugs are being sold in stores, so how is legalization helping recovery anyway?
@@progunjack5556 I'm saying it's possible that legalization of drugs might not help people in recovery. In certain countries llike Denmark it seems like legalization of drugs is helping. More people are getting clean, deaths are down, transfer of desease is down, and drug use is down. However... I'm saying that might not be the case in America. It might help, it might not. I just know I probably wouldn't be in recovery if the legal system didn't push me towards it.
Legalizing would help because instead of spending money keeping people in jail it could go towards treatment that's currently underfunded and not widely available
Always remember: Correlation does not equal Causation.
People talk about gateway drugs but every hard drug user has eaten food so with gateway logic food > drugs
AMEN! 👏
ur pfp is a walnut but ur name is potato. you confuse me
@@imperialloyalist4799 be sensitive, im a....
Transplant 🥔🤣
The gateway is the underground market not the item in question.
@@keepcalmsavehyrule don’t amen that’s, there is no logic to it. Ignorance shouldn’t be praised.
Well done journalism here; fair, straightforward and a clear proposal for governments everywhere to recognize, and hopefully consider adding to their dockets…
Good stuff, so true.
Had many discussions with my parents on the subject, and this verbalises so well why drug harm can and should be reduced by legalisation. Thanks!
Here's a story all about why drugs should be decriminalised czcams.com/video/lrZOSwLK-ds/video.html
Not really great to completely legalize it, I know so many people who fall for temptations, now your telling me you want kids to share cocaine instead of cigs/alcohol at a young age... If its legalized it would have to be extremely limited and reviewed depending on how strong/dangerous the drug is. Crystal Meth is not Marijuana for example.
End the war on drugs and end the war on consciousness!
Roe. V wade ..." Her body"
That's exactly what it is, a war against consciousness.
Definately on board with harm reduction as someone who has been on &off drugs my whole life I know for a fact that if we had policies based on harm reduction my family and friends & myself would have had completely different lives and less shameful results for future decision making and lifestyle choices
Here's a story all about why drugs should be decriminalised czcams.com/video/lrZOSwLK-ds/video.html
That was excellent.
I want to try ecstasy, why do I have to risk my life to obtain it
Try 🍄s instead🤣 Most ecstasy will be cut with methamphetamine. Street drugs are usually cut. Real prescription drugs are pure but people sell fakes as well. If you want to experiment, be safe and responsible.
Stick to the plant homies though 🌳 and 🍄s
Three very important words: substance test kit.
@@tylerstrippin9630 I'm only 21, but in all my years being around drugs I've never seen a user or a dealer use a substance test kit. They completely should! But I feel like its safer to just stick to plant homies 🌳🍄
Buy a Testkit, test you’re drugs. MDMA is the best drug out of all of them. If you’re in the Eu then you’re MDMA isn’t cut most likely
@@JJ-me4yu you obviously are partying with complete fucking idiots.... by the age of 16 I had seen more tester kits then I could count.......... there 75$ online dude........
Vice finally has some really good people talking about topics they really know about love to see it
0:56....Rocky Mountain High Dispensary!!!! I've been there before!! June 2017, I drove from Toledo to the Big Basin state park in California and I stopped in Denver for a week. Garden of the Gods, Colorado Rockies baseball and watched MetallicA at Mile High! Picture next to my comments is me at the Denver show.
It's about time someone has started this type of awareness. I'm just concerned that giving over the power of this stuff to the government is that they will have limits as to how much they can give you per day and the amount needed is going to be different for everyone and for the people who have been getting fentanyl instead of actual heroin, real heroin won't be strong enough for that person, period, that person is going to need to be able to get fentanyl. Especially if they have been doing that for a couple years now.
There's 0 authority in the US Constitution for the State to say what an individual can put in their own body.
The states don't have a backbone to stand on the 10th amendment
There's also a difference between decriminalization and legalization genius
I’m pretty sure that under the constitution states are allowed to make these things called laws. Everything isn’t about the constitution, it just makes you seem like one of those people that regurgitate talking points from fox.
Instead use actual facts like harm reduction is proven to actually work
@@reidyo5404 it's called the 10th amendment not a talking point it's a fact the war on drugs on a federal level is unconstitutional if you understand law and how it's supposed to be applied it should be the state's right to set law in each individual State the fed has been overstepping its authority for the last 75 years
u finna do meth? go ahead see what it does.
I would love to be able to buy pure heroin or MDMA instead of worrying about a possible deadly cutting agent. I wouldn't have to test my stash anymore.
I accidentally bought fake MDMA once and it was hell. Thankfully I was okay but for 48 hours I was just a mess and couldn't stop vomiting.
I don't understand how anyone would be willing to sell fake/laced drugs but I guess profit comes before anything else for some people.
@@KKISCRAZYFUL did you ever find out what you actually bought and took?
@@mitchellbailey4906 I don't really know but someone else who took it said they thought it was something called "meow". But we never got it tested.
@@KKISCRAZYFUL ah meow, it's 4-mmc drug that's been getting more popular lately
Here in Germany you cant even test your drugs.
6:07 It's not 0 overdoses, it's 0 overdose deaths - due to presence of others and nolaxane or similar counters
That’s literally what he said
“There have been 0 recorded overdose deaths…”
Brilliant!
My only hangup on the sale of these drugs for everyone is ive listened to a lot of people say things like if someone offered me heroin id take it even after years of sobreity. They no longer put themselves in situations where they see people who use or go to areas that you can easily get it. What do they do when they could easily get it off the market? There's no natural high on earth thats comparable to these drugs. Its hard for me to get on board with it because of that reason.
Idk what to say about someone offering you drugs, but as for buying them a system could be put in place where you inform the pharmacies of your past addiction and ask them to permanently blacklist you from buying certain drugs. I do agree with you that it’s a dangerous thing for recovering addicts, but I am sure that there is a viable approach that minimizes harm and promotes education and healthy use. Also congratulations on your sobriety!
@@joshlentz7468 Perhaps that would be a good solution, and it was a hypothetical. Thank you but i've never been addicted to any substance other than my vape haha.
Most normies would have no idea what kind of lifestyle they were getting into and couldn’t handle it
Can't wait to try some of these 'over the counter drugs" lmao
Opium grows out of the ground and is legal to grow for the most part in the USA
Grab your self some dextromethorphan... In the medicine isle.. I think normies call it "cough syrup".
Another great video, very handsome shirt. A++
Alcohol is well-regulated (if perhaps a bit too strictly) in Norway. You can only buy wine and spirits at the governmental wine monopoloy, but beer under 4.7% at supermarkets. Commercials for alcohol and tobaco are completely illegal.
This is crucial especially now in the time of TikTok where microdosing etc is being romanticised
tiktok is were absolute stupidity is romantisized.....its crack for the low attention span idiots of the world
absolutely beautiful message
BEST VICE VIDEO/TOPIC IVE EVER SEEN HANDS DOWN! ONE OF THE BEST VIDEOS ON CZcams PERIOD. "END THE FAILED WAR ON DRUGS!"
Beautiful the only way forward for all of our people 💚💛❤
We need more of this!
That’s great and all but I live in Canada and weed is legal and I still by off the black market. It’s cheaper and they deliver to your door. I can’t see the black market ever going away
The regulated market is still in its infancy. You’ve had a fair few teething problems, not least adequate supply and cost. These things will iron out eventually. It will likely get to the point where the black market won’t be able to compete. Even if that day never comes, at least you have the option. That option is an even greater necessity for drugs like MDMA and Heroin.
I was disappointed when I went to Vancouver and didn't see a single dispensary. Where I live in California I can order from one of several Cannabis dispensaries that deliver. The only people who use the black market are teenagers.
The black market will never go away but, the makers of this video are socialists and they don't understand economics. Still, they want the state to be involved. State involvement is precisely what created this mess from the very beginning! They need to stop worrying about what everyone else is doing.
Where in Canada do you live?
@@iowasenator SAY IT AGAIN FOR THE PEOPLE IN THE BACK!!!
This was a great doco.
I've thought about this for decades.
I'm an ex junkie, manufacturer and chemist myself.
It's scary to think all those years ago what we would either put into things or what we would find in things. Scarier still even when I knew we didn't have the equipment to refine or process products correctly and would consume it anyway. What other option is there?
The war on drugs is just looking more and more like a sham.
From drugs to guns to even phone scamming now all prohibition has achieved is incarceration and death.
Here's a story all about why drugs should be decriminalised czcams.com/video/lrZOSwLK-ds/video.html
Vibrational spectroscopy! nice
Very good work once again, Vice! Thank you for making sense of something that is so deeply embedded in controversy, manipulation and programming.
Here's a story all about why drugs should be decriminalised czcams.com/video/lrZOSwLK-ds/video.html
@@cloudymusic Great vid! Is that you? "The science is saying that tobacco's more harmful than ecstasy"... Love it! ~Evan
Wanna check out one of ours?
@@cloudymusic czcams.com/video/FR1udhT0Lik/video.html
@@SOULDocumentary Nice one man, sounding really good!!
@@cloudymusic Thanks, Cloudy! We keep working at it over here. 18 songs recorded for Soul Twin Messiah and 14 more in teh works. Plus I've got darn near 30 of my solo songs for #TheBlueRocker! Tons of good stuff coming soon. Thanks for your support! ✌
This series is great, perfect to share with people that haven't really thought about legalizing drugs.
My idea is I think we could legalize cocaine but not the harder things like heroin or meth
@@EmmaDeFazio5938 I'd disagree, the leading cause of death right now in American for 18-45 year olds is Fentanyl overdose
Most of those people are dying from fentanyl contaminated heroin, if there's any heroin in it at all.
People are also dying from fentanyl in cocaine and meth.
The main reason for legalizing these drugs is for harm reduction, you aim to keep people from dying or getting diseases, and offer them help so maybe they don't completely ruin their lives or end up dead.
In my opinion none of them should be allowed to be advertised, there should be a 21 year old age restriction, aside from special cases if prescribed by a doctor, and they'd be under very thorough regulations to ensure the products are clean and of a known potency.
At first there might be an increase in drug use, but all the other examples in the world show that the drug use actually decreases from the amount there was during prohibition, plus thousands of people lives could be saved, children, parents, siblings.
Also, think of all the tax dollars that could be made to spend on rebuilding infrastructure, giving opportunities to neighborhoods that were most negatively affected by the drug war, there's so much positive that could come out of it.
People are going to do drugs, regardless of their legal status. We need to accept that, and focus on harm reduction.
@@Toddis Huh okay
great video and I totally agree to some extent(because I have never tried any illegal drugs), But the real question is can I have one of those old CRT TVs?
Think about how many lives could be saved and how less money would have to go to an unending war. I'm no expert, but I can imagine that, as a result to legalization, the prices of (now illegal) drugs will plumit, and more money can be directed towards better goals, like more affordable housing.
Surely first there will be a period of many people becoming curious and become addicted from trying drugs. But much of that "wanting to try" is also because it is prohibited, it wont be such a 'cool' thing if it is legal and in their younger years, only the 'cool guys' use it. People just need to be informed about what they are taking in, and (most of) the consequences will be for themselves.
Long term I imagine, to name a few:
- more money for other things, which will become more problematic if we dont act now.
- less need for i.e. large scale expensive agressive operations.
- less need for imprisonment, which leads to less (expensive) prisons.
- less people need to work for big drug lords, more over all happyness across the world.
- less deaths, not just because it becomes less popular, but also because there wont be as much accidents as a result.
How I think it should be regulated, is mainly throughout pharmacies and declaration on passports that people use certain drugs. People who currently work in the drug business can seek jobs in places where drug control might be extra important, so they wont be without a job.
In short: there should be a while new reshuffle on how people see drugs. Because as it is right now it is just a waste of money, resources and time.