It's time to legalise drugs and for the government to control them in the same way they do tobacco and alcohol.
Actually this is the way forward. Would put a lot of criminals out of business.
It's time to legalise drugs and for the government to control them in the same way they do tobacco and alcohol.
I am not sure about this, drug use and addictions are very complex issues.
Would I want this at the end of my road, probably not.
There are many questions.
I suspect it will help the minority of the hapless heroin addicts, but it might have greater consequences that are less attractive.
Does it encourage addicts from throughout the UK to see Brighton as a haven for drug use, a more comfortable place to be an addict maybe a kind of addict migration.
Having seen 4 school friends die as a direct result of heroin abuse, I cannot agree with the 'vulnerable person syndrome' as told by the post above, you shouldn't lend such an obvious excuse to a terrible life choice.
I saw opportunity, accessibility and an easy acceptance within their chosen punk lifestyle, it was ok to take smack so they continued and they died.
There is an undoubted progression through the drug spectrum too, something why I am opposed to legalisation and always suspicious when there is an easing of any drug enforcement.
Any initiatives that when examined might actually increase drug use, even if more safely is a great risk.
Its called education. You seemed to be lacking it.What is that supposed to tell me?
Actually this is the way forward. Would put a lot of criminals out of business.
I am not sure about this, drug use and addictions are very complex issues.
Would I want this at the end of my road, probably not.
There are many questions.
I suspect it will help the minority of the hapless heroin addicts, but it might have greater consequences that are less attractive.
Does it encourage addicts from throughout the UK to see Brighton as a haven for drug use, a more comfortable place to be an addict maybe a kind of addict migration.
Having seen 4 school friends die as a direct result of heroin abuse, I cannot agree with the 'vulnerable person syndrome' as told by the post above, you shouldn't lend such an obvious excuse to a terrible life choice.
I saw opportunity, accessibility and an easy acceptance within their chosen punk lifestyle, it was ok to take smack so they continued and they died.
There is an undoubted progression through the drug spectrum too, something why I am opposed to legalisation and always suspicious when there is an easing of any drug enforcement.
Any initiatives that when examined might actually increase drug use, even if more safely is a great risk.
The social experiment goes on, should attract a few more to the town though, free drugs, then free accommodation, financial suppport and a great burden on the local tax payer,oh and a few more GREEN voters!!
I would rather have seen this pilot happen in more than one location i.e. one in Brighton, one in Bristol and one in Newcastle and for the advantages to be assessed accordingly. I think selecting one town doesn't mean that it will work nationally. I also wouldn't want Brighton to be seen as the 'go to' place for safe drug taking. That puts undue pressure on the town.
My immediate thoughts are that this is a good idea. I think we need to look at how we help people manage themselves off drugs and how towns can deal with the problem of drug taking and the knock on effects this has.
I think it's positive that a new approach is being considered to help tackle this huge problem. Expecting a different result by just doing the same thing is idiocy.
I used to think that everyone has a choice and they just need more self discipline but after a few years of working with vulnerable young people I realised how naive my thinking was. You realise that many choices are already made for these young people when they are born or where they grow up, the mental health effects of neglect, of poverty, of lack of aspiration around them. Our resilience is created as we go through life, we're not born with it. Most drug issues are not just drug issues in isolation. They are a small part of a load of other problems. Drug use may simply be their coping startegy for dealing with a pain that won't go away.
There are many reasons that people take drugs and yet a good friend of mine in my social group started by 'skinning up' in the toilets at clubs in the early 80s, of a group of 15 he was the only one serious on this. Next he was smoking more serious stuff and then after giving his mother hell for a decade and having a child along the way he shot up some stuff in the bath and died there and then. His circumstances were no different to the others in the group, granted we don't know what goes on in the minds of others, but it was not in any way a hard luck, bad upbringing situation. My point is, that he started on recreational and it led to his eventual death, saw it first hand and worse still missed his funeral because I was serving overseas. DRugs misuse affects many more peolple than those taking tem!!
Its called education. You seemed to be lacking it.
I pondered something based on my own experience i.e of the people (2) that I've personally known to become addicted to heroin and have it take over every facet of their lives, should they be lumped into the same debate as those who take a few substances at the weekend but hold down jobs and unassuming lives for the rest of the time.
I am not a fan of a softening approach, it facilitates greater use and therefore more victims.
I think it's positive that a new approach is being considered to help tackle this huge problem. Expecting a different result by just doing the same thing is idiocy.
I used to think that everyone has a choice and they just need more self discipline but after a few years of working with vulnerable young people I realised how naive my thinking was. You realise that many choices are already made for these young people when they are born or where they grow up, the mental health effects of neglect, of poverty, of lack of aspiration around them. Our resilience is created as we go through life, we're not born with it. Most drug issues are not just drug issues in isolation. They are a small part of a load of other problems. Drug use may simply be their coping startegy for dealing with a pain that won't go away.
Fair point about the multi-city approach, but it has to be seen to work first. I don't agree it will necessarily make Brighton a magnet for users.
There won't be a policy of just anyone bowling along - these would have to be properly supervised people already on programmes.
I agree. Brighton is a magnet for users anyway. There are various reasons for this but I really do not think this new approach will alter the numbers coming to Brighton.
Of course nobody holding down a job and leading an unassuming life has ever progressed to dependancy. Everyone believes they are the exception and can stop whenever they like - there are plenty of those on here.
BTW the insults go over my head so dont waste your time posting them.