• stealth_cookies@lemmy.ca
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    7 days ago

    Pretty much, you need to invest in all the pillars to deal with the drug addiction epidemic. Just decriminalizing doesn’t solve the problem for society as a whole, the non-drug using public also needs to see a marked decrease in drug users on the street and reduced crime for a program to be a true success.

    I said from say one that this was doomed to fail because they weren’t primarily investing in mental health and addiction treatment that was sorely needed. Of course that is the expensive and hardest part. Decriminalizing drugs is the “quick and easy” part.

    • Canaconda@lemmy.ca
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      7 days ago

      Yup. Really this is all just a vain attempt to avoid the unavoidable. Either we house the homeless or we’re just paying more to put them up in prisons and psych wards.

      I say “them,” but >50% of Canadians are living paycheque to paycheque and would be homeless within 3 months if they lost their jobs. So it’s us.

      Either we guarentee housing for us all or we pay more today to throw ourselves in jail/nuthouse tomorrow.

      • maplesaga@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        The problem I think is these are drug addicts.

        How do you safely maintain the housing, what do the contractors do when they’re doing meth as the pipes are flooding?

        Its like taking care of violent mentally handicapped adults, or like pitbulls.

        • Canaconda@lemmy.ca
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          4 days ago

          Yes that happens but ratios matter. Apply the 80:20 rule and you find that 80% of incidents are perpetrated by the top 20% of perpetrators.

          Invert that and you find that 80% of incidents are perpetrated by people with a higher aptitude for intervention.

          Than you also need to appreciate that there is an underlying, over arching, and penetrating, theme of “too little too late” in our welfare system.

    • non_burglar@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Yes, this exactly.

      So many proponents of decriminalization point to Portugal, but Portugal also put massive effort into the other infrastructures required to make addiction a health problem instead of a crime problem. Clinics, destigmatization through education, recovery programs, these are all needed for this to have been successful.

      My wife is a nurse in BC, and she said in this hellish year, addicts were demanding a “space to use” right in the hospital. No additional security, no training on handling addiction, nothing.