It's refreshing to hear you're views on these issues. Legalising drugs certainly will reduce drug dealing but IMO it wont stop drug taking, which is the national issue. As you said it will never be stopped but it can be dramatically reduced.
You will never stop drug taking, I don't know how I can make this point any clearer. All prohibition has done is make smugglers billions of dollars every year. 2004-5 figures estimated that Australians spend $7 billion on drugs in one year and we are a small country of only 20 million people. The world drug trade is over $400 billion per year and an estimated 1% of the entire world GDP. This is despite the war on drugs and the billions spent in the war on drugs, Australia spend almost $4 billion, the US spends over $20 billion each year alone. This is all money that could be getting spend on health, education and infrastructure rather than stopping 1% of smuggled drugs from getting into a country and telling kids to just say no.
If I can use smoking as an example. I don;t have facts but it's common knowledge that the % of smokers has declined consistently over time. Education anti smoking campaigns and "prohibition" are the reasons. A higher rate of non-smoking areas haven't stopped smoking but have made it less convenient. Anti Smoking campaigns have had a bigger impact.
Drug taking is the issue, the same as smoking was about 20 years ago. The anti-smoking education program you'll find has been successful over time in educating the use of cigarettes kills (Smoking Kills). If I can use your facts that more people use drugs than cigarettes ("The fact that there are 60-90% more adult drug users than smokers in Australia"). This suggests that the education anti smoking programs have been a success. As I don't have facts I think everyone can agree that this has been successful in reducing the amount of smokers in Australia.
You can't use smoking as an example, it's a legal product, there is no prohibition of smoking because I can just walk down to a milk bar, servo or 7-11 and buy it. The only restrictions are on WHERE you can smoke, that is not prohibition. The fact that smoking is legal is why we can deal with it's health issues properly, because people know it's bad for you, people know it kills you and people are not ashamed to admit they smoke and want to quit. These facts are not always true with all drugs, sure some are dangerous, but some are only dangerous because they are getting made by backyard chemists with who knows what going into it.
Recreational drugs are the same as Alcohol consumption or smoking cigarettes. Alcohol and Cigarettes are legalised but we still have problems with drink driving, alcohol abuse, lung cancer etc.
So? People are taking drugs anyway, we already know the health issues, so what's your point?
So I don't think you can say legalising drugs like ecstacy, cocaine and ice (for examples) will stop youths and experimenters from taking drugs to enhance there "party" experience at a club, event or party. Drugs will still be able to be purchased at clubs for $5, cheaper than alcohol and without the weight gain and hangover in the morning.
I never said legalising drugs will stop youths from taking them, it won't, that's not the point. As I said before, you CAN'T STOP PEOPLE TAKING DRUGS. Also it won't be a pill for $5 that would just be stupid, prices should come down, but simply to world average prices and the bulk of it would be tax, just like alcohol and tobacco.
Just like smoking the more education there is out there on drug taking with time generations will be wiser on how dangerous it is.
Maybe it's naive but I think following the smoking model is the best way to approach drug use.
Yes, you are spot on, have it as a legal substance so the education can be about the risks and harm minimisation strategies rather than just the scare tactics that exist now. Your comparison to tobacco as a reason to keep drugs illegal are ridiculous, there is no comparison, but you are correct in that it should be the model on how all drugs are treated.
I re-read you post, we're having an discussion on ways to stop drug addiction and abuse. "None of it matters" well it does matter when a high percentage of people are dieing from drug abuse.
What is a high percentage? I'm sorry but I couldn't disagree with you more, that is just wrong.
As I've already pointed out, less people die from drugs than both tobacco and alcohol. This is even with more people using drugs than taking tobacco. Again as I've already pointed out, no one has ever died from smoking marijuana, it is almost impossible to die from MDMA use.
Most heroin overdoses are from impurities and fluctuating strength due to it being an unregulated substance. There is no coincidence that when the strength of street heroin goes up, so does the amount of overdoses.
Edit - I can only find US annual death figures but they are as follows.
Tobacco - 390,000 deaths per year
Alcohol - 80,000 deaths per year
Passive smoking - 50,000 deaths per year
Cocaine - 2,200 deaths per year
Heroin - 2,000 deaths per year
Asprin - 2,000 deaths per year
Marijuana - 0 (never been 1)
All drugs combined - 4,500 deaths per year (or under 1% of those killed by tobacco and alcohol combined)
In fact tobacco kills more people in the US each year than all the illegal drugs combined have killed in the last century
Source - National Institute on Drug Abuse + other Federal government sources