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motorola_phone t1_je9jlk4 wrote

as someone whose hometown has arguably the worst drug and homeless problem in the nation (and we actually did decriminalize all drugs), decriminalization here isn't as easy or simple as it is in Portugal and imo it's more of a band aid fix

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Nolubrication t1_je9jyo1 wrote

Sure it is. You take all that money being wasted on enforcement and incarceration and divert it to health services. You're telling me your "hometown" did this, and it was an abysmal failure? I find that hard to believe.

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motorola_phone t1_je9k7a1 wrote

>You take all that money being wasted on enforcement and incarceration and divert it to health services

it's reeeeeeaaaaaally not that simple lol we have some of the worst problems in the country for drug use and homelessness and part of that is because all drugs were decriminalized. it makes sense if you really think about it haha

edit: also forgive me if I'm wrong cause I don't know a lot about baltimore yet but isn't it true that mass incarceration and overpolicing is like a REALLY big complex problem here because of the systemic racism? wouldn't that have to be dismantled too?

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Nolubrication t1_je9le3s wrote

If you're referring to something like Portland, that is not the same as a national drug policy. Makes sense that doing it on that scale would turn the city into a "destination". Not a comparison to what is happening in Portugal at all.

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motorola_phone t1_je9mogx wrote

so you're telling me you think it would be "easy" to nationally dismantle the law enforcement industrial complex and institute all the societal safety nets that are required of a program like this?

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Ok-Entrepreneur4365 t1_jedtsv2 wrote

Them : "I lived through de facto legalization and it's a bad idea"

You: yeah but fuck your real life experience

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Nolubrication t1_jeed9qm wrote

He didn't, though. Portland is not Portugal. I'm not advocating for half-measures.

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