I think we're on LSD now. In response to LSD, I say... Eh? Maybe there could be special centers with 'mind enhancing chambers' where you can get put inside a room filled with lava lamps and padded walls with 60s album covers on them and just trip without finding out you are in the middle of the forest buck naked.
I realize this center I'm talking about probably exists or did exist somewhere in California.
That would be an incredibly bad idea. When tripping on LSD being confined can lead to very serious consequences, no matter the surroundings. Being able to walk and living out curiosity is an important part of the whole experience.
Being supervised by a trusted person would be a much better idea.
As to the whole addiction thing:
I know one person who took the stuff almost daily. That person also regularly stayed awake for 4 days or more (as in: chained. I don't think in the time I had contact with him he ever slept on two consecutive nights) with the help of Amphetamines.
Any other person I know who took LSD was way too exhausted at the end of the trip and way too satisfied by it to even consider doing another trip again. As far as I know even on a good trip that is kept in fond memory for years at the end you wish it would stop - while it is certainly nice it also is extremely exhausting.
Also the trip normally is not forgotten. I don't know about any blackouts happening on a trip. What is valuable about the whole thing stays with you afterwards without a need for the substance. LSD actually has long term effects on the mind, which can be life changing (in the positive and negative meaning). Another of my friends was a compulsive liar (born out of poor self esteem) and generally very awkward around people (think Walter from "The Big Lebowski"). When he took LSD he first pretended to feel the effects of the drug, then got silent and proceeded to have an epiphany about his life. It certainly wasn't a nice experience for him, but it helped him to change his whole personality for the better in a matter of months. Today he is one of the most honest people I know.
Those two might be big reasons why LSD addiction isn't really a thing. There is no desire nor a need for most people to use the drug excessively. The ones who do so are, as far as I know, always misinformed about how the stuff works. They mostly expect the equivalent of pink elephants or something like that.
And right there on the wiki page is a picture of a cup of coffee. Caffeine is a drug. It is a mind-altering, psychoactive substance that crosses the blood-brain barrier and chemically alters the way your brain functions. And that's why people take.it. Specifically for the chemically altered mental state that it imparts. Caffeine is also addictive, and anyone who regularly partakes can tell you all about the withdrawal symptoms. In fact, in most offices it's a running joke that people can't function without it.
And furthermore: As someone who doesn't consume caffeine I can attest that being half asleep while working is quite survivable without it. Those are actually really withdrawal symptoms.
@i2amroy:
I live in Germany, where cannabis is illegal. I have never seen that anyone had any problems at all with getting the stuff when he wouldn't have had the same problems if the stuff where legal (like not having any money or it being between 1 and 3 on Sunday night). I also had friends who where persecuted for distributing the stuff. The only effect I could see that they changed to become assholes. The availability of cannabis wasn't affected at all.
Most people I know who smoke won't ever drive while under the influence. People who normally smoke tons of the stuff will stay clean when they have to drive. I have a slight nagging at the back of my head that I once knew one who would drive while high.
Also my experience with drug users is that the ones who are harmful to themselves and their surroundings are largely uneducated - specifically in regards to drugs and generally. Responsible drug use is a thing and I have seen it often done by people who lead productive and healthy lives.
Here's a graphic showing a ranking of drugs by the harm they cause, split by "harm to others" and "harm to users":
http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailychart/2010/11/drugs_cause_most_harmI would also like to note that LSD and magic mushrooms rank at the bottom.
To the war on drugs:
Drug use has seen a surge since the begin of the war on drugs.
Metamphetamine is a drug that has been developed as an answer to the criminalization of Amphetamines - it is easier to produce and wasn't illegal at the beginning, but it is much more harmful. Any user of Metamphetamine is a direct consequence of the war on drugs.
Imprisoning drug users (which thankfully doesn't happen in Germany) doesn't help them or anyone (at least I see no reason at all why it should help anyone) but it costs a fortune and presents drug users with an environment where they are almost required to learn how to be successful criminals - what I heard about prisons in the USA is not pretty and suggests the opposite of rehabilitation is happening there. You can look that up for yourself, I am sure YouTube has a few documentations on that available.
The war on drugs prevents true education on the subject. There are safer use fliers circulating in Germany and they contain a lot of information that should be taught in school but isn't, because authorities feel that this would incite more drug use (which I highly doubt - the fliers on safer drug use don't read like advertisements and certainly contain a lot of warnings).
I know people who function just fine with drugs but are shunned for it (not for a change in behavior, mind you). This also seems to be happening due to misinformation and a general perception of drug users as losers.
Here's a link on the costs of the war on drugs:
http://www.susanrobbins.com/cv/warondrugs.htmlThese parts are especially interesting:
Although some have debated the efficacy of treatment (see Bender & Leone, 1998), an important study by the RAND Drug Policy Research Center found that each dollar invested in drug abuse treatment saves taxpayers more than $7 in societal costs (such as drug related emergency room visits and crime committed to support a drug habit).
The war on drugs not only affects Black men and their families, but the inner cities as well. As Friedman points out (1998), the destruction of the inner city in major metropolitan areas is a direct consequence of drug prohibition. Sellers, who are heavily concentrated in these areas, are involved in stiff competition with one another, and the resulting violencehas left many inner city areas looking like war zones. Children who live in the inner city face some of the greatest dangers of being victims of drug-gang violence Benjamin & Miller, 1993).
Citing a National Institute of Drug Abuse study, the Network of Reform Groups (1999), notes that 60% of societal costs of illicit drug use are due to drug related crime and the black market. This includes “police, legal and incarceration costs, lost productivity of incarcerated criminals, and victims of crimes, as well as the lost productivity due to drug-related crime careers” (p. 1). Significantly, less than 30% of the societal costs were found to be caused by the effects of ingesting the drugs themselves. The authors conclude that “our failing War on Drugs actually creates the majority of costs our communities pay when considering illegal drugs” (p. 1).
This one is especially especially interesting, in light of your personal course of argumentation:
Many who support the current war on drugs cite drug use as being a significant causal factor in crime, replete with images of the crazed drug addict who robs or burglarizes to support his or her habit. Although there are crimes related to drug use, very few burglaries or robberies are drug related (Walker, 1998). Despite the common misperception that drug use causes a significant rise in crime, the relationship between the two is complex and the data do not support this connection. According to Walker, the National Household Survey data show that few who use illicit drugs become addicts or engage in other criminal activity. Quite to the contrary, there is a wealth of data that demonstrates the clear causal link between drug prohibition and crime (Benjamin & Miller, 1993; Gray, 1998), and the rise in crime that occurred with alcohol prohibition is analogous to the rise in crime that has resulted from the war on drugs. Not surprisingly, organized crime plays a central role in the distribution of illicit drugs and the war on drugs has led to a significant rise in organized crime and violence associated with drug dealing (Benjamin & Miller).
If you are further interested, there is a Google Tech Talk (I think) by a former police officer who worked in the... I don't know what the name is right now... who is now strongly advocating against continuing the war against drugs.
@DJ:
I am sure there are some who didn't. I guess there are even some who raped because they considered masturbating the less acceptable option.