So if criminalization isn't to prevent use, what's it for? I might have used hyperbole with "everyone" but I am confident that criminalization isn't a signifigant factor in deterring use, especially when it comes to hard drugs.
The hyperbole is what I was criticizing.
When it comes to hard drugs, my probably-flawed perspective is that it deters use except when socioeconomic factors create conditions overshadowing those proscriptions or deeming them irrelevant; basically the same reason why gun control might prevent your average Joe out in the suburbs from owning a gun, but doesn't work in violent inner-city areas.
To me, this is what creates much of the current black-market situation. If we would actually tackle the forces that cause people to resort to cooking/taking meth and shooting up heroin in the first place (and let's face it, many of these causes are quite visible), then, depending on your perspective, either criminalization wouldn't be necessary to begin with, or criminalization could work without resulting in so much of a black market for the product.
If they were illegal, with a black market and all the attendant problems, and you were arguing for their continued prohibition based on how criminalization was needed to prevent inhalant abuse, you'd be wrong.
I would be wrong because they serve useful purposes beyond the illicit ones, and throwing the baby out with the bathwater is a generally bad idea, and it would be completely impossible to criminalize anything that you could huff to get high. You can also discourage that kind of usage in other ways, such as by adding a bitterant, although that's kind of beside the point.
I can't really parse this part, from my reading you're totally contradicting yourself..?
In case it wasn't clear, I meant that if inhalants were really comparable to the hard drugs the country has a problem with, more people would be doing those as opposed to choosing options that could land them in jail and are sold on the black market for several times the price.
Fair enough, pretend I said "physical health." And I'll admit a drug that can create temporary psychosis presents a unique set of problems.. but I don't think they're insurmountable. It's definitely not that much more dangerous than alcohol.
The problem with comparing these drugs to alcohol is that alcohol serves a prominent and powerful purpose even when people
aren't using it to the point where it's screwing up their psychological state enough to be comparable to a hallucinogen, and the effects are generally more predictable.
I'm not saying I'm totally against legalizing hallucinogens, but comparing things to alcohol is a little tricky since alcohol has an extremely wide range of risk depending on how it's taken and under what circumstances. To some degree, that applies to other drugs as well, but not nearly to the same degree.