It's trivial for people to use them now. If people want an illegal drug, they will practically have it thrown at them in spite of the War on Drug's efforts.
This is hardly true for most people. You have to remember that if drugs weren't controlled, they wouldn't only be
sold, they would be
marketed. I mentioned an example of antibiotics being sold over the counter; your average person would take them for very minor things. The fact that illegal drugs are illegal is a deterrent in more ways than you think, because it means they aren't advertised (except in the case of prescription drugs) and aren't freely available. For example: Opioid pain reliever abuse is a common problem. It would be a much
worse problem if people could just buy them from the drugstore whenever they wanted, because they'd be used irresponsibly and for the wrong reasons, and often by people who do it simply because they don't know better.
Obviously, abuse happens, and it's not precisely hard to get most drugs (depending on the circumstances and the drug), but the
reasons for those drugs being bought, sold, and used would change if they were allowed to be sold and advertised freely. In fact, this was a significant problem before the FDA itself was established.
It's just one of those things that can't really be stopped so long as there are drugs to take and people to take them. The best we can do is try to educate people to make good decisions of their own choice, and to put them in an environment where that is a viable option. Anything else is unfair to us all.
This is a fairly libertarian viewpoint, and not one I agree with. Should we also be allowed to install asbestos in our homes, use known carcinogens in food and sell it, or anything else that's regulated? You cannot expect every single person in the nation to be enough of an expert regarding everything that they know which off-the-shelf product will potentially kill them, hurt them, or get them addicted. Yes, we should better educate people to make their own decisions, but it is totally unreasonable to expect every person in the nation (even if you only include rational adults) to have to fend for themselves when it comes to purchasing products that are safe. This is the basis of... basically
all government health and safety regulations.
I don't think that anyone is advocating free-for-all antibiotic usage. There's little reason for that. No black market, no serious desire for them. The only medical drugs people generally go after are painkillers of various stripes, not antibiotics.
I'm not sure what you're talking about. Why would heroin be legalized but not amoxacillin? People "go after" antibiotics
right now, not recreationally, but as medication because they
don't know not to because they aren't medical professionals. People would have a definitely tendency to abuse them by taking them at the first sign of basically any illness; as I said, many people already attempt to. This is not only a health hazard to the individual, but even current levels of overuse of antibiotics contribute to the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
Legislate that any food product containing addictive elements must have, in large florescent letters on the front of the package, CONTAINS ADDICTIVE SUBSTANCES: (said substances here)
What about substances that aren't particularly addictive, but are still quite harmful? Where exactly do we draw the line regarding what we can or cannot put in food if cocaine is allowable? And what makes you think that putting harmful and addictive substances into things marketed toward the average American, and available for cheap at the corner store, and implicitly encouraged by their acceptance, would cause people to use them
less? That's exactly what you do if you
want as many people as possible to become addicted: You market them and make them freely available in a socially and legally acceptable manner. See: Alcohol and tobacco, especially prior to restrictions on their marketing practices.
Some problems can't be prevented without insane and oppressive measures. This is one of them.
I would not call scheduling opioids as prescription-only "insane and oppressive". I would call the current "war on drugs" insane and oppressive, but not the fundamental concept of limiting access to things which may be significantly harmful even when used as intended.
This does not mean all pro-active solutions are good, or that pro-activity for its own sake is the right course of action. Example: Invading Iraq.
I agree, although I think Iraq is a bad example, since we were lied to about that from day one.
We should be pro-active when pro-activity is the best methods of efficacy, and then only to the extent that the cost benefit analysis clearly favours it. Our current "solutions" are, arguably, pro-active. They also don't work.
I agree that our current solutions are pretty bad, but that doesn't mean
all proactive solutions are bad. And I wouldn't even consider jailing drug users "proactive" at all; it's highly reactive and perpetuates the problem far more often than it helps to solve it.