Yes indeed, just as the public wanted to be protected from booze in the 1920s. I believe that didn't work out so well.
Can I just re-phrase that to "things you see as disadvantages to legalisation", because as always, you are short on fact and long on opinion, but it's ok, because I've got some facts for you.
Yes, I can just see the Crips and Bloods lining up to sell cold and 'flu remedies and antibiotics.
Given that the major problem with antibiotic resistance is over-prescription by medical professionals and usage by farmers who just don't care as long as it imapcts the bottom line*, I think any concerns about opening legal trade in antibiotics is over-stated in the extreme. Antibiotics are dirt cheap - which is why they're so widely used and abused - and there would be little incentive for operators to trade in them.
*Link: http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs194/en/
What better way to test the effects of drugs on humans than use those who Darwin has gifted as people too stupid to use approved and proven methods of medication?
Also, you're helping prove the point that legalisation would have made no difference - people accessed those drugs anyway. Women I know who have had babies - and there are many, many of them - would almost unanimously not take drugs during their pregnancy, no matter who the drugs were approved by.
There have also been many notable failures of those drugs which have been approved by official bodies. I can list a few if you wish.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_withdrawn_drugs
Sorry, I was looking for an emoticon laughing hard enough to cope with your statement!
[sarcasm]Yes, the mental health industry has a superb record of monitoring and assessing patients under their care [/sarcasm].
I'm going to guess you don't want to list the enormous number of just US-based serial killers and mass murderers who have acted while allegedly under care and on prescribed drugs, but I will do so if you like.
http://www.cchrint.org/school-shooters/
(note that's only school shootings)
Are you a homeopath or naturopath?
I ask because it's such an unusual approach to take - that if something's easy to grow and natural, it's ok. Then you discount opiates, yet opium-bearing poppies they are actually far simpler to grow than marijuana plants, which are a pain the butt. No processing required to extract and smoke the pure opium. Maybe you've never heard of the Opium Wars?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opium_Wars
Has nothing to do with legalisation, though. It's not as though vast amounts of aid money and goods aren't ripped off and sold anyway. Might encourage those donating to be a little more careful with their supply chains. One thing is for certain, the drug companies won't miss out. The number of people who would buy unknown drugs is an awful lot smaller than you're suggesting.
Having gone from laughable to sublime.
Miniscule? Try over a third of the size.
Legal drugs: $954bn. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharmaceutical_industry
Illegal drugs: $320bn. http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontp...-business.html
Now that it becomes obvious there's no evidence to support there being a difference in the two markets, you don't need to worry about it.
I'm pleased you brought advertising up to finish on, because it's possibly the single most-damning indcitment on the pharmaceutical industries across the globe.
I mean, they all such wonderful companies with the best interests of humans at heart. They must spend an awful lot more on research and developing new drugs than advertising, don't they?
Surely????
You work it out: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharmaceutical_marketing



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