I thought it's pretty clear we're specifically talking prohibition of recreational drugs - of course some things should be prohibited.
Who fronts up to the families of the tens of thousands of people a year who die from drinking and smoking?
Again, I'll make the point that these are increasing vices that each generation has walked into growing up. What you are talking about is extending those vices voluntarily.....increasing the load.
The state has done a lot against smoking compared to how it was 50 years ago and to a lesser extent against alcohol as well.
If we include obesity-related illness, you're probably into hundreds of thousands a year, and the state 'made a gain' in all of them.
You shouldn't include obesity because there's nothing the state can do about that outside of pure authoritarian-like cradle to grave politics.
Does anyone make the suggestion that the state can't 'hold its hands up' over the death of someone who smoked cigarettes for 40 years? I've never really seen that play out at all - I think most people would accept that the deceased who decided to continue smoking cigarettes knew the risks and made their peace with it.
You do have a point in this area.
The state made/makes money out of a vice that decreased someone's life-span.
However, it makes it very very clear in respect to smoking....quite graphically. It's also illegal to do both these before 18. Quite rightly it wants to push people away from these activities exactly because it has complicity in people's demise....Of course the individual is the main decider, but if state made bank out of their choices then its hands aren't exactly clean.
It's about why the state should extend these harms, when it didn't have to.
I would also argue that if the state’s chosen system produces high incarceration, enormous organised crime profits, and overdose deaths, it cannot claim moral neutrality.
This is another valid point.
But in most cases the individual made that choice (though I accept that edge cases exist and some people have little choice in reality). If someone drinks, smokes, eats themselves to an early grave...there is blame to be allocated, but it's mostly self inflicted.
Properly enforce or legalise?
Well, like Hitchens says, the state has never bothered to enforce an anti drugs system because it doesn't want to deal with the actual consequences of it. So....along with making money out of booze and fags it is already morally implicated.....it's just an argument of extension.
I could live with a hardcore anti recreational drugs system or I could live with full legalisation......but morally I think both do harm....but the former at least says, 'this far but no further'.
Personally for me, there is no 'moral neutral' position here, which ever position you take you are going to be fecking up lives.....it comes down to should the state make more bank from it.
Legalising drugs comes with other negative aspects for me, like acceptability......I want a certain amount of negative health pursuits to be frowned upon for the reasons I gave in earlier posts.
I think as a society we have fallen down, in my view, and seem to want to accept every human vice out there.