The-Drug-Problem-ingles

This book suggests that we should turn away from the illegalisation of drugs; we should do so not because drugs are good, but because the consequences of illegalisation and the accompanying Supply Oriented Drug Policies (SODPs) are far worse than those stemming from a more liberal approach. Although this book addresses a depressing topic, it has been designed to be entertaining: you will be surprised.  Read the book partVIDEO

Against an unconventional and provocative backdrop—humanity portrayed as a weakened species in search of certainties in a world that offers increasingly fewer—the reader is encouraged to consider whether illegalisation is likely to bring about anything positive, in line with his or her own beliefs and values. The author believes he has convincingly supported a “no” in response to this question and anticipates that you will realise this for yourself by engaging with this test: My Drug Problem. Furthermore, he asserts that he has devised some intriguing new, or at the very least, unusual insights. Take "My Drug Problem" test.

Some main conclusions of these books are that our current focus on SODPs is at best misguided, that partial legalisation is an option well worth considering, and that a better understanding of the drug problem could be achieved by asking: “Why are drugs illegal?”

“The writing of Andres Laszlo is not for everyone. He challenges, pushes, provokes, and dances wildly in that strange borderline between cool analytics and expressionistic creativity. This said, he has written a book on drugs, drug use, drug policy, and drug experience that deserves to be taken seriously, as a challenge, a push, a provocation, and an orgiastic dance of intellectual energy. It will not be to everyone’s liking, and takes a certain pleasure out of just this fact.”
Professor Alf Rehn

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Drug Harms Literature.