After reading some interesting points in the cannabis thread, I've decided to start a discussion about drug laws in general.
Should they lead to harsher prison sentences? Lenient prison sentences? Rehabilitation? Community service? Should the drug in question matter? I'm keen to hear different thoughts.
As always, please keep discussion civil.
Hi Caleb, good thread.

I'm focusing in on that question about harsher sentences. Not harsher prison sentences, necessarily, but certainly a punishment that could act as a deterrent.
I find this a difficult concept to pin down. I mean, what drugs would lead to harsher penalties? Would it simply be the usage or possession of the drugs that we believe should lead to harsher penalties, or is it the
acts done while under the influence of drugs that we should crack down on? How are we ever to prevent drug usage if the government cannot seem to quash the market anyway?
There was the story of that girl just the other day who pulled her eyeballs out of her own eye sockets due to an especially bad trip where she believed she was doing it as a sacrifice to God. Because of this story and other evidence, I believe that we should try our best as a community to prevent drug usage. That doesn't prevent people from dealing in the black market - I doubt anything will if you're addicted - but the law honestly doesn't seem to be doing the best job... Drug dealers are like the heads on a hydra; cut off one, and two more grow in its place.
I think that the use of cannabis, as a minor drug, should not lead to penalties unless there is a significant amount in a person's possession that is indicative of their role as a dealer; but a person under the influence of ice or another serious and potentially violent drug should be deterred from using it again. Drugs that are known to be harmful to not only the user, but society in general, should be held in a serious light. And right now, under Victorian law, they are. However, I also believe that rehabilitation is first and foremost, and that people addicted to these substances should be helped before being punished.
I think that CCOs are really good alternatives to imprisonment for people with addictions to serious drugs. They are free to live their lives, but are required to contribute to the community and attend rehabilitation.
If they are a danger to society, however, I feel like imprisonment is the only way to keep them and the rest of us safe.
I don't blame a person for an addiction they have - they may have originally taken the drug by choice, but addiction is not a choice, it's something that you
need to do. I find it really frustrating that there's not more ways to look after addicts without imprisonment.