How to smack it down
To beat the scourge of heroin, governments should deal the drug themselves
THE war on drugs is at last subsiding. A growing gang of both rich and poor countries are choosing to tolerate or even legalise drugs that they once tried to suppress with force. And many of the calls for a ceasefire are coming from unexpected places. The main moves to allow people to use cannabis have been in America, which was long the world’s chief cheerleader for prohibition. This week Mexico’s supreme court opened the door to legalising marijuana. Even more surprising is conservative Ireland, a country that still outlaws abortion, which announced plans to permit some consumption of heroin.
This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline "How to smack it down"
More from Leaders
How “judge-mandering” is eroding trust in America’s judiciary
The assignment of judges to cases should be random, not political
The world’s most improbable success story still needs to evolve
Under Lawrence Wong, the city-state has a new chance to change
What companies can expect if Labour wins Britain’s election
The party that aspires to lead the country is courting business