For decades, policy favored punishment over healing. From crack-era laws to “zero tolerance,” governments built enforcement-heavy systems that filled prisons while leaving demand untouched. This episode examines how deterrence failed: supply adapted, markets shifted, and harm multiplied. Meanwhile, treatment and harm reduction proved what punishment could not—reduced death, improved safety, restored lives. We explore the choice societies still face: criminalize people for the substances they use, or design systems that address why use begins and why it persists. The war on drugs was never a war on molecules—it was a war on communities. By Niklas S. Osterman BHPRN, MA Addiction Specialist
Niklas Osterman
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