|The whole UK has the same drugs legislation but Scotland's rate of drugs deaths is three times higher than the UK as a whole. The problem is not explained by Scotland not being in control of its own legislation, although, in fact, it is in control of some of it.
I suggest you first identify exactly why Scotland's drop problems are so bad before leaping to the conclusion that it is our current drug laws.
There is no one explanation - I wish there were.
I can only speak for my own area. Whilst there was a low level of drug abuse - mainly solvent, cannabis, amphetamine, etc - before 1986, the closing of the mines - the principle employer - awnd failure to invest in sufficient employment opportunities and infrastructure - led to mass unemployment with little prospect of improvement, yet with money - mainly redundancy compensation- falsly boosting the local economy for about five years.
The first wave of heroin can be traced to around 1989...that generation is,by now, in decline, but their children, to a distressing degree, have also taken drugs...mainly heroin, crack and the rest.
Nany of those on methadone have taken other substances as well.
The suicide rate is truly frightening; this year - 2019 - alone, our minister has had to take over a dozen funerals of suicides in his two parishes which encompass around nine thousand.
Since most of the addicts register as unfit to work, they don't feature on the unemployment stats, which look surprisingly healthy - but stats can be manipulated. This very morning,I went to the town nearest mine, and, at the pharmacy, saw the usual pathetic queue for methadone. The queue doesn't get shorter, though the faces change.