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cybernetics

Prohibition: Supply and Demand

Prohibition, as a policy archetype, emerges from an institutional reflex: control harm by restricting access. At surface level, this seems rational. But the U.S. opioid crisis reveals its flaw with brutal clarity. Decades of interdiction, scheduling, and enforcement have not stopped overdose deaths—they’ve amplified them. Synthetic opioids like fentanyl bypass traditional supply chains, intensify risk, […]

Categories
cybernetics

Prohibition Fail: Illicit Tobacco in Australia

Attempts to prohibit are not failures of intelligence but failures of systemic insight. The logic is recursive: the more force applied to negate a behaviour, the more structure is built around that behaviour to preserve it. Prohibition becomes a generator — not a suppressor — of the phenomenon it targets. The system does not respond […]