Of course its a loaded statement, he's making a straw man out of support for personal freedom to marginalize the opposition.
No, I'm pointing out the actual consequence of your position instead of allowing you to sweep it under the rug.
For example, let's say 'I want to remove all anti-pollution laws, and leave it up to the morals of the people running companies. If they do wrong, we can publicize their bad choices, and consumers can not buy from them and put them out of business, that's a lot better than government intervention. I don't support pollution - just legalization.'
I could respond to that by pointing out that it's incredibly impractical and naive, and the result will be massive pollution and the mythical accountability won't happen.
I think I'm right, but it's not easy to 'prove' to an ideologue who chants 'liberty'.
My position is that the net result of that policy would be a massive increase in pollution, and I'd say that position is 'supporting pollution, in effect', because it's supporting a policy which will cause that effect, despite the fact the person advocating doesn't understand that or agree.
That's not 'marginalizing' the position any more than any criticism saying 'your policy has a bad effect' is. We might disagree; that's my opinion. It's not unfair.
Bottom line: de-criminalization will result in far higher drug abuse rates than eliminating the behavior. Your personal opinion about abuse doesn't matter; the law affects the issue, not your opinion. So, choosing a policy with far higher rates is supporting the effect of that policy. You seem confused about taking responsibility for the consequences of the policy you advocate. Yes, it's 'their choice'. And yes, it's your choice which policy to support, with varying effects.
'I'm for removing the speed limit, and my opinion is everyone should choose to continue to drive safe speeds' isn't all that different in effect than 'I support unsafe speeds'. Both result in unsafe speeds.
That's my point. By advocating legalization, it's choosing for there to be high drug abuse people choose, over choosing a policy with far lower drug abuse. And that is, in effect, supporting drug abuse.
Your strong objection in my opinion is not because I'm making an unfair point, but because I'm making a fair one that points out an error. Until you recognize the error ou are making, you will object to it being pointed out.