I'm definitely the wrong person to say anything about this because I'm not a drug user, but I have to say I honestly think the language of being like "all drugs are fine" or whatever in the name of decriminalization and bodily autonomy is pretty misguided, because ultimately with any kind of substance the smartest thing to do is to be pragmatic and safe in how you use. Saying shit like "ketamine is a baby drug" or "everyone does coke" doesn't really do anything to make drug use safer, and if anything just encourages people to not take precautions like testing their drugs or using clean needles.
And this goes for literally any substance that has risks you need to account for. Like, I love coffee and caffeinated drinks, but I also take the risk of drinking them seriously, and I would never suggest that because consuming caffeine is so normalized, that having any concern about what it could do to you is babyish. This extends to lots of everyday things. Alcohol. Tobacco. Over the counter medicine. What is the utility in neutralizing being aware of safety measures in consuming a substance?
It feels like a lot of people simply cannot reconcile the difference between "using this substance should not be stigmatized" and "using this substance does carry some risk that you need to account for" and honestly it reads this kind of juvenile