There's a strong consensus argument for moral imperative to provide healthcare for every citizen in the United States, and the United States has continuously and vigorously declined to do so. I suggest the same could be extended to drug decriminalization, which we vehemently decline despite an evidence base, public popularity, and cost-effectiveness, which can apply to the former.
Fast-tracked people with end stage ALS don't get SSDI before they die. Burn victims, quadriplegics literally get denied twice for $1000 a month max benefit via SSDI.
500,000 people in the United States are homeless. A significant percentage of them would benefit from housing and it would improve their quality of life and turn them into some semblance of societal members. Let's just say it's 20% of them, that's one hundred thousand people unhoused, or an entire third-tier city.
So when the government starts aggressively caring and advertising about your well-being, you should be concerned.