Perhaps we need a little history lesson here. On January 15th, 1920 you would have been able to walk into a bar in most states and they could "legally" sell you a nice cold beer, BUT on January 16th, 1920 the 18th amendment took affect and alcohol was illegal to sell.
Now suddently people all over the countries were "drug dealers" (to use your jargon) and breweries with hundreds of years of brewing tradition were now "illegal drug manufacturers".
Steroids were made "illegal" not by the will of the people, not to save America, not to right a wrong, not to help, but for the express purpose of political grandstanding.
Most of these asshole politicians wouldn't know Depo-Provera from Depo-Testosterone.
The point is steroids haven't changed, they are not a truly mind altering drug that affect society like crystal meth, heroin, crack, and other drugs, the ONLY thing that changed in recent years was that steroids were used as a political football to score some political points and curry favor among the population of misguided voters.
Steroids were pontificated about and demagoged on the Sunday morning talk shows by the lackeys for the politicians grandstanding to the American people with histrionics and hyperbole and such wild assed comments that your average American housewife bought it hook, line and sinker.
So next time you look down your nose and call a "source" a "drug dealer" remember it was sheeple like you who bought into their bull shit and foisted these stupid laws upon us.
Again I suggest you read the following so maybe you can understand what this is really all about. I provided a link for you at the bottom so you can do some more research.
"Many social problems have been attributed to the Prohibition era. A profitable, often violent, black market for alcohol flourished. Racketeering happened when powerful gangs corrupted law enforcement agencies. Stronger liquor surged in popularity because its potency made it more profitable to smuggle.
The cost of enforcing prohibition was high, and the lack of tax revenues on alcohol (some $500 million annually nationwide) affected government coffers. When repeal of prohibition occurred in 1933, following passage of the Twenty-first Amendment, organized crime lost nearly all of its black market alcohol profits, due to competition with low-priced alcohol sales at legal liquor stores. Organized crime later adjusted by selling illegal drugs instead. The black market thrives on the sale of any illegal product. On such points as these, the modern "War on Drugs" has been compared to Prohibition, but there is disagreement on the validity of this comparison.
Prohibition had a notable effect on the brewing industry in the United States. When Prohibition ended, only half the breweries that had previously existed reopened. Many small breweries were out of business for good. Because mainly the largest breweries had survived, American beer came to be chided as a characterless, mass-produced commodity.
Beer connoisseurs lamented the decreased quality and variety. It was only in the 1980s that craft brewing finally recovered. Fritz Maytag has been credited with jumpstarting the microbrew revolution that awoke brewing from its post-Prohibition doldrums
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prohibition