Pubdate: Thu, 06 Sep 2001 Source: Jamaica Gleaner, The (Jamaica) Copyright: 2001 The Gleaner Company Limited Contact: http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/493 Author: Peter Webster LETTER OF THE DAY - GANJA AND HEALTH The Editor, Sir, Propaganda aside, and reduced to essentials, it matters not whether cannabis use is harmful, or deemed immoral by some. What matters is that a large number of citizens in free societies the world over insist that cannabis prohibition is a failure, and produces more harm than the drug itself could possibly do. For example, a recent USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll indicates that 34 per cent of Americans want marijuana prohibition ended. Even greater support is found in other European countries and in Canada. This fact brings up an important issue: considering generally-accepted principles of democracy, by what right does a government refuse to accede to the demands of a large, conscientiously dissenting minority? If a significant number of citizens desire a change of law, yet the government refuses even to consider their desires, we have the extremely anti-democratic situation which no small number of writers and scholars have warned us about: the tyranny of the majority. After all, we surely cannot advance the idea that one-third or more of a country's citizens are completely deluded and have no idea what they are proposing by backing cannabis legalisation! Prohibition of cannabis forces the minority who wish to use cannabis sensibly to abstain, or suffer severe legal penalties whereas, if prohibition were repealed, that would not FORCE the majority to do or suffer ANYTHING AT ALL save perhaps a wound to its dubious moral convictions. The idea that society would suffer irreparable harms, that "the sky would fall" if cannabis were legalised - the warning constantly made by prohibition's propagandists - is patently absurd and contradicted by the best scientific evidence we have on the subject. Diversity of customs, opinions and pursuits is to be encouraged in a society, not repressed. As Arnold Toynbee wrote,"Civilisations in decline are consistently characterised by a tendency towards standardisation and uniformity. Conversely, during the growth of civilisation, the tendency is towards differentiation and diversity". I heartily encourage Jamaica towards a rational and effective drug policy! I am etc., Peter Webster Review Editor, International Journal of Drug Policy - --- MAP posted-by: Beth