Pubdate: Tue, 30 Oct 2001 Source: Michigan Daily (MI Edu) Copyright: 2001 The Michigan Daily Contact: http://www.michigandaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/582 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) DECRIMINALIZE MARIJUANA, UNITED STATES MUST LOOK TO BRITAIN ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- One week ago, British Home Secretary David Blunkett announced that marijuana possession will no longer be punishable by arrest within the United Kingdom. The plans for reform by the Home Office mark the first significant relaxation in British cannabis law in 30 years. Under the new proposed national policy, marijuana will be reclassified as a "Class C" or "soft" drug, giving it the same status as antidepressants and other prescription drugs. The United States should look to Britain's example of a more practical drug policy. Blunkett made the announcement before Members of Parliament on the home affairs select committee and emphasized that the drug will still remain illegal and that distribution of the substance would still potentially carry a five-year penal sentence. Yet according to the official proposals, arrests will be very unlikely for those smokers who are caught with small amounts of marijuana for personal use. British officials say the reclassification is designed to remove what they call the "policing anomaly," visible in that seven out of 10 drug arrests in the United Kingdom are for soft drug possession. British police, as American police should, want to devote more time to cracking down on the abuse of harder, more dangerous drugs like heroin and cocaine. As it would in the U.S., the elimination of the arrest of pot smokers in Britain will allow a dedication of criminal justice facilities to violent crime. Last week's proposal was recommended by the Home Office nearly 18 months ago; its official acceptance is the latest in a series of drug policy reforms occurring throughout Europe. Earlier this year, the governments of Belgium, Luxembourg and Portugal completely decriminalized the use and possession of marijuana. However, the prospect of similar drug policy reform in the Unites States looks bleak. Marijuana solidly and illogically continues to bear Schedule I status -- along with heroin, cocaine, and LSD. The U.S. government continues to retain enormous ideological problems with all drugs, however innocuous they may be. With rapid cannabis reform coming from Europe and Canada -- where cannabis decriminalization is imminent, the United States is finding that it is fast becoming the odd one out in granting rights to responsible marijuana users. It would seem that American policy makers are ironically far behind most Western nations in their attention to certain basic civil liberties. The United States should indeed realize the folly of its over-exaggerated malign of recreational cannabis use and concentrate instead on crimes that actually pose a threat to society. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth