Pubdate: Sun, 25 Feb 2001 Source: Halifax Daily News (CN NS) Copyright: 2001 The Daily News. Contact: http://www.hfxnews.southam.ca/ Author: Parker Barss Donham CANADA SHOULD AVOID WAR ON DRUGS U.S.-Driven Crusade Waste Of Time, Lives On Wednesday, a United Nations agency slammed Canada for not being harsh enough on drugs, especially marijuana. Justice Minister Anne McLellan responded by promising to put more money and resources into the war on narcotics. The International Narcotics Control Board said the sentences meted out to pot growers by Canadian courts amount to little more than slaps on the wrist. "We wonder whether that policy is a sufficient deterrent to get people not to cultivate cannabis," said Herbert Schaepe, the board secretary. "It's clear that we can do more, and we must do more," McLellan told a scrum outside the Liberal caucus meeting. "We're going to put more resources toward that. Certainly we, as a government, are seized with the issue." The UN and McLellan overlook one small problem: throwing money and cops into the war on drugs doesn't make matters better, it makes them worse. The great majority of the human misery, crime, illness, death, lawlessness, poverty, wasted human potential and other social evils attributed to the use of narcotics is in fact a result of the illogical, counterproductive attempt to control illicit drugs through the criminal justice system. The results are easiest to see in the United States, which has for two decades pursued the war on drugs with fanatical zeal. This year, the U.S. prison and jail population will surpass two million, of whom nearly one-quarter are there for drug offences. In federal prisons, drug offenders constitute 59 per cent of the population. By 1998, 3.6 million Americans had been deprived of the right to vote because of criminal records. Nearly half of these were black males, a staggering 17 per cent of whom are disqualified from voting by felony convictions. And yet, as the Cato Institute reported in 1997, this extraordinary record of incarceration hasn't stopped "either the use or the abuse of drugs, or the drug trade, or the crime associated with black-market transactions." Thousands of Americans die every year in homicides related to the drug war. Because illegal drugs can't be regulated as to quality or purity, tens of thousands more die of overdoses. In Vancouver alone, 400 people a year succumb to fatal overdoses. The illicit nature of drug use discourages the hygienic use of needles, with the result that injection drug use is a leading cause of the spread of HIV and Hepatitis C. These impacts of the drug war have been well documented by groups spanning the political spectrum, from Human Rights Watch on the left to the Fraser Institute on the right. Zealous law enforcement makes the drug problem worse by a simple, easily understood mechanism: the law of supply and demand. By restricting supply, the anti-drug crusade drives up prices until substances produced for pennies in the Third World can fetch thousands of dollars on the streets of North America. This cost-price differential creates an irresistible magnet for criminals. At $600 billion, the estimated world trade in narcotics constitutes eight per cent of all international trade, all of it tax-exempt, all of it going into the hands of criminals. Addicted users spend much of their time stealing or selling sex to raise the hundreds of dollars a day their habits may require. The war on drugs doesn't limit crime; it promotes it. It increases the sense of insecurity in North American cities. It breeds disrespect for the law and for hypocritical lawmakers such as McLellan. The situation with marijuana is slightly different. Because pot is non-addictive and no harder to grow than broccoli, even the harshest law enforcement has limited power to control supply or drive up prices. British Columbia entrepreneurs grow about $4 billion worth of cannabis every year - that province's largest agricultural crop. By lavishing law enforcement efforts on this benign drug, all McLellan will accomplish is to waste precious public resources and give criminal records to an unlucky minority of the millions of otherwise law-abiding Canadians who enjoy the odd puff of grass. She certainly won't limit marijuana use. Despite the UN's misplaced umbrage, pot use among young people is higher in the United States than Canada, and higher in both countries than in Holland, where the selling of small quantities has been allowed for years. McLellan isn't as stupid as she tried to make out this week. She doesn't need me to tell her that all the cops in the world won't put a dent in the drug problem, that they will only cause increased hardship and human misery. She's embarked on this senseless course not because she thinks it's the right thing to do, but because the Liberal caucus, or more likely the Prime Minister's Office, has made a calculated political judgment that the ever-shrinking rump of Canadians who resist legalization of drugs is less tolerant of opposing views than the solid majority who want an end to the war on drugs. What a stupid waste. What spectacular political cowardice. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth