Pubdate: Wed, 23 May 2001 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2001 The Edmonton Journal Contact: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 MARIJUANA MOVES ONTO THE AGENDA What have they been smoking back there in Ottawa? MPs of all five parties have actually agreed to work together on an excellent piece of public service: a review of Canada's marijuana laws. Doubtless, it's no coincidence a survey has just been released showing Canadians on the verge of majority support for legalization. The MPs sense the time may finally be right to look at the status of a substance that proper society has considered dangerous almost on principle since its association with the hippy generation of the 1960s. Nevertheless, willingness simply to be open-minded on non-medical use of drugs takes courage. And whatever the outcome, it will be better than the current blend of ignorance and hypocrisy in a society at pains to protect the rights of tobacco users. Some on the libertarian end of things may wonder why they must wait 18 months for a new commons committee to report, when the basic arguments have been known for decades. The answer is simple: If 49 per cent of Canadians are indeed mellow enough now to back legalization, that doesn't mean it should be legalized, or that the 49 per cent will hold to their view when the matter has been fully aired. Besides, if there is to be a change in the law in Canada, building an informed consensus is at least as important as getting at facts. The fact that alcohol and tobacco are legal drugs is eloquent testimony to the importance of public acceptance. A recent editorial in the Journal of the Canadian Medical Association, which advocates taking marijuana possession out of the Criminal Code, frames the question as one of balancing medical and legal considerations. Essentially, it asks whether the damage to the health of Canadians is more serious than the legal cost and fairness of saddling 500,000 Canadians with criminal convictions. The matter is less simple than it appears. First, of course, we must consider relations with our neighbours. In the unlikely event that Canadians were ready to make the leap to full legalization, we would have to consider the implications for smuggling and for undermining U.S. law. Second, we'd have to be sure we weren't sending the wrong message to young people about the entire class of perception-altering drugs. Third, we must beware the danger of demanding consistent policy. The entrenched legality of one nasty drug, tobacco, is hardly a good reason for approving another, even if its consequences are considerably more moderate. Fourth, if we wish simply to downgrade possession to a non-criminal offence, it will still be imperative to better accommodate those with medical reasons for using marijuana. And fifth, having retreated this one recreational drug, we'd have to be certain we'd drawn a new line in a defensible position. Nevertheless, we now have decades of experience with widespread marijuana use. Is it truly as dangerous as society has always assumed, either for itself, or for what it allegedly leads to? Let's talk about decriminalization, and see where that leads. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake