Pubdate: Mon, 15 Jul 2002 Source: Daily Mail (UK) Copyright: 2002 Associated Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/108 THE CASE AGAINST CANNABIS BRITAIN THEY sit openly smoking their cannabis joints while families, including some with small children, sit close by innocently enjoying the sunshine. Passing youngsters who ask for a puff are happily obliged ... Welcome to Cannabis Britain. The weekend scenes at Hyde Park and in other parks around the country point the way to life after David Blunkett's decision to relax the law on cannabis. Parents must be in despair. One of the strongest arguments they could use to persuade their offspring to reject cannabis - that it was against the law - has been effectively removed at a stroke. And at whose urging? Greeted with widespread scepticism and foreboding, this move was not something that the people of Britain either sought or want. It has been foisted upon them because of the noisy and relentless demands of our liberal metropolitan elites. Yet despite the blithe assurances of this lobby and their sympathetic 'experts', countless thousands of parents can testify that cannabis IS the gateway to harder drugs and that - as Dr Anthony Daniels chillingly confirms in today's paper - its physical and psychological effects are 'numerous and dangerous'. Nor can any credence by (sic) put on the somewhat illogical assurance that the police will get tough on those who sell pot. Our report last week from Brixton shows that getting the drug is as easy as buying a bag of crisps. Our reporter bought from a pusher, unhindered, within a few feet of four police officers. Why should anyone think this will change, now that pot-smoking is no longer to be punished? This is not the only illogicality in the government's approach. After all, much time and money has rightly been spent on campaigns warning youngsters off smoking and excessive drinking. Yet now they are given the message that it is all right to appear in public with a spliff between their lips. Do most decent people in Britain really want pot-smokers on every corner and in every park? They do not? But in Britain, who cares what they think? - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart