Pubdate: Mon, 13 May 2002 Source: Nelson Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 Nelson Daily News Contact: http://www.nelsondailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/288 Author: Hubert Beyer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) GOVERNMENT POT PROJECT GOES BUST VICTORIA - If ever there was proof that government shouldn't be in business, the spectacular failure of the federal medical marijuana grow program is it. The stuff the feds have been growing inside an abandoned copper mine near Flin Flon, Manitoba, couldn't give you a buzz if you smoked your brains out. Last year, then Health Minister Allan Rock announced a new program to provide chronic pain sufferers and terminally ill patients with the right to legally smoke marijuana. The issue had been forced by an Ontario Court of Appeal ruling that told Ottawa to either change its regulations for the medical use of marijuana or the court would strike down the country's illicit drug laws. Do something or get off the pot, you might say. So what does Ottawa do? Create a massive bureaucracy, load it up with tons of red tape, find a location more suited to the storage of nuclear waste than the growth of pot, look for seeds and start growing the stuff. Turns out the seeds they got from police raids on grow-ops around the country didn't do the trick. The first crop that was to have been ready for distribution several months ago consisted of about 185 different varieties. It was declared useless. All the government had to do was send someone up to Tofino, where some of the world's most potent pot is grown, to get a supply of seeds. An alternative would have been to place on order with High Times Magazine. You can actually order the seeds on the Net. Any strain your heart desires - Big Bud, Northern Light, Dutch Passion. B.C. marijuana is known to pot smokers the world over as the best there is. Yet, our government can't get a decent crop to head off court action that might strike down any law forbidding the growth, distribution and possession of marijuana. The easiest way out for the government would have been to allow Victoria-Esquimalt MP Keith Martin's private members bill proceed to the Commons for debate and approval. Martin's bill called for the decriminalization of marijuana. But common sense is not what the Liberal-dominated Commons is known for, so the Liberals killed the bill, throwing two years of work on the trash heap. A law that can't be or isn't enforced is a bad law and should be scrapped. The law prohibiting possession of marijuana is a bad law because it isn't enforced anymore. Like a police officer said recently it is damned near impossible to get busted for possession of pot in Vancouver. Smoking is more tightly regulated these days than the possession of pot, and tobacco smokers are subject to greater harassment than pot smokers. The marijuana issue was originally brought to a head by Terry Parker, whose court case forced the government into growing marijuana in the first place. Parker went back to court recently because he was unable to get what the court said he was entitled to and received a personal exemption. Meanwhile, because Ottawa is still sitting on the pot, some 255 users have been licenced to grow marijuana, and 164 of them are permitted to smoke what they grow. Seems the private sector is way ahead of the public one. Also, people who want marijuana for medical purposes can easily get their hands on it, provided they get a certificate from their doctor. With that certificate, they can buy pot in certain stores, at least in Vancouver and Victoria. The process is not legal, but police lose no sleep over it and the courts wouldn't either. And while Ottawa tries in vain to produce a decent crop of pot in its Flin Flon bunker and the war on smokers heats up, liquor laws are being relaxed all over the country because there's big money for the government in the sale of alcohol. Yet nobody's ever become violent from smoking pot, the cult film classic Reefer Madness notwithstanding, while a great deal of human misery can be attributed to alcohol. It all doesn't make much sense, but that's government for you. Of the three products in question, booze, tobacco and pot, two are widely considered dangerous to our health. The government makes fortunes on the sale of both those products, but leaves the users of one alone, while declaring open season on users of the other. Marijuana, on the other hand, widely regarded as harmless and not contributing a cent to government revenues, is illegal, but Ottawa is trying to grow it. Makes the Madhatter's Tea party look like a philosophers' convention. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh