Pubdate: Tue, 30 Sep 2003 Source: Link, The (CN QU Edu) Copyright: 2003 The Link Contact: http://thelink.concordia.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2694 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/GHB GHB IS A WEAPON The Canadian Alliance has put The Link in an uncomfortable position. It appears we have to support them. You see, a week ago today the Alliance launched its date-rape drug campaign. While it's already criminal to drug someone for the purpose of acquiring sex, Private Member's Motion M-458 calls on the federal government to classify date-rape drugs as weapons in the Criminal Code and to establish new national guidelines in the collection and documentation of evidence in sexual assault. The problem with date rape drugs such as GHB and Rohypnol is that they are easily slipped into drinks and food. Once ingested they act rapidly, rendering the victim unconscious or unresponsive, without any memory of what happens while the drug is in their system. Worse, all traces of the already hard to detect drug leave the body within 72 hours, making criminal prosecution difficult. The difference between GHB and other recreational drugs like cocaine or heroin is that date rape drugs are used as weapons in drug-assisted rapes. Rapists don't get their victims high on coke hoping to use it as a mask for their crime, but to lower inhibitions in the hopes of obtaining an easier consent. Opponents of the proposed bill point to the fact men have been getting women drunk since the dawn of time in the hopes of obtaining easier consent to sex, and that alcohol itself is a key factor in a majority of rapes. The crucial difference here is the women drinking can make a choice whether they want to drink. When a rapist uses date rape drugs, the woman has no choice. Other opponents argue that GHB and other date rape drugs are used recreationally, so why do they get any more consideration than other recreational drugs? Again, it's the method. While many people find sex enhanced on drugs, and make a conscious choice to use them, slipping something in someone's drink without consent is an entirely different matter. Using a drug as a method of covering up a crime, and to make a crime easier to commit, is the equivalent of using a gun in a robbery as opposed to sheer brute force. So bravo to the Canadian Alliance, for making it known that rendering a woman unconscious for the purposes of an easy and untracable rape and rendering her defences (both mental and physical) null and void is using a weapon against her. MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk