Pubdate: Wed, 08 Jan 2003 Source: Sylvan Lake News (CN AB) Copyright: Sylvan Lake News Ltd. 2003 Contact: http://www.sylvanlakenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2378 DECRIMINALIZE POSSESSION OF MARIJUANA Stories you rarely see in a newspaper: Thousands of football fans, many of them stoned on marijuana, rampaged through downtown yesterday, breaking windows, overturning cars and setting fires after their team won the championship. Amother and her two young children were gunned down yesterday by a jilted boyfriend high on marijuana. Misuse of marijuana costs the economy billions of dollars in increased costs for social services, health care, crime-fighting and absenteeism, according to a study in the New England Journal of Medicine. We could go on, but you get the point. Substitute the word alcohol for marijuana and the stories become instantly recognizable as variations of the reports we hear and read about every week. In a rational world, if one of the two substances, liquor or marijuana, was illegal, it would be liquor. In our world it's pot. Why? Despite decades of study, the worst researchers can say about marijuana with any degree of certainty is that it limits a user's ability to concentrate, impairs judgement and affects short-term memory. It also contains scores of chemicals in addition to the active ingredient THC, many of uncertain toxicity. Worrisome, yes, but compare that to smoking tobacco. Messages on cigarette packages warn smokers of many horrible consequences of lighting up, all of them well documented. The only valid warning you could put on a pack of joints would say, "Smoking ANYTHING is bad for your lungs." Light up a cigarette, also known as a cancer stick, and people near you may frown. Light up a joint and the police will charge you with a crime. More than 600,000 Canadians have criminal records today for the simple possession of marijuana. Canadian police forces spend hundreds of thousands of dollars every year trying to stamp out the cultivation and use of pot. If they're making any headway, we don't see it. Even those who of us who don't smoke pot don't see it as evil. A recent National Post poll indicates almost two-thirds of Canadians believe possession of small amounts of marijuana for personal use should be a non-criminal offence, punishable by a fine rather than a jail term. So does the House of Commons Special Committee on Non-Medical Use of Drugs. It has recommended Ottawa decriminalize the possession and cultivation of not more than thirty grams of cannabis for personal use. So does Justice Minister Martin Cauchon, who said he will consider a new policy that would decriminalize marijuana as a first step in reforming drug laws. "The legislation in place is sort of disconnected with Canadian reality," he said. The Canadian Senate has gone even farther. In September, it concluded that prohibiting marijuana contributes to organized crime and law enforcement efforts little impact on use. It recommended letting people smoke pot without penalty. "Scientific evidence overwhelmingly indicates that cannabis is substantially less harmful than alcohol, and should be treated not as a criminal issue, but as a social and public health issue," said Senator Pierre Claude Nolin. The evidence supports decriminalizing marijuana. Public opinion favours it. Political leaders support it. So why is simple possession still a crime? It's time to deal with this issue. Let's get some legislation on the table and hold a national debate. We're often told, if it ain't broke, don't fix it. Well, the opposite holds true as well: if it is broke, fix it. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex