Pubdate: Fri, 15 Aug 2003 Source: Erie Times-News (PA) Copyright: 2003 Erie Times-News Contact: http://www.goerie.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1347 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) BEST WISHES TO TERRY DAWLEY "Thumbs up" and "thumbs down" are quick takes on the week's news. As President Ronald Reagan is supposed to have remarked to Pope John Paul II, "It hurts, getting shot." Both men should know; both survived bullet wounds. Now-retired Erie police officer Terry Dawley would no doubt agree. He has been shot twice in the line of duty. And the wounds he suffered during an arrest three years ago have ended his career. Dawley was shot in the left hand, knee and right thigh; he lost the full use of his hand. This week, he retired after 13 years' service. Dawley was "the guy you write books about," one police lieutenant told our reporter, the ultimate S.W.A.T. policeman, the most decorated officer ever to serve the city of Erie. Yes, some Americans have become skeptical of the militarization of police work. Yes, we see how Hollywood romanticizes violence in its police movies. Neither of those criticisms applies here. Terry Dawley always had a fine reputation as a policeman. And he was also never afraid to speak his mind, in public and in print. "I can't even tell you how much I miss it," he said of his former profession. We wish him well. Where angels fear to tread. ... When Congressman Phil English was asked about his support for the war in Iraq at a meeting with senior citizens, he said, "I would do it again. Saddam may have dumped the weapons (of mass destruction) or hidden them, but they will turn up or records about them will turn up." We hope our congressman knows something we don't. Those WMD - - how Washington loves those acronyms - seem conspicuous only in their absence. Of course, we don't mean all possible weapons. We mean the important ones. We mean nuclear weapons. Where is Saddam's nuke program, the bombs he was going to give some shadowy terrorist group? Other supporters of the war have quietly dropped the weapons business, and justify the war because it rid the world of a horrible tyrant. English is wise to avoid saying so. He knows uncomfortable questions will follow, such as why we didn't go in to remove, say, our good buddy Pinochet; or why we pamper the tyrants ruling Saudi Arabia. No reasonable person mourns for the Iraqi regime, but many reasonable people think the Bush administration risked its credibility in its lead-up to the war. If English is right, he can have the delicious pleasure of saying, "I told you so." But if not. ... Oh, Canada! Times have changed in the country a French wit once dismissed as "a few acres of snow." Now an American wit says that to some Americans, Canada is "morphing itself into a modern Gomorrah with hockey teams." Put wit aside: Canada is sponsoring some interesting experiments. Let's see if they succeed or fail. In May, Canada made possession of small amounts of marijuana a minor offense. In June, its government introduced legislation to recognize gay marriages; and Vancouver dispensed its first heroin to an addict. And this month Canada began providing seriously ill patients with medical marijuana - some of it grown at a government marijuana farm in Manitoba. Anti-drug warriors in the United States say all Canada's new drug measures will lead to self-destruction. American cultural conservatives say "No way" to same-sex marriages. Canada disagrees. Of course, Canada is not a mirror image of the United States. Despite many similarities, it never was our 51st state. Parallels need not be exact. But let's see what happens in those "few acres of snow." Good riddance to bad rubbish. John M. Poindexter has announced he's leaving public service on Aug. 29. You'll remember, Poindexter was the genius who proposed developing a futures market for terrorist attacks, and creating a massive database of information about all of us ordinary Americans. It took only a slight breath of publicity to flame a firestorm of public indignation with both wacky proposals. "I regret that we have not been able to ... reassure the public that we do not intend to spy on them," he wrote in his resignation letter. That's because, he did intend to spy on us. This is the second time the retired admiral has resigned in disgrace. Poindexter was national security adviser to President Ronald Reagan during the Iran-Contra scandal, in which arms were illegally sold to Iran to bankroll Nicaraguan rebels. Poindexter was convicted of lying to Congress about this mess, but an appeals court overturned his five felony convictions on a technicality. Prosecutors could not prove they had not used testimony Poindexter had given Congress under a grant of immunity. Perhaps his first resignation was just for practice. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman