Pubdate: Fri, 13 Jun 2003 Source: York Guardian (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 York Guardian Contact: http://www.insidetoronto.ca/to/york/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2195 Author: Dave Barnett GOVERNMENT'S POT LAW JUST THE START OF SOCIETY'S SLIDE INTO MORAL DECAY As Pierre Trudeau might say, "Welcome to the 1960s!" Possession of small amounts of marijuana is no longer a crime in Ontario, according to the latest court ruling. The provincial Tories say they will wait to see what the Liberals in Ottawa do before they contest the decision. Our federal government has been moving toward decriminalizing the possession of marijuana for some time, but I have yet to hear any rational argument explaining why. This is a government that has made a huge deal out of its opposition to tobacco companies and their legal products. Health concerns and costs are cited as the reason why smoking should be stamped out all across the land. They have spent millions of dollars on court cases trying to get their hands on big tobacco's money (and failed). They have mandated those gruesome pictures of diseased lungs and brains be included on cigarette packages. Smoking, they cry, is an evil that must be eliminated once and for all. Yet for some reason they have decided, or been persuaded, that marijuana is OK: a drug that not only includes all the dangers of tobacco, but adds to them incapacitation and eventual memory loss and brain damage. As for anyone who thinks that experimentation with marijuana doesn't lead to harder drugs, just wait a few years and watch the statistics. There will be a rush of young people in this province trying to get their hands on a joint now that the government says it's not a criminal offence. Sadly, these dichotomous government goals are proof that there is no fixed standard of behaviour that guides policy decisions in Canada's Parliament. Tobacco bad, marijuana good. Alcohol good, too. Not only do the Liberals straddle the policy fence on this issue, they utter stunningly stupid spin-doctoring statements, such as the crime rate will go down once possession is no longer a criminal offence. While I am sure a few tokes will bring back a fond remembrance of the '60s, is there anything from that era, as we look back 40 years later, that we can be proud of? Free love and drugs, once hailed as an enlightening influence on society, were just the beginning of our long slide into moral decay. It all seemed so innocent back then, didn't it? Today the frightening statistics on sexually transmitted diseases, families riven and mangled by divorce, and the untold millions chained by drug addiction stand as witnesses to man's folly and rebellion. The consequences of abandoning laws and practices that have been retained for generations may not be immediately apparent. But make no mistake, decriminalizing marijuana will have tangible, negative consequences. Which of our legislators will stand up and take the credit for the ruined lives in years to come? Will this be Prime Minister Jean Chretien's grand legacy? Or is the real problem with our elected representatives the fact that taking responsibility for their actions is something they rarely consider? - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens