Pubdate: Thu, 18 Nov 2004 Source: Voice, The (CN BC Edu) Copyright: 2004 Langara College Contact: http://www.langara.bc.ca/voice/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3592 Author: Rubina Sidhu LEGALIZE POT - PROS AND CONS Yes: Snub the Yanks The discussion about keeping marijuana illegal is bogus. The stale argument, peddled by the likes of U.S. drug enforcement czars, is burning out and Vancouver has more important things to worry about. We are living in a weak economy. Stability for job security is unrecognizable. Marijuana is a multibillion-dollar-a-year industry, and eliminating it is neither doable nor desirable. A wild idea, viable to fix this particular dilemma of marijuana and our weak economy, is to combine both in a nice and tidy economic package. The legalization of marijuana would give British Columbia, and Vancouver in particular, a sizable, economic increase. Even right wing think tank experts at the Fraser Institute report a retail value of $7 billion dollars a year for marijuana. The report - Marijuana Growth in British Columbia - proposes that if marijuana is taxed as a legal product, it could generate over $2 billion dollars for the government. Put that information with our dependence on the tourism industry and we may have a match. Oh, but Vancouver wouldn't want drug tourism! The horror! However, one must keep in mind the blatant attempt of hypocrisy, when defending a right-wing ideology on legalizing marijuana. No one talks about drug tourism when it comes to promoting Canadian beer or BC's luxurious wine industry. There have been numerous late-night brawls in the streets that often end with gunfire and other mayhem. But in order for this to work, there must be cause for the city and the province to act independently from the nation's capital. Canadian drug laws are set nationally, so it might seem that it would be difficult for the city or the province to formally legalize marijuana without Ottawa. However, enforcement is carried out at the local level and there are already major differences in the way marijuana prohibition is enforced in BC compared to the rest of the country. Vancouver and other B.C. cities could simply set their own policies and instruct their police to act within certain guidelines, as the Dutch do. Marijuana in Holland remains illegal in principal; cities set their own marijuana policies within guidelines set by the national government. Vancouver should send a delegation to Holland, and not just to Amsterdam, to examine their coffee shop style system. But if Vancouver attempted to venture in these foreign pot waters, what would the American government say? Undoubtedly the American government would bluster. But do the Canadian people want their policies set in Washington? The people of BC are alienated enough from Ottawa, so what sense would it make to bend over and comply with big brother? - --- MAP posted-by: Derek