Pubdate: Wed, 24 Nov 2004 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Philippe Lucas, Special to the Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Philippe+Lucas (Philippe Lucas) Note: Philippe Lucas is a medicinal cannabis researcher and distributor living in Victoria. He is the founding director of Canadians for Safe Access and the Vancouver Island Compassion Society. UP IN SMOKE Three Decades After LeDain, A New Survey Confirms That The 'War' On Marijuana Is Unwinnable 1. The use of marijuana is increasing in popularity among all age groups of the population, and particularly among the young; 2. This increase indicates that the attempt to suppress, or even to control, its use is failing and will continue to fail -- that people are not deterred by the criminal law prohibition against its use. - -- From the LeDain Commission of Inquiry into the Non-Medical Use of Drugs, Canada, 1972 What is it with the Liberals and pot? Why would a prime minister who has admitted to ingesting his wife's illicit cannabis brownies want to keep arresting Canadians who might choose to do the same thing, when all evidence suggests that prohibition and increased police enforcement criminalizes millions of otherwise law-abiding citizens without ever reducing usage rates? Insanity, that's why -- according to Einstein, anyway -- but more on that later. Despite recent moves towards alternative penalties, over the past 10 years the Liberals have overseen a massive increase in cannabis-related seizures, arrests, and spending. According to the RCMP, cannabis seizures have gone from 5,500 kg in 1995 to more than 21,000 kg in 2003, and from 295,000 plants to 1.4 million over the same period -- an increase of more than 400 per cent - -- with some police departments now reporting that more than half of their current drug cases involve cannabis cultivation. According to a recent Statistics Canada report, the rate of cannabis arrests has gone up 80 per cent between 1992 and 2002, to a total of more than 70,000 a year, two-thirds of which are for minor possession. According to the auditor-general, spending on cannabis education and enforcement cost Canadians nearly $340 million in 2000 -- a number that has only gone up over the past four years. Now that Canada arrests more people per capita for cannabis crimes than any nation in the world other than the U.S., one would hope to see a reduction in the rates of use, but results from the Canadian Addiction Survey released today reveal that quite the opposite is true. Over the 10 years since the last national survey was conducted in 1994, cannabis use in Canada has risen dramatically, with 44.5 per cent of Canadians over the age of 15 reporting that they have tried cannabis, up from 28.7 per cent in 1994. The biggest rise was seen in 18-24 year olds, where use rates doubled from 35 per cent in 1994 to nearly 70 per cent today. Total reported use over the past year also nearly doubled, rising from 7.4 per cent to 14 per cent, meaning that more than three million Canadians used cannabis over the past 12 months. A few weeks ago our cigarette-smoking minister of public safety, Anne McLellan, displayed her usual tact and grace by calling Canadian cannabis users "pretty stupid." On behalf of the 44 per cent of Canadians who have tried cannabis -- including the likes of literary icon Pierre Berton and our aforementioned PM -- I demand an apology. This assumption is not only offensive but, according to the new CAS survey, it's just plain wrong. One of the study's most interesting revelations is that the rate of lifetime cannabis use increases significantly in conjunction with both higher education and income -- rising from 34.9 per cent among those without a high school degree, to over 52 per cent among Canadians with some post-secondary education and from 42.9 per cent of those with low income, to 54 per cent of those reporting a high income. In other words, Minister McLellan, the smarter and more successful you are, the more likely you are to use cannabis; or is it vice-versa? The results of the CAS survey will inevitably provoke cries from prohibitionists to further increase both enforcement spending and the penalties around cannabis use and production. Einstein once defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results, yet this all too accurately describes the madness of our federal cannabis policy over the 30 years since the report of the LeDain Commission. Perhaps it would serve to remind both Paul Martin and Anne McLellan that the 42 per cent of Canadians over 15 who have tried cannabis -- and who remain potential targets for either high fines or imprisonment under Bill C-17 -- are considerably more numerous than the 36.7 per cent of voters who voted for the Liberals in the last election. As the data from the CAS survey suggest, it's time that we stopped waging this unwinnable, unpopular war on cannabis, and put an end to the potential criminalization of the nearly 15 million Canadians who have tried it. Legalizing and taxing the adult use of cannabis may finally allow our nation to focus our resources on the many real problems we face, chief among them being the unending flow of inane comments from McLellan. As the wise man once said, "stupid is as stupid does," and you can put that in your pipe and smoke it. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek