Pubdate: Wed, 11 Feb 2004 Source: Burlington Post (CN ON) Copyright: 2004 Burlington Post Contact: http://www.haltonsearch.com/hr/bp/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1528 Author: Brad Dietrich Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n144/a08.html?13169 EDITORIAL EXAGGERATES DANGER OF GROW HOUSES: READER I think you are grossly exaggerating the danger posed by cannabis grow operations. (the Post, Jan. 21). Linking the production of cannabis with organized crime and a "litany of other societal problems including drug trafficking, guns, assaults and murder" is awfully specious. No doubt, the huge profits are attractive to organized criminals, but the claim that they are responsible for the establishment and maintenance of a significant number of the hundreds-of-thousands of grow operations across the country is very dubious. It certainly isn't the situation reported by Forbes magazine in its recent profile of the Canadian cannabis industry. Furthermore, if grow houses really were sites of frequent episodes of assault and murder, then the sheer number of them would mean that the newspapers and television news would be filled every day with the grisly reports. The reality is that firearms are found at roughly 15 per cent of grow houses that are busted, which is about half the rate at which firearms are kept in Canadian homes in general. According to the late Gil Puder, a Vancouver city cop, part of what makes the war against cannabis attractive for police officers is the relative safety for them. As for the accusation that grow operations are related to drug trafficking, well, this rather obvious claim shows how desperate you are to bolster your arguments supporting prohibition. I'm certainly not going to defend the practice of stealing electricity. However, it should be pointed out that this, like most of the problems mentioned in the editorial, are the result of prohibition, not the drug itself. Most growers could and would buy their electricity honestly, but are encouraged to steal for the sake of increased security. This theft does hurt everyone indirectly, but it could be stopped almost entirely, simply by legalizing the production of cannabis. And, again, the danger posed by this theft is exaggerated. If the danger was as extreme as that described by the police, then the huge numbers of grow-operations would guarantee that most urban communities would resemble war zones. Unless, that is, the estimation of grow house numbers itself is also a huge exaggeration. I agree with the lawyer representing six of the people charged in connection with that massive grow factory in Barrie. Considering the "harm" posed to society by these men and the cannabis they grew, they don't belong in jail, and, as distasteful as it may be to reactionaries across the country, there is a huge segment of the public that finds the whole matter amusing. Brad Dietrich, Port Alberni, B.C. (By e-mail) - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom