Pubdate: Fri, 18 Feb 2005 Source: Langley Advance (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.langleyadvance.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1248 Author: David George Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05.n250.a02.html SYSTEM WON'T CHANGE FROM WITHIN Dear Editor, Apart from his attempt to belittle my position on cannabis and to confuse cannabis with "drugs," which appears to be the standard operating procedure of anyone who fears the truth, Mr. Marsh [Poor fellow deserves pity, Feb. 11 Letters to the Editor, Langley advance News] seems to think that a dishonest and corrupt system can be changed from within. As far as I know, the only way to deal with corrupt people is to put them in jail. Unfortunately, the true criminals own the jails. They also own the politicians who write the laws and the police who enforce them, as well as the court system that interprets the laws, all for their own benefit. I wonder just where Mr. Marsh fits within that system. At least he seems to agree with me that the current system needs to be changed. His tired challenge to attempt to change the system from within might work on someone who had not spent 40 years of his life working for the system. The system works for its masters, and anyone who works within it is its servant. Who bites the hand that feeds them? Mr. Marsh likens me to a spoiled child who can't get his own way, who would prefer to sit in an alleyway somewhere, licking my wounds. Mr. Marsh seems to me like a spoiled child who became an ignorant bully, blindly serving his corrupt masters, precisely to avoid being out on the street. Poor fellow. I do agree the alleyway is where anyone who opposes the system is likely to end up. Mr. Marsh, and prohibitionists like him, ought to consider what happens to a spoiled child licking his wounds in an alleyway. A short time in the alleyway can make a person - even a spoiled child - - very strong. It can get to be quite an expensive exercise to keep all those spoiled children under control. At some point you might begin to wonder how it was that you ended up with a large number of spoiled children licking their wounds in alleyways. You might send out the death squads, I suppose. Would that make Mr. Marsh happy? Section 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees freedom of "thought, belief, opinion, and expression." Prohibition of cannabis use prohibits the thought created by cannabis use, and is not demonstrably justified in a "free and democratic society." So it appears Canada is not a free and democratic society. The federal government's own explanatory pamphlet, published by the Department of Canadian Heritage, describes the Charter guarantee of freedom of thought as freedom of an individual to create ideas. Perhaps Mr. Marsh is one of those people who, confronted with the failure of the system he seems to cherish, would warn anyone who opposes it: "Don't get any ideas." David George Bellingham - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin