Pubdate: Mon, 07 Mar 2005 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Pete McMartin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) RCMP DEATHS SPARK CONFUSED DEBATE OVER POT ISSUE In my life, I've inhaled. I'm betting most of us have, if my experiences in high school, university, work and every neighbourhood I have ever lived in are any indication. Pot was ubiquitous 30 years ago: it is ubiquitous now. Does that make me complicit in the tragic death of four RCMP officers in Mayerthorpe, Alta.? Does it make anyone who has ever smoked or still smokes pot complicit in their deaths? Uncomfortable questions. But in the superheated and often overwrought coverage of the four officers' deaths, linkages are being made that beg answers. Suddenly, the guilt of the officers' needless deaths has spread beyond the actions of a lone psychopath and fanned out, by inference, to the millions of illicit drug users in this country. Are they, we, ultimately, the guilty party? Is anyone who has ever had a toke involved? Did James Roszko embody our collective lawlessness or was he merely an unfortunate singular eventuality? Many took the opportunity to expound on both suggestions. With the RCMP officers' deaths still fresh, and with the facts still vague, various eminences at the Liberal party convention offered up the whole spectrum of strategies, from calling for the complete legalization of marijuana, to a further decriminalization of marijuana, to mandatory prison sentences for operating a grow-op, to a renewed effort of the war on drugs and a zero-tolerance approach. Letters to the editor pages mirrored that confusion. One letter in our sister paper, The Province, argued the four officers would not be dead if pot were legal: another argued pot played only a marginal part in the killings: a third argued drugs are "the front end of terrorism" -- making, in a single bound, the leap between Mayerthorpe and al-Qaida. The same dichotomy can be found in today's Sun, with one letter writer calling for stiffer sentences for grow-ops, likening them to a "disease," while another, decrying the senselessness of the officers' deaths, called for an end to marijuana prohibition. Remove the law: remove the problem. In Saturday's paper, Sun editorial cartoonist Roy Peterson -- the nation's best and most decorated at his job -- suggested in his editorial-page cartoon that pot smokers were complicit, with a cartoon of a youngish, toque-hatted dopehead toking on a doobie, and saying "Smoking cigarettes can kill you or me. Smoking pot kills cops and criminals but not me." The headline above it was "Customer Denial 101." Peterson, who has never smoked pot, was right in one sense: There is a whole lot of denial and avoidance going on. He was wrong in another. His image of pot-users as feckless low-life slackers is out of touch. Pot is firmly entrenched in the middle and upper-middle classes. It is not exclusive to the marginalized or to the young. This is a country of several million polite, tax-paying criminals. For all the talk about terrorist groups and export, grow-ops serve a primarily domestic audience. They meet a consumer demand, which seems to be forgotten in the call for stiffer sentences. Oddly, the killings in Mayerthorpe had only a peripheral connection to grow-ops. Even the Mayerthorpe RCMP, as its media relations officer told me on Sunday, did not consider this a raid on a grow-op: it was a retrieval operation of stolen property. They stumbled on James Roszko's grow-op, just as they stumbled on his psychopathic anger. His grow-op wasn't much to boast about, either: Twenty mature plants and 280 "others" -- seedlings, perhaps -- is nothing in the marijuana industry, not when B.C. has seen seizures in the range of 20,000 plants. James Roszko wasn't a problem because he grew pot: He was a problem because he was nuts. At any rate, the corrosive effects of grow-ops manifest themselves in ways other than violence. The majority of raids do not result in shoot-outs. But grow-ops are fire hazards; they steal power in huge quantities; they ruin property; they bankroll gang life and gun-running and all manner of illegal activities. And they put police in harm's way. And here's the thing about that: All us nice, tax-paying criminals who have ever smoked pot in our lives, or who casually take a toke at a party if offered, know this. We would feel differently, of course, if the grow-op was next door to our house. But the odds are, it's not. It is somebody else's problem. We live with that fact, and in this, we are complicit, and we are guilty of avoidance, and Peterson is right. On the other hand, the prohibitionists and those who call for stiffer sentences against grow-ops suffer an avoidance of their own, namely, grow-ops serve a huge market. That market lives next door, and is made up of neighbours who, having seen the havoc that alcohol and tobacco have legally wreaked on society, don't see pot use in the same alarmist perspective they do. Those neighbours would charge the prohibitionists -- who probably don't mind having a drink and or smoke -- with being guilty of hypocrisy. But then, terminology is everything, isn't it? Some will always see it as a war on drugs, when that is only half the equation. This is a civil war. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth