Pubdate: Thu, 17 Mar 2005 Source: Outlook, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Outlook Contact: http://www.northshoreoutlook.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1433 Author: Denny Boyd Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) GOING TO POT OVER POT More and more I am coming to believe that Canadian attitudes and laws concerning marijuana are hopelessly illogical. It seems that governments major and minor in Canada and the weight of the nation's law enforcement are frittering away colossal amounts of money, time and effort for zero progress. It's like the weather; everyone talks about it but no one does anything about it. It used to be that we fretted about the use of marijuana, the horrible damage it was going to do to our kids' brains. That didn't jibe with the happy, serene disposition of all those kids on Fourth Avenue, but never mind. Now it isn't so much the use of pot that is the near-hysterical concern, it's the growing of it. I blame the whole Canadian media for suggesting that a marijuana grow op, 28 plants in a rural barn, was the root cause of the murder of four RCMP in rural Alberta. The RCMP had gone to the farm to check out reports of stolen cars. The discovery of the pot plants was incidental. And by no stretch of credulity could the killer be called a hardened grow operator. He was a sociopath, a psychopath, eaten up with a raging hatred of authority. He was a freak. The Justice Ministry and the RCMP, perhaps to divert scrutiny of police procedures, have fallen in with the hysterical, angle-crazy media in the absurd rationale that there was pot on the scene, ergo pot was complicit in the killings. The most reasonable explanation for the murders that I have read is almost a fairy tale version. A member of the federal Justice Department said, "We just have to accept that meteors fall out of the sky sometimes and someone's going to get hurt." I don't think it is too far-fetched to think of pot growers as farmers with a reliable crop, no blights, droughts, ruinous hailstorms. Or perhaps they are bootleggers, selling home-brew. The more law is enforced to wipe out the grow-ops, the more the price and profits grow. It is a situation where a weed fetches the price of white asparagus. The demand is too great to be discouraged by law. The only rational response must be to decriminalize it. Let anyone who wants it, grow and smoke it openly. Perhaps with the market opened, there will be less crime to control. The huge waste of police time could be diverted to a really serious crime issue, juvenile street racing and hit-and-run killings. Better yet, Ottawa would be removed from an enterprise that is no more wicked than selling tomatoes from a roadside stall. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek