Pubdate: Tue, 15 Mar 2005 Source: Camrose Booster, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2005 The Camrose Booster Contact: http://www.camrosebooster.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2438 Author: Geraint Osborne Note: Dr. Geraint Osborne is a professor of sociology at the University of Alberta's Augustana Faculty. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) THE DECRIMINALIZATION STRATEGY Second Thought The murder of four RCMP officers in Mayerthorpe was a terrible tragedy. I have tremendous respect for the men and women in our police services who patrol our highways, protect our communities, and come to our aid at a moment's notice. It is a tough, stressful, sometimes dangerous, and often thankless job. We owe them a great deal of gratitude. While we pause to remember the fallen, we should also take the time to consider what can be learned from this senseless loss. I have a personal interest in this issue, as several of our Crime and Community students at Augustana go on to serve in various police forces across the country, including the RCMP. I'd like to think that we can salvage something from this terrible ordeal that will make their work safer. The Liberal Party should ignore the hysterical rhetoric of reactionary politicians and continue with its plans to decriminalize marijuana. The suggestion that marijuana caused these deaths, and worse yet, that all marijuana users are somehow responsible, is inane and shameful. It is reminiscent of the outrageous racist comments made by Emily Murphy in The Black Candle (1922), which suggested that "Aliens of colour" were pushing their drugs on white Canadians; it reminds one of exploitation films, such as Reefer Madness (1938), which claimed that the "killer weed" combined with "evil jazz" would lead to sexual misconduct, insanity, and homicide. This type of ridiculous and sensationalistic rhetoric has never encouraged rational discussion about crime, law, and the social reality of drug use and abuse in modern societies. James Roszko, with his gun-fixation and hatred of police, is ultimately responsible for these murders. He was a very dangerous man whose life was not that different from many serious offenders. There were many factors--criminologists refer to them as criminogenic factors--that contributed to his lengthy history of criminal activity, including being abused in a foster home as a child. Tougher drug laws would not have prevented his violent actions. Nor would they have reduced the availability and use of marijuana in Canada. We have known for the last 30 years that the war on drugs has been a complete failure. Despite a long and expensive war, illegal drugs are still available. Moreover, as a growing number of experts concur, the intensification of the drug war has served only to make the drug trade more lucrative, and organized crime and drug trafficking more violent. The prohibition of illicit goods and services is the lifeblood of much organized crime. Prohibition of alcohol led to bootlegging and, more recently, high taxes on cigarettes led to smuggling and illegal sales. Historically, no form of prohibition has ever been successful. People turn to drugs either because they want to retreat from impoverished social conditions and abuse or because, as more people increasingly admit, they enjoy their casual recreational use. In either case, these people are unlikely to change their behaviour through legal force. If we can't keep drugs out of "secure" institutions like prisons, then how do we expect to keep them out of an open democratic society with porous borders? By decriminalizing and eventually legalizing drugs and by controlling them in the same way we do more dangerous drugs--alcohol and tobacco kill more people than all the other illegal drugs combined--we will greatly reduce much of the harm associated with the drug trade. Scholars working within the field of peacekeeping criminology remind us that education is much more effective than coercion. Rather than adopting destructive and ineffective war-like strategies to prevent people from abusing drugs, we should put our resources into health and education. These will be far more effective in addressing the problem, as already demonstrated by the declining rates of tobacco consumption in developed countries. It is irresponsible for us to put our police officers into a war they cannot win. The decriminalization of marijuana remains our best harm-reduction strategy. Dr. Geraint Osborne is a professor of sociology at the University of Alberta's Augustana Faculty. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin