Pubdate: Thu, 17 Mar 2005 Source: Dalhousie Gazette, The (CN NS Edu) Copyright: 2005 The Dalhousie Gazette Contact: http://www.dalgazette.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2866 Author: Vanessa Green Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05.n453.a08.html IS POT THE PROBLEM? Jimmy Kapches article "Pot: No Longer a Harmless Head Rush" (Gazette 137:22) was ludicrous and ill-conceived. I am sick of people using the tragic death of the four Mounties in Alberta to promote their own anti-drug values. It was well known, by family and acquaintances, that James Roszko was a gun-totting sociopath, and clearly mentally unstable, and that those shots fired had little to do with trying to save his pot plants. It is not the substance that is the issue here: it is the people, and their lack of a moral conscience, that should be addressed. Furthermore, your argument that people who boycott Starbucks and Nike should also sanction their pot smoking habits is ridiculous. Marijuana is a not a corporately owned product, and therefore your actions would not be heard by any CEO or manager of any company. Boycotting a product is an attempt by the consumer to express their dissatisfaction with a corporation or company's policy or method of conduction business. Boycotting 'pot' would be pointless and idiotic, if it was in attempt to make any kind of statement that was intended to matter. Lastly, your comment about "coercing families of illegal immigrants shipped in from China to grow plants in their house in Oakville or Mississauga," is ridiculous. I've lived in Mississauga for five years, and I know many kids whose parents are Chinese immigrants and have started businesses from the ground up, proving that immigrants do not have to resort to illegal means in order become successful. In no way I am trying to downplay or excuse the appalling circumstances of what went in Mayerthrope, Al., but people who try and sensationalize these tragedies, and point fingers in completely misguided directions only make these situations even more difficult, and unnecessarily complicated, to deal with. Vanessa Green Second-year Journalism University of King's College - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin