Pubdate: Tue, 14 Jun 2005 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Peter McMartin Note: Peter McMartin is a columnist for the Vancouver Sun HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY WHEN IT COMES TO DRUG USE VANCOUVER - The bravest and, I'd argue, most revolutionary report to come out of Vancouver City Hall may also be the most drIly entitled: Preventing Harm from Psychoactive Substance Use. It was co-authored by the city's drug policy co-ordinator Donald MacPherson and social planner Zarina Mulla. When their report was made public this month, the resulting media coverage concentrated on the recommendation to legalize and regulate the sale of marijuana. That emphasis on marijuana was a shame, since the report wasn't about legalization. It was about the nature of governance. For that, the report deserved a much closer reading than it got, starting with its title. Notice, it doesn't use the accepted phrase "substance abuse" -- which has always had a scolding connotation, suggesting the traditional paternalistic government view that drugs are bad for you, and government is going to protect you against them whether you like it or not. Instead, it uses the less judgmental and open-ended phrase, "substance use." That shift, which may seem like a small thing, is actually at the core of the report's importance. It finds expression over and over in its pages. Some examples: "It is acknowledged that the use of psychoactive substances is part of human behaviour." "The plan acknowledges that substance use is pervasive in contemporary society and prevention initiatives should clearly focus on the prevention of harm from substance use." Got that? Hear the breathtaking candour and honesty in that? It admits what we all know: We like drugs. Here is a bureaucracy speaking to us candidly, stating the obvious rather than keep up the usual schoolmarmish pretense of moral rigour. It is admitting that we, for better and worse, are a drug-saturated society, and that government, rather than act as an agent of censure and punishment, would be better to take a more active role in education, treatment and moral suasion. It implicitly recognizes the hypocrisy of those who, regarding legalized pot as the end of civilization as we know it, daily calm their nerves with two bottles of wine and a half a pack of cigarettes. It would desist from telling its citizens what substances they should or should not put in their bodies, but instead counsel them on the wise use of those substances. "Prohibition," states the report, "ironically allows unregulated access to those substances that are prohibited and hampers efforts to develop quality educational approaches that address issues of harm - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)