Pubdate: Wed, 25 Jan 2006 Source: Houston Today (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Houston Today Contact: http://www.houston-today.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4080 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) YET ANOTHER MARIJUANA GROW-OP WAS BUSTED LAST WEEK NEAR HUNGRY HILL Whatever happened to the discussion about legalizing the stuff, anyway? Rarely have I seen such a monumental waste of resources as the continued effort to keep this substance illegal. The most recent raid involved officers from Houston, Smithers and Terrace. Officers who could have been spending their time doing something constructive. I'm not going to rehash all the arguments here, it's a simple issue to my mind. Millions of Canadians have demonstrated for decades that no amount of legislation is ever going to stop people from growing, buying and smoking pot. And it's not an isolated phenomenon. People from all walks of life and every (almost) political stripe like to fire up a doobie every now and then. And our government even recognized that. In September 2002, the Canadian Senate Committee on Illegal Drugs released its final report on cannabis after spending a year talking to experts, reviewing research and interviewing thousands of ordinary Canadians. Their recommendation was unequivocal: Canada should legalize -- not decriminalize -- but actually legalize marijuana. The committee laid out a comprehensive public policy with the general goals of reducing the injurious effects of the criminalization of the use and possession of cannabis; permitting persons over the age of 16 to procure cannabis at duly licensed distribution centres; and recognizing that cannabis is a psychoactive substance that may present risks to physical and mental health and, to this end, to regulate the use and trade of these substances in order to prevent at-risk use and excessive use. The members of this committee were not a bunch of hippies prancing around stoned and naked in the woods. These were senators -- among them conservatives. That recommendation got watered down into a ridiculous parliamentary bill that basically -- and barely -- reduced the penalties for possessing and using small amounts of weed. That bill died at the table when the 2004 federal election was called and with it the public discussion went up like a bong hit. Of course, since then we've been consumed with much more contentious issues, many of which would benefit from the legalization of pot. Never mind all the resources that would no longer have to be wasted trying to control the stuff, but the feds would reap billions in new taxes. I don't use marijuana myself, nor would I if it were legal, but I am absolutely convinced that legalizing it the right thing to do. And I'm not talking about some namby-pamby reduction of penalties. Marijuana belongs in the same category as tobacco and beer not cocaine and heroin. Whatever happened to the pot debate? - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D