Pubdate: Sun, 12 Mar 2006 Source: Brandon Sun (CN MB) Section: Pg 6 Copyright: 2006, Brandon Sun Contact: http://www.brandonsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2437 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) DUDE! CHILL OUT OVER POT LAWS Whoa! Chill out, Mr. Toews! Canada's new justice minister is being anything but groovy with his refusal to relax Canada's rarely enforced, overly harsh laws that prohibit tokers from using marijuana. This past week, the justice minister and Manitoba MP put the brakes on a proposal that would decriminalize cimple possession of marijuana. The idea, one of the few brainchilds of the former Liberal government that was worth supporting, would have relaxed the penalties for possessing less than 15 grams of pot - roughly 20 joints. "We have a law on the books, don't we?" Toews hurriedly told reporters in Ottawa after a cabinet meeting last week. The same day, his spokesman was equally as blunt when The Canadian Press asked if the Conservatives would resurrect the Liberals' decriminalization efforts. "It is a very short answer, and the answer is no," Mike Storeshaw said. "We have no plans to bring any bill forward." A Liberal bill to decriminalize weed would have given police the power to issue fines between $100 and $400 if they caught smokers with less than 15 grams of marijuana. It would have meant potheads caught smoking up would not have a criminal record and wouldn't face drug charges in court. For the most part, we think the plans Toews and the Conservatives have to hand out harsher sentences and get tougher on criminals are far better than the soft-on-crime stuff peddled by the Liberals for the past 13 years. But on the issue of loosening up pot laws, we think Mr. Toews needs to seriously chill out from his stern stance. Does the new justice minister think Canada is about to enter some sort of reefer madness if he lets stoners smoke up without the fear of getting a criminal record? We hope not. That's just silly, not to mention old-fashioned. There's a huge, huge difference between decriminalizing marijuana and legalizing it -- as they do in the Netherlands, where people can buy week and freely smoke it in certain sections of restaurants and bars. The intent of the Liberals' decriminalization bill was to prevent recreational marijuana users from ending up with a criminal record just because the police happened to catch them smoking a reefer one day. Surely, most Canadians would agree that it would be a far better use of our law-enforcement resources, the courts and the police, to go out and shut down grow-ops, meth labs and crack houses - - which more often than not are tied to organized crime - than spend their time chasing minor drug users. Besides, if your goal is to prevent people from smoking marijuana, what better way to do it than focus on busting the places where the drugs are made or harvested? Reportedly, Westman's pot supply dried up to a certain extent last summer after police shut down a huge grow-op near Oak Lake. If you want to keep kids from smoking marijuana, cut off their supply - don't send the police out to charge them all with possession. There are perhaps some other reasons for the Conservatives' opposition to relaxing marijuana laws. It could be worries that more and more people are driving under the influence of pot. Perhaps they're worried they'll upset their friends in the White House, who are just as ornery about marijuana and who the Tories likely want to convince that Canada isn't a permissive socialist haven that lets gay people get married and potheads run amok. (The former U.S. ambassador to Canada, Paul Cellucci, once suggested there could be tie-ups at the border if Canada relaxes its pot laws). Maybe the answer is all of the above, or perhaps it's something else entirely. Whatever, man. If you're reading this, Mr. Toews: Dude, get with the times, quit fretting about a minor drug a growing percentage of the population uses anyway and focus instead on stopping the real bad guys. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman