Pubdate: Mon, 19 Jun 2006 Source: Beacon, The (CN NF) Copyright: 2006 The Beacon Contact: http://www.ganderbeacon.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3279 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) BUSTS - THE BIGGER, THE BETTER Police in recent times have made tidy work of drug busts in the province. Whenever there's a news release issued to media in the province about another arrest and seizure, that's supplies that will not make it to the streets or the schoolyards of communities in the province, whether or not there's ever a conviction in court. Some will tell you, however, that it's practically impossible to rid any community of illegal drugs and we're sure that's true. But, we keep looking for cures for cancer, HIV, diabetes and other killing agents even though at times, it all seems close to impossible to counteract. It's good to see police keep working to counteract the sale of illegal drugs in our communities -- even if cleaning it up totally is a too-far-to-reach goal. When a young person can say it's no problem getting cocaine and crack cocaine in a schoolyard, then something needs to be done for sure to curb it. Marijuana has been used and sold for years and though it still is illegal, cocaine and crack cocaine puts a whole new spin on the use and sale of illegal drugs in our society. There is a certain percentage of people who will always experiment with whatever drug becomes available, and by the same token there is always a greater percentage who auspiciously opt to say no. In any large town, drug use and trafficking tends to be prevalent and Gander is right up there for markets for a pusher to hit. It's not the acne-faced kids with $300 worth of weed in his pants pocket selling in the school yard, it's the scumbag suppliers who put up the big bucks to yield huge profits from the 10 or 12 pawns who carry out the illicit trade for them. All you need to reap the benefits of drug sales is a dormant conscience that doesn't allow the guilt of screwing up a young person's life to interfere with the big financial gains. The principal of a school in Blaketown, Trinity Bay, recently made a few headlines when he called the RCMP to his school to report a drug incident. The 18-year-old student was charged with trafficking over a single marijuana joint. Some called the charge heavy handed and perhaps it was a bit heavy -- as indications are many students pass joints to each other regularly and most likely that is the case. But maybe there's a message in it all about the repercussions of illegal drugs in a schoolyard. But, most people would prefer to see the heavyweights going down -- the ones dealing with pounds and not the ones nickel and diming. It's the big-ticket hawkers who make sure shipments of crack cocaine trickle down to the schoolyards and wherever else supply-and-demand can be capitalized on. We may never shut down all the businesses of the drug dealers, but cracking down on it sends a solid message: don't sleep too soundly, for you never know who's going to knock on your door because someone decided to rat you out. Even the biggest can fall and those types have a bigger height to fall from. Here's to bigger drug busts in the future. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek