Pubdate: Sun, 25 Jun 2006 Source: Jamaica Gleaner, The (Jamaica) Copyright: 2006 The Gleaner Company Limited Contact: http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/feedback.html Website: http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/493 Author: Dawn Ritch Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) WHAT PORTIA SHOULD NOT DO EVERYBODY IN Jamaica wants Mrs. Portia Simpson Miller to do something or other. Fire Omar, fire Paulwell, fire Colin, take back the public service company and the cement company from foreign occupiers, fix the roads, increase the salaries, lower the taxes, tariffs and tolls, reduce interest rates, public waste and corruption, and restore the natural environment. I just hope Madam Prime Minister doesn't fall into irritation like her predecessor and start forming committees to address our wrongs, when she is the one with the constitutional duty to do so. Everybody else's reports just gather dust. I'm disappointed, therefore, that she wants the Jamaican Diaspora to have its own parliamentary committee so that it can have an input in government policy. Not surprisingly, Opposition Leader Bruce Golding is trying to claim this idea as his own. Diaspora's Say If any body of people should be given a soap box in officialdom it is the overseas Jamaicans. But since they do charity work in Harlem and Brixton, they should have the soap box over there and not here. They should try to influence American and British foreign policy in a positive way towards the Jamaican people back at home. Instead, the diaspora wants a say here in Jamaica on the basis of its remittances to the island. I doubt that Madam Prime Minister intends to sell us to them, but what about somebody else? Someone might simply sell us for our weight in gold to build a stadium, a highway, or an extra territorial court. This is a form of endless debt bondage upon which we are already well embarked. The task before her, therefore, is to reduce the public debt, burdensome taxation and refloat the Jamaican economy. That, in my view, is the only way to balance lives. He or she governs best who governs least. A flurry of new legislation, therefore, in the House of Parliament will be the signal that she has fallen prey to despair. If all the officials of government are seated around various tables crafting new laws and amendments for enactment, it will be a sure sign that Mrs. Simpson Miller has lost her way. Her predecessor was a congenital fiddler, and loved nothing more than constitutional law. If Madam Prime Minister merely upholds it, the country will be far better off. Law must not suit the needs of the prime minister and a tiny elite, it must suit the needs of predictable and good public order. A rash of regulations trying to control private behaviour is therefore the hallmark of a government that has lost its way. As long as the private lives and habits of people don't frighten the horses, a government has no business in them. Anything else is not government, but state oppression. The Jamaica Diaspora is like the illegal drug trade. Nobody is quite sure how many they are, where they are, or how they can be identified. If a law can be enacted to give them any kind of role in Parliament, it seems only fair to repeal our marijuana laws and end the judicial persecution of small farmers and poor people living in Jamaica. The latter constantly identify themselves on the television news bemoaning the state's destruction of yet another crop. This doesn't even call for a new law, just the repeal of bad law that reflects not the moral degeneracy of our people, but that of the United States interfering with the culture, production and economy of the island. Drug Problem The world had no drug problem before the 20th century. Busy-body and interfering legislation primarily in the United States changed all that. In 1972, United States President Richard Nixon described "drug abuse (as) the nation's public enemy no. 1," and proposed federal spending of $600 million for fiscal year 1972 "to battle the drug problem from poppy grower to pusher." The year before that the House voted 366 to 0 to authorise "a $1 billion, three-year federal attack on drug abuse." Anybody who follows these matters knows that for over 20 years, the United States' war on drugs has spent untold billions and never won a single battle, much less the war. When they squeeze one country, production shifts to another. Not even a combination of all U.S. and United Kingdom fire power and sanctions will ever vanquish that foe, for the simple reason that it's a false foe. No government, no matter how powerful, will ever be able to legislate self-control in any population in the consumption of narcotics. People who want it, use it, and they're generally a credit to the human race. The Sumerians used opium in circa 5000 BC and created a great civilisation. The Egyptians brewed alcohol and built the Pyramids. The earliest historical evidence of the eating of poppy seeds was c. 2500 BC among the Lake Dwellers of Switzerland. Today they make the finest watches in the world. In 1797, Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote the celebrated poem 'Kubla Khan' while under the influence of opium. Towards the end of the 19th century, the Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland was opened. One of its world-famous founders, Dr. William Stewart Halsted, was a morphine addict. He continued to use morphine in large doses throughout a phenomenally successful surgical career lasting until his death in 1922. It wasn't until 1903 that the composition of Coca-Cola was changed. Caffeine replaced the cocaine it contained until that time. By 1919, prohibition of alcohol had been added to the U.S. Constitution. The following year, the U.S. Department of Agriculture published a pamphlet urging Americans to grow cannabis (marijuana) as a profitable undertaking. Social Legislation Now it seems they want to outlaw cigarettes and fast food, but not before trying to beggar them with regulations and litigations. This is not the country to which we should turn for guidance. Social legislation seems to be the reason for their existence. But the record shows they don't know what they're doing from one decade to the next. If they want to lead their own people around by the nose, and Americans so consent, that is a matter for them. U.S. influence, however, has turned the great fortune we have here in Jamaica of ganja, into a great slavery of prohibition, crime and poverty. The Roman philosopher and statesman Seneca, once wrote, "There is no great genius without some touch of madness." We need to nurture these people, instead of burning their crops and throwing them into jails already overcrowded with their brethren. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake