Pubdate: Tue, 16 Oct 2007 Source: Mountain View Gazette (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 Mountain View Publishing Contact: http://www.mountainviewgazette.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4234 Author: Kim Dick Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) POT PROHIBITION NOT WORKING Here we go again with the heavy hand of prohibition slammed down by the federal government. Stephen Harper's new $64-million dollar war on drugs - otherwise known as the National Anti-Drug Strategy - is having a hard time slipping quietly under the radar. But with an exorbitant price tag and an undeniably similar crackdown to our neighbour, the United States, it feels like the feds' new anti-drug strategy is more of a political nod to the south than an actual campaign for change. Touting it as a formula for the mixed messages Canadian politicians have been sending over marijuana use in our country, Harper's strategy has a two track system. Focusing two thirds of the funding on prevention and treatment. The rest of the funding goes straight into law enforcement, border crackdown, busting grow-ops, meth labs and tough new legislation for drug producers and sellers. May sound like a good plan but unfortunately it seems like the hardest hit are the Canadian pot users. A recent UN study shows that Canadian pot use is four times that of the global rate and the highest in the industrialized world. Since the Conservatives took office, the number of arrests for simple possession of marijuana has skyrocketed from 20 to 50 per cent. A far cry from the Liberal bill which would have seen small amounts of marijuana decriminalized under Canadian law. As far as I can tell, cracking down on pot users - who may otherwise be known as generally law-abiding citizens - is a renewed attempt at marijuana prohibition. Maybe Canadians are not ready for full legalization of the ancient herb but all signs point to prohibition nurturing organized crime rather than combatting it. This idea is examined in the book, Bud Inc. Inside Canada's Marijuana Industry by author and journalist Ian Mulgrew. In Mulgrew's book, Stephen Easton, senior scholar for the Fraser Institute and economics professor at Simon Fraser University, estimated that marijuana was Canada's most valuable agricultural product. Easton predicted that Canadian cannabis consumers annually spent $1.8 billion on pot - just shy of tobacco expenditure at $2.3 billion. Imagine the tax boon inherited nationally if government took control of the sought-after agricultural commodity. Easton and Mulgrew also share the idea that marijuana revenue is sustaining organized crime syndicates and allowing them to produce and distribute more harmful substances. "It is a real source of enormous amounts of revenue for criminal organizations," said Easton in the book. Prohibition didn't work in the '20s with alcohol and it's not working now with marijuana. With prohibition comes profitability - which means if one grow op goes out of business, there are plenty others to take its place. Prohibition is not the answer. It is time for the feds to try a new strategy - or at least look into something that works. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin