Pubdate: Fri, 23 Nov 2007 Source: Parksville Qualicum Beach News (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Parksville Qualicum Beach News Contact: http://www.pqbnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1361 Author: Neil Horner NEW DRUG STRATEGY SHOULD WORK I never thought I would say it, but hats off to the federal Conservative government. They saw a problem and took bold steps to tackle it. Regardless of how I feel about Stephen Harper and his crew, I have to respect that. Harper's new anti-drug bill is going to handle an increasingly serious problem - probably very effectively For some time now, Vancouver Island pot growers have been growing concerned about the price of their product. A crackdown at the U.S. border has made it tough to get B.C.'s major export crop to market, leading to a glut this side of the border. Not all pot growers are economics majors, but most of them could tell you that's going to mean the price is going to drop like a stone as local producers have more product than the domestic market can handle. It's pretty basic stuff. It's also a major problem for pot growers. They have bills to pay and families to feed. And that's what it's really all about, isn't it? Money? Last time I checked, people weren't hanging out on street corners at night selling pot because of the high social status associated with being the neighbourhood drug dealer. They do it because of the money. Lots of it, a surprising amount, actually. When you consider the fact marijuana is a weed which can grow pretty much anywhere on earth, doesn't it strike you as odd its flowers are almost as expensive as gold? There's a couple of reasons for that. First, naturally, there's a market for it. People like it. It makes them feel good, and you generally have to pay through the nose for things that make you feel good. Second, it's illegal. This makes it a very risky business because, quite apart from the mold, the mice, the slugs, the rabbits, the deer and the ripoff artists, the pot grower has to deal with police - and the possibility of all the heartache and hassle which follow from getting busted. Now, if the government really wanted to cut down on pot use, it seems logical for it to attack one or both of those two branches. First, disrupt the market. This has actually been done by the crackdown at the border. B.C. People can grow kickass weed, but they can't smoke all of it themselves. They need help from the U.S. With the market flooded, local pot growers are seeing less bang for their hazardous buck. Next, take the money out of the equation as much as possible. Decriminalizing pot was aimed in this direction. Take away the big risk and the price of marijuana would likely revert back towards where it really should be - the price of a weed that can grow just about anywhere - which ain't much. If there's not much money, there's not much interest from organized crime, either. Pity the poor Island pot grower then, when it looked like the Liberals were going to decriminalize pot and at the same time the border with the U.S. slammed shut. What were they going to do? Take up macrame and hang out at craft fairs? Maybe they could learn a trade or something. This wouldn't have just affected pot growers. Others make their living out of the illicit dealing in drugs, too. RCMP drug enforcement officers across the country could have been out of a job if there were no grow ops to bust - which there wouldn't be if there was no money in it. Well here's news flash for you: RCMP drug enforcement officers have families, too.. What the heck were they supposed to do? Pretty bleak for them, I would think. Decriminalization would have hit hard at the families of both pot growers and RCMP drug enforcement officers - particularly in this province. That's unacceptable, and Stephen Harper, bless him, knew it. He tackled this one head-on, and kudos to him for it, I say. This crackdown is going to send the price of pot - glut or no glut - through the roof. The growers who manage to escape detection will be in gravy. Not only that, I expect a hiring blitz for new RCMP drug enforcement officers will be coming down the pipe - meaning possible promotions for all those experienced veterans already on the force. For some at least, good times could roll again in B.C. Thanks Steve. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart