Pubdate: Wed, 07 Mar 2007 Source: Caledon Enterprise, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 The Caledon Enterprise Contact: http://www.northpeel.com/br/caledon/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4318 Author: James Treliving WINES AND MARIJUANA SHOULD GET EQUAL TREATMENT Dear Editor: In a recent issue, The Enterprise (Business Matters feature section) reported glowingly on the success of a local farmer/entrepreneur who had opened a winery in our area. I have visited that winery and enjoyed its products. In another section of the paper, you reported not so glowingly on another local farmer/entrepreneur who had opened a marijuana grow-op in our area and subsequently was arrested. I have not visited that establishment, nor do I use the products. Here's my dilemma. A winery produces a consumer product that contains a drug that can induce a euphoric state that can result in impaired judgment. A grow-op produces a consumer product that contains a drug that can induce a euphoric state that can result in impaired judgment. Our government permits and encourages the sales of the products of wineries and makes huge profits. Our government bans and punishes the sales of the products of a grow-op and suffers huge losses. Conservative estimates place the profits from the sale of Ontario-grown marijuana in the billions. A recent article in 'Forbes' magazine states "These 'grows' as they are known, have made marijuana Canada's most valuable agricultural product, bigger than wheat, cattle or timber". The profits apparently filter down to organized and unorganized crime, but the legitimate businesses that supply the equipment and the electricity benefit as well. Our society appears to be unable and in some case unwilling to reduce the consumer demand or the source of supply. Is there then an argument for legalization? The Canadian Government is already licensing growers for 'medicinal marijuana,' so why not let our Ontario farmers grow the weed in controlled, quality conditions and function under a quota system similar to the Milk Marketing Board? The government could market and tax marijuana, like liquor and cigarettes. Our farmers could use a good cash crop and the proceeds would hopefully be better in the coffers of our government than in the hands of non-taxpaying criminals. Our police and courts would be relieved of the madness of attempting the futile prosecution of illegal growers, sellers and users because the damn stuff is available at the corner LCBO. To put this another way, if marijuana production is bad because of the adverse effects, how do we justify our wineries, breweries, distilleries and tobacco industries? JAMES TRELIVING Palgrave - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath