Pubdate: Thu, 28 Jun 2007 Source: Vue Weekly (CN AB) Copyright: 2007, Vue Weekly. Contact: http://www.vueweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2918 Author: Bryan Birtles WHAT ARE THEY SMOKING OVER AT THE GLOBE? After doing independent research on marijuana 15-year-old Saskatchewan Grade 10 student Kieran King told his friends that, in his opinion, marijuana was less harmful than either alcohol or tobacco. Expressing this opinion, unfortunately, put him at odds with his principal-who, King alleges, threatened to call the police if he discussed marijuana again. When King protested, he was suspended from school for three days. Even more ridiculous than punishing a 15-year-old for voicing such an opinion-one backed up by an avalanche of scientific research and a Canadian Senate Committee-is some of the debate that has erupted in the wake of the incident. Since 1923-the year marijuana was criminalized in Canada-the justification for its vilification has been based on scientific fallacies and a not insignificant amount of racism. Instead of undertaking any scientific studies of the drug, the Canadian government outlawed the use of marijuana primarily because it was associated with the Chinese workers who built the Canadian Pacific Railway and were seen as a problem after the CPR was finished using them as cheap labour. Public opinion in the matter was swayed by a series of articles by Emily Murphy-yeah, that Emily Murphy, writing under the name Janey Canuck-that appeared in Maclean's. This week the Globe and Mail's Margaret Wente took a similar tack while applauding the school's position. Claiming the potency of marijuana has skyrocketed, making today's marijuana as addictive as cocaine, Wente cited no scientific sources and cloaked herself in smug boomer hypocrisy when she opined that it was just fine for her and her friends to smoke a little pot back in the '60s but, because marijuana is "many times more powerful" than it used to be, it is now causing disastrous social problems in Canada. And, in a style eerily reminiscent of Emily Murphy's racist ravings against the Chinese, Wente goes on to claim that the new super weed is causing absolute reefer madness amongst "certain ethnic minorities," mentioning native reservations. Taking a position that was unsupported by any scientific evidence nearly a century ago is laughable, but taking one based on racist rhetoric is pathetic. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek