Pubdate: Fri, 27 Jul 2007 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2007, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://torontosun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Christina Blizzard Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n840/a05.html?72001 COLUMN WAS A CAPITAL OFFENCE Oh, my. It seems I touched a raw nerve in Ottawa a couple of weeks ago when I suggested they had a -- how shall I put it? -- okay, they've got a drug problem. TV and radio stations there picked up on it and took polls to see if readers agreed with my assessment. Most of those who called in said I was right. My e-mail filled up with comments -- both for and against my view. Truth be told, some people were very angry and thought I shouldn't be writing about their city. One person told me to "shut my yap and go back to Toronto." Dozens and dozens of people wrote to tell me that the situation is far worse in Vancouver. As if that somehow excuses it. Ottawa's got a really bad problem with crack cocaine being dealt openly. But Vancouver has a problem too -- so that makes it okay? And, as I knew they would, people pointed out that Toronto has its own problems. Yes, we have a gun problem here. Four people were shot to death in Toronto last weekend. I have written endlessly about this city's gun violence. That's what I do. I write about things that need to change. If society sweeps these issue under the rug, nothing will ever get done. Just because Toronto or Vancouver has one problem, it doesn't mean that I can't write about another problem in the nation's capital. Three wrongs don't make a right. As for going back to Toronto, well, whether you like it or not, Ottawa is my city. It is the national capital. The cradle of government in this country. It's where I go if I want to see my MP at work. Where do we send our children when we want them to understand the democratic underpinnings that keep this country great? We pack them in buses and send them off on school trips to Ottawa. Like it or not, fellas, your city is the guardian of every institution we hold dear: The Supreme Court of Canada. The Parliament Buildings. The Peace Tower. When we want our kids to pay tribute to our war dead at the national war memorial, that's where we send them. If we want them to watch national debate in Parliament, they go to Ottawa. If they want to go the War Museum, the National Gallery -- all those great institutions that are the very essence of what it means to be Canadian -- they go Ottawa. And I don't think we want our kids to see drug deals going down right across from Parliament Hill. Some people were insulted by my column. They think I don't like their city. Nothing could be farther from the truth. I love Ottawa. It is one of the most beautiful and elegant cities in the world. What better way to spend a hot summer evening than sitting out on a patio having dinner in one of those superb restaurants in the Byward Market? Yet I had to fight off panhandling drug addicts clearly desperate for quick cash for their next fix. I got countless e-mails from people who agreed with me. Those who work in the National Defence Building seem to be under siege by crack addicts. I got numerous e-mails from them. I also heard from visitors from overseas who had been posted in Ottawa and who had been shocked by the open drug dealing in that city. It seems my column hit with a bit of a thud because it came hard on the heels of the city canning a crack pipe program they'd been funding. Crack pipes? For pity's sake! Crack pots, more like. They make Toronto's loonies look moderate by comparison. Of course, some people said I'm the one with the problem. Apparently, by their logic, we should just hand over our capital city to junkies and crack addicts because, well, that's the Ottawa way, apparently. I don't think so. By far the majority of responses came from concerned citizens who want to reclaim their city from the downhill trend they have seen. That's a good thing. Because everyone knows the first step to getting off drugs is admitting you have a problem. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom