Pubdate: Sun, 11 May 2008
Source: Independent on Sunday (UK)
Copyright: Independent Newspapers Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/208
Author: Joan Smith
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom)

SUCCESS IS NO ANTIDOTE TO ADDICTION

What the West London Siege Tells Us About Class

When the police shot and killed a man in London on Tuesday evening, 
the news was greeted with disbelief. First, the siege happened in 
Chelsea, an affluent area of London. Second, the dead man was white 
and a barrister. Third - which got into headlines - he was an Oxford 
graduate. We have become used to hearing of black kids being shot in 
Kilburn or Brixton, but it just doesn't happen to people like Mark 
Saunders. Prosperous lawyers aren't supposed to become distraught and 
open fire across one of London's desirable squares; they're supposed 
to belong to the right clubs, make money and become QCs.

Anyone who doubts the continuing significance of class in this 
country should take a look at the responses to the violent death of 
Mr Saunders. A colleague spoke of him as a future judge and his 
family insisted that he had a strong relationship with his wife, 
describing them as a "golden couple". His father questioned the 
police's actions during the four-hour siege, saying he did not 
believe his son necessarily posed a lethal threat, even though he 
exchanged fire with them on three occasions; an unnamed firearms 
expert suggested the police should have exercised greater restraint, 
as they knew they were dealing with a "respectable chap".

In fact, there is no reason to believe that lawyers are immune to 
depression, alcoholism, drug abuse or domestic violence. They are 
almost certainly better at concealing it, and the affluent middle 
classes are less likely to come under scrutiny from the authorities; 
questions are being asked about how Mr Saunders, who was known by his 
family to suffer from alcoholism and depression, was able to keep his 
shotgun licence when police reviewed it last October. In that sense 
his death is revealing, not just over class, but over the double 
standards that apply to the subject of addiction.

Last week the Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith, ignored scientific advice 
on the effects of cannabis and raised its classification from a class 
C to class B drug on the grounds that a small number of people become 
psychotic from heavy use. A similar argument applies to alcohol, 
which is used by millions of social drinkers without acute harmful 
effects, but turns large numbers into addicts.

Accounts of Mr Saunders' rampage agree that he was drunk when he 
started shooting, and that he had been spotted two weeks earlier 
weeping in the street near his flat. Last week, his addiction to 
alcohol proved lethal. As he was a high-flying barrister, his 
problems weren't addressed in time, showing that alcoholism is 
regarded more tolerantly than other addictions.

The Home Secretary is happy to crack down on the hundreds of 
thousands who use cannabis socially. But is she going to criminalise 
middle-class people whose fix is available at bargain prices in 
supermarkets? Of course not, as long as booze remains the drug of 
choice of Mail readers. Not for the first time, a sensible discussion 
of addiction has been sacrificed to the worst sort of crowd-pleasing politics. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake