Pubdate: Fri, 18 Jul 2008
Source: Lac du Bonnet Leader (CN MB)
Copyright: 2008 Lac du Bonnet Leader
Contact: http://cgi.bowesonline.com/pedro.php?id=211&x=contact
Website: http://www.lacdubonnetleader.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2956
Author: Marc Zienkiewicz

SINGER PAGE VICTIM OF FLAWED SYSTEM

Barenaked Ladies lead singer Steven Page was arrested by police in 
New York state late last week after allegedly being caught with a 
substance that tested positive for cocaine.

Oh, the horror!

Page now faces drug charges and will have to go through a ridiculous 
series of legal hoops that keep lawyers in business and do nothing to 
benefit the public at large, other than to give us a little 
entertainment for a few days until someone else famous gets caught 
with an illegal substance.

The hatchet job on Page has started already. Newspaper stories this 
week reported that fans are "shocked" and "disappointed" upon hearing 
the news. Media outlets are playing up the fact that the Barenaked 
Ladies recently released a children's album, and are due to perform 
at a children's-themed event in Long Island, N.Y., next month.

The insinuation, of course, is that Page is now somehow a negative 
influence on kids because he allegedly possessed a recreational drug, 
and that he's a hypocrite for singing children's songs in public and 
allegedly possessing drugs in private.

What a pile of horse dung.

The media circus now surrounding Page is nothing but a smear campaign 
perpetrated by the defenders of North America's nonsensical drug laws.

The trend echoes the same one that reared its ugly head during 
prohibition of alcohol in the U.S. and also in Canada's prairie 
provinces in the early 20th century. Drinkers were labeled as social 
deviants, whose morals were corroded with every drop of booze they consumed.

Those who drank were mean, dishonest, and irresponsible. Dads who 
enjoyed alcohol were branded as unfit fathers. Many a citizen was 
shamed publicly by the media and the legal system if caught imbibing, 
and all in the name of a silly temperance movement that caused more 
problems than it claimed it was solving.

Page finds himself caught in the same witch hunt, only our present 
version of Prohibition targets the supposedly dangerous, 
irresponsible, deviant citizens of North America who enjoy 
recreational drugs in private.

It's no secret that Canadian and American drug laws are a complete 
failure. The result of drug prohibition in America has resulted in 
overcrowded prisons, countless ruined lives, and millions of wasted 
taxpayer dollars.

As Dr. Diane Riley of the Canadian Foundation for Drug Policy notes, 
drug prohibition has led to the worldwide illegal drug industry 
growing to an estimated annual worth of $400 billion, "fueling 
organized crime, corrupting governments, increasing violence and 
distorting economic markets. In many parts of the world, the war on 
drugs results in the spread of infections (e.g. HIV), violations of 
human rights, damaged environments and prisons filled with drug 
offenders convicted of simple possession."

Criminalizing drug use has done nothing to prevent crime or reduce 
their use. There's actually ample evidence out there to suggest drug 
prohibition actually increases drug abuse, rather than reducing it.

Still, citizens are told that drug prohibition is a good thing. It 
protects us and our children, we're told by lazy politicians and law 
enforcement officials whose job it is to maintain the status quo.

Sadly, people like Page are caught in this system and have their 
lives and careers potentially damaged for no good reason.

According to the official police story, Page and two women were 
allegedly caught with cocaine in a New York apartment after officers 
discovered a car with an open door in the driveway of a home. While 
investigating the vehicle, officers said they observed a man and a 
woman sitting inside an apartment with a "white capsule" before them.

How these police officers went from investigating a car to apparently 
peering through people's apartment windows is so far unclear. Page 
has plead not guilty and is scheduled to appear in an American court 
at the end of August.

With any luck, the charges will be dropped. Celebrities often get off 
easy when it comes to drug charges, which highlights even more the 
inequality that results from the system of drug prohibition that's in place.

Even if he is cleared of all charges or let off with a slap on the 
wrist, the damage to Page's career could be irreparable. Drug 
prohibition proponents have been successful in painting anyone 
associated with drugs as social pariahs, and many citizens still buy 
into this false and dishonest message.

Still, there is hope. Support for an end to drug prohibition is 
mounting. Columnists like the Ontario-based Gwynne Dyer have called 
for the legalization of all drugs. In fact, Dyer estimates that the 
current system of drug prohibition will end within the next five 
decades, as policy makers slowly realize the current system cannot 
possibly be maintained.

In the mean time, people like Page will continue to be wrapped up in 
ridiculous legal messes while taxpayers fund legal systems and police 
agencies that keep drug prohibition alive.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom