Pubdate: Fri, 03 Jul 2009 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Dave Breakenridge WHATEVER YOUR VALUES, REDFORD IS WAY OFF BASE Forget the talk that might lump me in with the most hardcore of the freedom fighters. Forget trying to rationalize that the sole reason there is violence around the drug trade is because drugs are illegal and the dealers are competing for a market share. Forget the argument alcohol was once the subject of violent organized crime clashes, during a time when it was prohibited. Legalize drugs? What have you been smoking? Those arguments don't take well in Alberta. Oh, and nix the line about marijuana being less harmful, and drug users more apt to be a harm to themselves rather than to others. Despite all that, gangs are bad and if you want to smoke a spliff come Saturday, you're with the gangsters, according to our top law enforcers. I'm no fancy big-city lawyer like Justice Minister Alison Redford, but if hers is what qualifies as a reasoned argument, I guess I saved money by not going to law school. I'm all for laying the boots to the gangsters, and making it hard for them to make life unsafe for average Albertans. I've written that vehicle and property seizure laws aren't all that bad in trying to put and keep gangsters behind bars, if that's the system under which we're going to be working. But all the tough talk about telling people not to do drugs as an anti-gang strategy rings hollow at best. It makes no sense for the province to tell us that users are just as culpable as the gangsters and then allow addicts to be treated with the kind of kid gloves they've previously held up as an ill of the justice system. Not to give Alison Redford and Solicitor General Fred Lindsay any ideas, but if users are so harmful and a party to the violence, then they can't possibly condone the operation of two drug courts in this province. If users are truly to blame for the drug war in our midst then the province should, under no circumstances, be coughing up money to let addicts who turn to crime off of the hook. Who cares if it's proven that programs that divert people from the jail system and into treatment actually save us money in the long run? And why draw the line at reverse onus at bail hearings for drug traffickers, as Redford is proposing? Why not force everyone popped for possession to prove why they're not a danger to public safety, if that's how our cabinet minister views us? Because it's not true. This kind of talk is especially troubling in a province that takes in hundreds of millions of dollars a year from the sale of tobacco and alcohol, which Redford lumped in with marijuana as being equally harmful. They're either bad or they're not. But it's time to stop pretending one is worse for society because it's illegal. She's right, if marijuana were made legal, there would still be a market for other illegal drugs, but as reason for prohibition, it is the most faulty kind of logic. We may as well reinstitute alcohol prohibition. And Redford should remember that as more and more people find themselves comfortable in admitting they are recreational drug users, especially pot smokers, the more she risks alienating a large number of people who identify themselves as Tory voters. In a war to win the hearts and minds of Albertans, Redford is likely hitting the right notes for the choir, but will do little to sway the congregation. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr