Pubdate: Wed, 04 Feb 2009 Source: Nanaimo Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Nanaimo Daily News Contact: http://www.canada.com/nanaimodailynews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1608 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) MEDICINAL POT LAWS NEEDED TO BE CHANGED Canada is not going to descend into a lawless and reckless state if sick people are given adequate access to medical marijuana. It is now without question that pot is beneficial for a host of illnesses, from glaucoma to multiple sclerosis, as well as relieving the effects of chemotherapy. The government may acknowledge this, but their actions to see that those in need can get access to pot are dismal. Government-approved pot is so low in potency it is pretty much useless for someone using it for relief from pain or other symptoms. It's understandable that so few people would jump through the legal hoops set by Health Canada to be severely limited to growing small amounts of low-grade pot. And even having a Health Canada licence is no guarantee that police won't come knocking, either politely or by kicking down the door. The Health Canada rules are also rather convoluted, and many people who thought they were abiding by them have ended up before the courts facing charges of cultivating a controlled substance, if not possession for the purpose of trafficking. The ruling of Madam Justice Marvyn Koenigsberg calls on Health Canada to make serious changes. The ruling states that "compassion clubs," which have sprung up around the country, including here in Nanaimo, should be able to grow and provide pot to their clients. Obviously the government's effort to monopolize or control production of medicinal pot has failed. Governments are dismal at doing much more than regulating and taxing. So why didn't they do that with medicinal pot from the start? Likely they were concerned about a crossover into recreational pot use and Health Canada saw their rules as a means to prevent that from happening. If they thought it was going to open the door to recreational use, they badly misunderstood the availability of pot in this country. Organized crime has that market cornered as they finance other criminal activities. Crime gangs could hardly sell enough medicinal pot to afford a weekend at Whistler. And those who want recreational pot are hardly about to be running to friends and family suffering from terminal illness. If they fear that compassion clubs could serve as a cover for organized crime, then they are severely incompetent. A government that can enforce current tobacco legislation can enforce new pot regulations. It is highly illegal to grow, refine and sell tobacco, and the RCMP has a whole unit devoted to pursuing scofflaws who dare grow tobacco. The same goes for those who play poker for money and do not abide by various legislative requirements. While pot can serve as a gateway drug for those disposed to addiction, for millions of others it is, for the most part, harmless. We have another drug that does a lot more damage -- alcohol. Justice Koenigsberg's decision re-opens the question about decriminalizing or legalizing pot. would certainly solve the medicinal pot problem. Legalizing it would put the government in a position to tax it. It's at least time the government gave up controlling the production of medicinal pot. And if new regulations allow compassion clubs to produce and distribute pot, with some crossover into recreational use, that is a small price to pay. The real problem here is not that there is an inability to control pot, but that healthy people use it as an anodyne in the same way others abuse alcohol. Somewhere between the real need for pot use by ill people and its abuse by stoners is a balance. Until we have a responsible society where pot and booze are not abused, the government is going to have to find a way to provide it to one and either prevent or control it for the other. No reasonable person still looks upon pot as some great evil. It's time our government's policies came in line with public sentiment. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin