Pubdate: Mon, 13 Apr 2009 Source: Banner, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 The Orangeville Banner Contact: http://www.orangeville.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2217 Author: Doug Harkness LEGALIZING POT ISN'T THE ANSWER You can always count on Rob Strang to resort to the Green Party playbook on weeks when there is nothing to write about. I'm sure sometimes he does it just to get under my skin (like I do to him on occasion) but never would have guessed that his column last week calling for the legalization of marijuana would have elicited such a strong response. I'll admit that I once too wrote a paper with an argument strikingly similar to the one my colleague proposed, based very much on economics. While I'm sure I must have received a good grade, I've matured a lot since Grade 9 or 10 or whenever it was that I handed it in and my views have turned 180 degrees. The Center for Addiction and Mental Health reports that "with heavy use (cannabis) often reduces motivation for work and study ... may impair people's attention, memory and the ability to process complex information for weeks, months and even years after they have stopped using cannabis." Rather than legalizing marijuana we should give our law enforcement and judiciary the tools they need to effectively fight this problem. Those that make the argument for the legalization of marijuana argue that up to half a billion dollars could be saved on policing and judicial costs. They go on to suggest that up to $2 billion could be netted in new tax dollars. It will remove the grow-op problem, they tell us, and take power and money away from gangs and other assorted criminals. It isn't really related here, but those arguments are strikingly similar to the ones that are also used for legalizing prostitution. They also blissfully ignore the other side of the equation related to the increased medical costs required to fight addictions. The argument that legalizing marijuana will take away the criminal element is almost laughable. The stories about problems related to contraband cigarettes never stop with our provincial government seemingly having resorted to calculating the price elasticity that increased taxes have on the problem. The more they tax, the more prevalent the problem becomes. There are some rather impractical implications to legalizing marijuana as well. The local papers have been filled over the last little while about zoning issues and surrounding windmills and gravel pits. Can you not imagine the fun the first time a local farmer approaches one of our rural municipalities seeking permission for the first legal grow-op? What about in town? Well son, you need a permit for a chiminea to toast marshmallows, but it's OK to grow some weed. The divide of public opinion on this issue is almost evenly split and there is also a very stark divide of opinion at around the age of 35. Green Party support for this issue is smart policy very clearly focused on their goal of attracting younger voters. It's unfortunate, too, because for all of the wonderful policy ideas that the party has introduced into debate it is one of the goofy ones that keeps it closer to the Marijuana Party and farther from the elected mainstream. - --------------------------- Doug Harkness is a longtime member of the Orangeville community with a keen interest in local, provincial and federal politics. He is a member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart