Pubdate: Thu, 21 May 2009 Source: Abbotsford News (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Abbotsford News Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/BkAJKrUD Website: http://www.abbynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1155 Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/people/Tim+Felger Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) SOBER CONTEXT TO BUST We have no sympathy for Tim Felger. The marijuana activist arrested yet again last week is the architect of his own misfortune in terms of attracting the attention of police. Felger makes his own choices in terms of what he does and sells in his Da Kine store. And if found guilty of pot trafficking, those choices will be grievous, particularly given his previous drug conviction. That said, there is a certain irony in Felger's bust juxtaposed with a Statistics Canada report, released the same day, that listed Abbotsford as being among the top five cities in the country for drug crime rates. According to the study, the rate of police-reported drug offences in Canada - on the rise since the early '90s - reached its highest rate in 30 years in 2007. Vancouver, Victoria and Abbotsford join the other two top cites, Quebec's Trois-Rivieres and Gatineau. Abbotsford placed fourth with a rate of 393 reported drug crimes per 100,000 people. First-place Vancouver's rate was 630. Now place these statistics in the context of the extreme violence and mayhem playing out for months on the streets of this city and other Lower Mainland communities. The bloody mayhem is being perpetrated by an assortment of gangs struggling for turf and control in the outrageously profitable drug trade. In the process, in addition to gang members taking bullets and beatings, four young Abbotsford men have been slain in the past few months. At best, they were bit-players in the drug wars, and at worst, just collateral damage on a brutal battlefield. The situation is deeply disturbing, as reflected in the Abbotsford Police Chief's public warning last week to teens involved in the drug trade. Get out now, or run the risk of becoming another victim. And more bodies there will be, we fear, regardless of tougher drug and criminal violence sentences, or how much law enforcement resources are invested. The illegal drug world is simply too lucrative, too attractive, to be eradicated by legislation and enforcement. Prohibition is not effective. This society must come to grips with that reality. There must be a serious national dialogue on alternative approaches to drug issues, which address criminal trade, addiction, and American policies, all of which have been used as arguments against various forms of legalization or decriminalization. The fact remains: The current drug policy is hugely expensive, arbitrary and for some, deadly. There has to be a better solution. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom