Pubdate: Fri, 26 Jun 2009 Source: Calgary Sun, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 The Calgary Sun Contact: http://www.calgarysun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/67 Author: Rick Bell JUSTICE MINISTER ALISON REDFORD ISN'T MINCING ANY WORDS WHEN IT COMES TO DRUGS AS SHE REALLY HAS ONLY ONE THING TO SAY: DON'T BUY'EM If there's a new war on drugs, this is the sound of the artillery. Yesterday, at a big gabfest on how to go after gangs, the province's justice minister sized drug users up in no uncertain terms and Calgary's police chief threw in some of his own grief for good measure. We're talking about the imbibers of everything from pot to crack and they're being painted as a very big part of the gang problem and not any part of the solution. And, while the tides may be shifting somewhat elsewhere, at least when it comes to looking more loosely at marijuana, they're nowhere near Alberta, where any official talk of going easy on weed is not happening. "People should stop buying drugs. Period. Gangs are in the business of making money and the way they do that is by selling illegal drugs. Customers feed the machine of crime, violence and gangs," says Alison Redford, the justice boss not known for playing soft with the syllables and fully electric this day. "It doesn't matter if the customer is someone who is vulnerable or someone sitting in a middle-class neighbourhood or someone with a lot of money, a customer is a customer. They're giving money to gangs. They are fuelling criminal business in this province." Pot, cocaine, name the drug. It's all there. "It's not as if some drugs are less dangerous than others," continues Redford. "We know from the way gangs do business, a kilo of marijuana from Canada is equivalent in the drug trade to a kilo of cocaine from Colombia. It's important not to think some drugs are innocent and aren't dangerous and don't contribute to the gang problem in the same way. They all do. Equally." Redford is on a roll, speaking, as top cop Fred Lindsay did last September, of those in the professional and business crowd who do drugs. "The assumption is perhaps some of these people, if they are doing drugs, they can 'handle it.' They can 'afford it.' But, at the end of the day, it all leads to the same decline," she says. The justice minister also takes on any do-your-own-thing libertarians scanning the page. "People say they want to be able to make personal choices in their lives. This isn't about an individual making a personal choice that doesn't impact anybody except them," she says. "When they buy drugs, they are giving money to organizations trying to get more turf and customer share and these people have guns and armoured vehicles and they are prepared to kill." "We have to talk about this stuff. I remember when I was young we used to talk an awful lot more about how drugs were bad, how they got you addicted and, when you got addicted, you committed crimes and, when you committed crimes, you didn't have a lot of good choices to make in your life. We need to talk about that again." Yes, in a government where some on the benches are all over the map, Redford is pitching the fastball right over the plate and you can take it or leave it. "I go to a lot of high schools and talk to kids and there's the very earnest group who talk about it and know it. There are some who are kind of flip about it and it's Yah, ha, ha. I call them to task. It's not funny. It is not funny and just because you're under 18 doesn't mean if you get involved in the drug lifestyle in any way you're not going to end up having made an impact on your life you're not going to want to make." "So don't do it. We have to talk about why drugs are bad for your health and how they contribute to criminal activity on our streets." Redford wants no part of tossing out laws on marijuana. "The public discussion is if we just legalized marijuana we wouldn't have the problem. As I've said, in the drug trade, marijuana is equal to cocaine." "I think if you start taking that approach, of legalizing, it's a slippery slope. You still have the next level of intoxicants that are illegal. You're still going to have gang activity, you're still going to have the police trying to enforce the law. You're not solving the problem. The problem is gangs will make the money selling the illegal items, whatever they might be, unless nothing is illegal." Then she goes after those who say marijuana is no more harmful than booze. "It is more harmful and whether you're talking about an addiction to marijuana or alcohol it's having a tremendous impact on people." Later, Calgary police chief Rick Hanson turns up the heat and takes aim at those who shake their heads over gangs, wonder what the cops are doing and then go out and buy a quarter ounce of coke. "These people are hypocrites. It's time they look inward and decide what they want more. Do they want a safe community or are they going to contribute to the problem themselves?" says Hanson. "That's going to take some soul-searching." If a soul could be taken by the scruff of the neck, I think it just happened. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr