Pubdate: Wed, 26 Aug 2009
Source: Province, The (CN BC)
Copyright: 2009 Canwest Publishing Inc.
Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476
Author: Jon Ferry, The Province

LEGALIZATION THE ONLY WAY TO WIN DRUG WAR

Attitude Shift With Mexico's Choice to Decriminalize
Pot

The news last weekend that Mexico has moved quietly to decriminalize
the possession of small amounts of marijuana and other currently
illegal drugs has clearly been a hit with Metro Vancouver drug users.

That's not so much because of the immediate impact the new law will
have on Mexico's drug cartels, but because of what it says about U.S.
President Barack Obama's longer-term approach towards the war on drugs
and the possibility that "drug prohibition" is gradually lifting.

"Everybody in the movement is happy that it's happened," said Jeremiah
Vandermeer, editor of Vancouver-based Cannabis Culture magazine,
noting that small-scale decriminalization is far from outright
legalization, but is a step in the right direction.

And it does signal an important change in attitude. As Christian
Science Monitor reporter Sara Miller Llana points out, three years ago
a similar Mexican initiative died amid a storm of controversy, with
Mexico being portrayed as going to pot.

Now, in the midst of drug warfare that's claimed thousands of lives,
the initiative has quietly become law, with hardly a peep of concern.

There is some question, however, whether the move to let people
possess a small amount of drugs for "personal use" (five grams is the
maximum amount of pot allowed) will curb the violence. SFU criminology
professor Neil Boyd suggests it might make matters worse.

"Decriminalization of use will do nothing with respect to the issue of
demand, and will only benefit people who are already involved in the
trade," Boyd told me.

I'm more hopeful, though, if only because I don't think the type of
drug-related bloodshed Mexico has seen, and the kind we've witnessed
in Metro Vancouver recently, can get much worse.

For the gang violence here, we have only ourselves to blame. Our
slavishly liberal, hippy-dippy attitudes towards drugs have blinded us
to the dangers of the monster lurking in our midst. And we now have to
clean up a terrible mess.

To do this, Ottawa cannot act alone or simply resurrect the bill the
federal Liberals introduced in 2003 to decriminalize possession of
small amounts of marijuana. Far bolder, broader action is required.

Canada must work with the U.S., Mexico and other like-minded countries
to end the unwinnable drug war and reach a historic agreement to
legalize, regulate and tax marijuana . . . and possibly other drugs.

Vandermeer favours legalization and regulation of all drugs. But I
agree with Boyd that some --such as crystal meth and crack cocaine --
are simply too harmful to be legalized.

Marijuana, though, could be sold to adults under strict controls and
with stern health warnings that would put it on much the same footing
as tobacco.

Tobacco remains a legal drug. But because of mounting public concern
about its harmful health effects and the public nuisance its drifting
smoke causes, it's effectively been driven into the margins of society.

Let's hope that, with a similarly enlightened and disciplined
government approach, marijuana and other currently illegal drugs can
soon join it there. 
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