Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 2010 Source: Guelph Tribune (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 Fairway Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.guelphtribune.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3422 Author: Alan Pickersgill LEGALIZE CANNABIS Sleeman Brewery has a new advertising campaign that highlights the shady side of the family heritage. The TV spots look back to 19th century England when they got out of piracy and into brewing. This smooth evolution of business models set up the family well. Future generations would continue to prosper. One of the ads refers to Al Capone, the Chicago gangster who ran illegal booze into backroom bars across the northern States. Willing Canadian entrepreneurs like the Sleemans and the Bronfmans got comfortably wealthy providing their products during the prohibition years. From 1919 until 1933 it was illegal to make, sell or consume alcohol in the United States. The law did nothing to stop the trade. It was widely flaunted. As many as 100,000 "speakeasies" operated in New York City alone. They were just as widespread in other cities like Detroit and Chicago. Organized crime grew strong on the illegal alcohol trade. They controlled everything from distribution to the final point of sale. When they felt the need, they thought nothing of killing people who stood in their way. Citizens who led otherwise honest lives were given criminal records when found in possession of a flask of rum or a flagon of ale. Fast forward to today. Instead of a case of Sleeman Cream Ale, think of an ounce of BC Bud. Distribution and sale is still controlled by organized crime. Honest citizens are still given criminal records for possessing it. In July 2009, Statistics Canada reported that violent crimes across the country declined. Yet, they said, "cannabis offences increased in 2008, while declines were reported for cocaine and other drug offences. Possession of cannabis, which continued to account for almost half of all drug offences, posted a rate increase of five per cent." While all this is going on, one of the most addictive and harmful substances known is widely available and sold in corner stores throughout the land. There is no good reason why alcohol and tobacco should be legal while marijuana is not. Yes, some people will become addicted to it, but some are also addicted to alcohol. Everyone who smokes cigarettes for any length of time becomes addicted. Many will also die of cancer. Smoking pot is probably not good for you. It's been a few decades since I bothered with it. Breathing any kind of smoke into your lungs is a stupid and dangerous thing to do. The risk of addiction, or tragic health consequences, are obviously not determining factors in decisions about legality. If they were, tobacco would have been banned years ago. Legalize cannabis, tax it and sell it through the LCBO stores. Failure to do so leads to ridiculous events like the recent raid on the Medical Cannabis Club of Guelph. That such a club even exists shows the extent to which people must go to possess the stuff without legal risks. When you look at a list of the medical conditions that are helped by it -from multiple sclerosis to glaucoma -just about anyone could talk their doctor into prescribing it. Laws do not stop crime. If they did, we wouldn't need police. Laws are a statement of society's moral values. Values change. Many things that used to be illegal are now allowed. Alcohol, divorce, homosexuality, abortion, contraception, books by D. H. Lawrence. The opposite is also true. Racial discrimination used to be government policy. Now it's against the law. Attitudes change over time. Sooner or later a tipping point is reached. That's when laws and penalties are overhauled. We have reached the tipping point with cannabis. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake