Pubdate: Tue, 21 Feb 2012 Source: Williams Lake Tribune, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 Williams Lake Tribune Contact: http://www.wltribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1226 Author: Diana French, Columnist, Williams Lake Tribune Note: Diana French is a freelance columnist for the Tribune. She is a former Tribune editor, retired teacher, historian, and book author. PRETENDING CAN BE COSTLY We certainly are living in interesting times. (Isn't there a Chinese curse along those lines?) In the last few weeks, Auditor General John Doyle found serious flaws in the management of our forests; B.C. Ombudsperson Kim Carter issued a damning report on senior's care; and provincial court judge Daniel Steinberg said the state of our justice system is "abysmal." This is on top of the ongoing battle between the province and teachers. And that's just on the provincial scene. It's a matter of chickens coming home to roost because many of these issues started with government cutbacks a decade ago. It's going to be costly getting things on track, no doubt about that, but it's just as costly to pretend everything is OK. Health Minister Mike De Jong and Justice Minister Shirley Bond are doing something, but Forest, Lands, and Natural Resources Minister Steve Thomson says the forest goals are being met already. If those goals are to decimate our forests, he may be right. Premier Christy Clark is saying there is no money for any changes. Maybe instead of supporting the fed's proposed Bill C-10, which, among other things, will see mandatory sentences imposed for marijuana offenses (putting even more strain on the justice system) Ms. Clark should be going with the doctors, lawyers, judges, former mayors and attorney generals who are saying it's time to treat marijuana like tobacco and booze, regulate it and tax it. The tax money would go a long way to fill government coffers (instead of drug dealers) and decriminalization would free up the justice system. Sure it's a federal matter, but supporting it might give Ms. Clark a boost in the polls. Question. According to a couple of federal cabinet ministers, citizens who disagree with Conservative programs and policies are foreign-funded environmentalists, terrorists, anti-capitalists, or child-pornographers. What do they call citizens who would decriminalize marijuana. Stoners? - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.