Pubdate: Thu, 17 May 2012 Source: Surrey Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 Surrey Leader Contact: http://www.surreyleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1236 Author: Ken Cornelis Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v12/n271/a01.html LEGALIZING POT WON'T STOP GANGS Re: "Prohibition won't stop teen pot use." I read with interest Evan Woods' letter in the May 8 edition of The Leader and just had to say something. We hear the same old explanations for legalization all the time - how liquor prohibition didn't work, how gang violence is increasing, how teens seek the "forbidden fruit" and all these points are true, but there are other things to consider. Alcohol and tobacco are currently legal and regulated and yet teens do seek them out along with pot. If pot was regulated then the use would continue, but using Woods' argument about forbidden fruit, you would see a definite increase in the use of other drugs. Legalizing drugs like meth or ecstasy cannot happen because they are in fact dangerous chemical cocktails and so should remain illegal. Gangs by the way did not put down their guns and violence when alcohol prohibition ended, did they? Even if all drugs were legal, gangs would still be around making money on gambling scams, extortion, human trafficking, identity theft, etc. They would just ramp up these other things to make up for lost profits in pot sales. The way things are now, simple possession is ignored unless it is for dealing, and dealers are criminalized. This is how it should be. Many voices are calling for the legalization of pot. One wonders, are these people on drugs? Ken Cornelis, Surrey - --- MAP posted-by: Matt