Pubdate: Wed, 15 Jan 2014 Source: Simcoe Reformer, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2014 Sun Media Contact: http://www.simcoereformer.ca/letters Website: http://simcoereformer.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2386 Author: Monte Sonnenberg THE BUZZ ON THE STREET Things on the marijuana front are moving with lightning speed after decades of inertia. Justin Trudeau, leader of the Liberal Party of Canada, made a bold move last summer when he said he'd like to legalize marijuana. Not long ago, Trudeau would have paid a price for that. Not so today. In fact, there is majority support in Canada for loosening the rules. Trudeau's position hasn't cost him. If anything, he stands to gain. This policy will help voters traditionally torn between the Liberals and New Democrats make up their minds. Conservatives, of course, don't approve. Their leader is a buttoned-down guy. Stephen Harper's asthma aside, marijuana is something a policy wonk like him can't relate to. He was a serious man by the age of 10 and doesn't have a counterculture bone in his body. Harper needs to watch it. He could be on a collision course with historic change. In an apparently lucid moment, Toronto Mayor Rob Ford last week came out in favour of legalizing marijuana. Ford is already on record saying he has smoked lots of marijuana and has confessed to dabbling in crack cocaine. He is at 47% in the polls and is poised for re-election. This would've been inconceivable as recently as five years ago. After spending the last half of 2013 dumping on Trudeau for his views on marijuana, the Conservatives have been singing a different tune in recent weeks. Justice Minister Peter McKay recently said the government is open to a dialogue. Internal polling has that effect on politicians. Further evidence of change came last fall when the states of Washington and Colorado legalized marijuana in referendums. There is talk of relaxing the rules in New York, California, New Hampshire and Alaska. So what has changed? Why is the tide moving in the direction of legalization? First and foremost, there is the Baby Boom. The people who demonized marijuana and brought in laws against it are dead and gone. Meanwhile, the generation that grew up with it doesn't understand what all the fuss is about. They have had enough of the militarization of our police and their hamfisted approach to "the war on drugs." This expensive campaign has given the United States the highest incarceration rate of any country in the free world, much of it marijuana-related. To Boomers, a world that outlaws marijuana while allowing alcohol and tobacco is one that swallows camels while straining at gnats. Besides, now that Boomers are retiring in large numbers, they want the option of smoking marijuana as a means of amusing themselves and whiling away the long hours of idleness ahead. Boomers are selfish. They are immune to concerns that the wider availability of marijuana might stunt the development of young people who will have to support them in their golden years. Canadians are fortunate that we have a decent interval to watch what happens in the U.S. before electing a new government. All we can say with any certainty is that legalizing marijuana will not be an unmitigated good or an unmitigated evil. David Murphy, a member of Norfolk's Police Services Board, summed it up well last week when he said Canadians have a lot of homework to do before taking decisive action. "I don't think we're ready for it yet," he said. "I believe it's something that needs a lot of discussion. The doors are opening but I don't know where this is leading. There are other addictions that society doesn't seem to have a problem with. But I want to see how the issue unfolds in the U.S. before I go into more detail." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D