Pubdate: Wed, 30 Dec 2015 Source: Recorder & Times, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2015 Recorder and Times Contact: http://www.recorder.ca/letters Website: http://www.recorder.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2216 Page: A6 JUST SAY 'NO' TO THE LCBO SELLING POT Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne caused amusement recently when she claimed with a straight face that allowing the Liquor Control Board of Ontario to sell marijuana "makes a lot of sense." Ontarians didn't need to be either high or loaded to slap their thighs at that howler. Thanks to the provincial government's 650 unionized liquor outlets we've paid more, suffered more inconvenience, been offered less choice and punished more for alcohol consumption than any people in the world outside of the Middle East. Only in the blinkered mind of a lifelong denizen of the public sector such as Wynne would it seem appealing and logical to expand a widely-loathed government racket to ruin the enjoyment of another recreational product. According to Wynne, the LCBO has the experience and expertise needed to bring an age-controlled substance to the retail market. Those talents can be tapped, she says, should the federal government deliver on its election promise to legalize sales. The fulfillment of that federal promise remains much in doubt. But let's examine Wynne's idea as though legalization were imminent: Has the LCBO succeeded in keeping liquor out of the hands of minors? Does it please customers? Should its reach be expanded into other areas of Ontario life? Should it be emulated for anything at all? There are no 'yes' answers to any of those questions. However, the LCBO has been enormously successful in bilking billions more in taxes and prices from consumers of alcohol than in any other jurisdiction in the world. It's also been very successful at employing tens of thousands of union members at some of the highest wages in the world for stocking shelves, and producing untold political benefits for the Liberal party beyond the millions in campaign contributions it receives from that aforementioned union. Indeed, the most enthusiastic supporter of Wynne's LCBO idea in the province seems to be OPSEU President Smokey Thomas. He thinks appointing his members official government dope dealers is a wonderful idea. Other than enriching a government, a party and a union that need no further enriching, nothing about the LCBO monopoly is worth admiring or extending to any other aspect of Ontario life. A better answer than the LCBO would be private, non-government retailers not beholden to any political party or union. Pharmacies might be ideal: more widely dispersed, larger, many open 24/7 - and there are several major competing chains. And unlike the LCBO, they're all part of the taxpaying real world. - - Postmedia Network - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom