Pubdate: Mon, 11 Jan 1999 Source: Evening Post (New Zealand) Contact: http://www.evpost.co.nz/ Copyright: Wellington Newspapers (1999) Ltd. MPS CAPTURED BY THE PRO-CANNABIS LOBBY The pro-marijuana lobby notched up a significant victory before Christmas when the parliamentary select committee on health recommended that the Government reconsider the illegality of the drug. Though not required to consider the legal status of cannabis - the committee was supposed to concern itself with the mental health effects of the drug - the MPs said traditional crime control methods had not been successful in reducing the apparent number of cannabis users. The effectiveness of current policies on cannabis required examination, given the "high level of use" in New Zealand. Turning to the mental health issues, the committee concluded that the negative mental health effects of cannabis appeared to have been overstated. "Moderate use of the drug does not seem to harm the majority of people though we do not deny the serious impact cannabis may have on certain individuals, particularly those with schizophrenia or those with a vulnerability to psychotic illness." What the committee appears to be saying is that because the cannabis laws appear not to deter users of the drug, the Government should consider relaxing them. Decriminalisation of the drug is one obvious option. The committee appears to have also concluded that because most users are not adversely affected by cannabis, there's no harm in easing prohibitions against its use. But the committee's reasoning is flawed and sloppy. It is saying that because the laws are too hard to enforce, the police should give up - a view with which the police, regrettably, appear to concur. Taking that logic to extremes, it could be argued that rape and murder might as well be decriminalised too; after all, people continue to commit those crimes despite laws against them. And what about speed limits? Should they too he discarded because most people flout them? If the select committee's reasoning on cannabis is valid, why not? The reality, of course, is that laws exist for reasons other than simply to be enforced. A law, even when not rigidly policed, sets a community standard and transmits a message about what is and what isn't acceptable, according to the prevailing standards of society. The mere fact that a law is widely disregarded is not sufficient reason for it to be stricken from the statute books, no matter how much the cannabis-user lobby and its respectable-sounding proxies might argue for it. As for the health argument, it is lazy and complacent for the committee to argue that because the majority of cannabis users are moderate users of the drug and not deleteriously affected by it, the Government should review its legal status. There is overwhelming evidence that the potent cannabis in circulation today has a tragic and devastating effect on some vulnerable users, particularly - but by no means only - adolescents. Moreover many users are unable to restrict their consumption to moderate levels, with devastating consequences for their relationships and employment prospects. If the MPs on the select committee are not aware of these cannabis victims, they have not done their homework adequately. If they are aware of them and have chosen to ignore them, then they don't deserve to be in Parliament. We have said before that two damaging legal drugs - tobacco and alcohol - are quite enough already. New Zealand does not need a third. The select committee on health has done itself and the public a disservice by allowing itself to be captured by pro-cannabis rhetoric. - --- MAP posted-by: Rolf Ernst