HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html
Pubdate: Tue, 13 Jan 2004 Source: Barrie Examiner (CN ON) Copyright: 2004, Osprey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.thebarrieexaminer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2317 PROHIBITION DIDN'T WORK THE FIRST TIME A century ago, our society was struggling with the evils of drug addiction. The struggle was intensely defined in Orillia, a rough lumber town north of Barrie trying to find its way to respectability at the turn of the 20th century. The drug was alcohol. The local newspaper played a significant role in shaping debate and, eventually, alcohol policy on a local level. It took a strong "dry" position on the subject. The effects were lasting. A person had trouble buying a drink in Orillia until the 1960s. Moved by the social toll alcohol addiction was taking on society and prompted by fervent, well-organized campaigns to make alcohol a banned substance, governments in North America experimented with prohibition. It didn't work. It was unpopular and ineffective. What's worse, it gave organized crime a new lease on life - empires were built on the illegal trade of alcohol. Gradually, governments gave up on all-out prohibition. Over the years, a tolerable way of dealing with alcohol evolved. Controlled sources, age limitations, strict laws about behaviour involving drunkenness - all of these innovations have brought the beast under some control, though it continues to wreak havoc and cause social damage. It seems to be a reasonable, if, at times, uncomfortable balance between altruism and basic human frailties. This past weekend, two huge marijuana-growing operations were exposed by police. One right on Highway 11 in Oro-Medonte Township, the other at the former Molson brewery in Barrie. The scale and audacity of the operations is shocking. It may also be a wake-up call. Such operations are continuing unabated, despite more and more police resources being thrown into the mix. The police will shut these two huge operations down, only to have them pop up somewhere else. And the trend is to bigger operations, not smaller ones. There are no easy answers on decriminalizing pot. Yet we're beginning to wonder if police and governments aren't just playing out the same old prohibitionist scenario. After having spent billions of taxpayers' dollars in ineffective enforcement and inadvertently providing a business base for organized crime that rivals that of the rum-running barons of the early 20th century, will we eventually arrive at the same place when it comes to pot: controlled sources, age limitations and strict laws governing behaviour? As a society, we need to look at the lessons of prohibition, weigh the disadvantages of decriminalization and legalization against organized crime, examine the health and social implications of the various avenues open to us and abandon the hypocritical view of alcohol as the only "acceptable" drug. Until we iron out these difficult issues, expect a parade of ever-larger growing operations chased by increasingly expensive and ineffective police agencies at a huge cost to the taxpayer - while other, more important societal problems remain underfunded and ignored. Those most opposed to decriminalizing and legalizing marijuana might be the criminals who grow and deal the stuff. It would be terrible for business. It seems to be a reasonable, if, at times, uncomfortable balance between altruism and basic human frailties. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake