HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Legalize Pot, Focus Sights On Crystal Meth
Pubdate: Sat, 13 Aug 2005
Source: Sault Star, The (CN ON)
Copyright: 2005 The Sault Star
Contact:  http://www.saultstar.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1071
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)

LEGALIZE POT, FOCUS SIGHTS ON CRYSTAL METH

Federal officials are signaling the danger of methamphetamine by raising 
penalties for possession, production and trafficking to the same level as 
for cocaine and heroin. Crystal meth needs to be taken seriously, but until 
Ottawa completely overhauls its approach to drugs it's just so much sound 
and fury, signifying nothing.

Announcing the sentence for infractions involving this dangerous drug is 
rising to life imprisonment from 10 years may play well in the media, but 
it will be laughed off the street. Neither Justice Minister Irwin Cotler 
nor Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh could point to any case in which someone 
was convicted to even 10 years, and it's highly unlikely judges will start 
putting pushers in jail for life.

Crystal meth deserves the same level of concern as cocaine and heroin, but 
as some critics quickly observed, "How's that working for you?" Point made. 
Coke and heroin continue to devastate individuals, families and communities 
despite the harsh potential penalties that crystal meth now shares.

Such drivel is only an illusion of action, which officials apparently hope 
will take them off the hook for doing anything real to stop the scourge.

What Canada needs is an all-out assault against such drugs on a broad 
front. Part of that involves legalizing marijuana so scarce police 
resources aren't squandered on pipsqueak diversions while the real killers 
escape largely unmolested.

Dispensing pot through government agencies such as the LCBO would mean it 
was no longer a gateway drug. The millions of Canadians who smoke weed 
currently have nowhere to get it but from criminals, who also push crystal 
meth and other hard drugs or can quickly advise where to get it.

With licensing fees, legalized marijuana would move billions of dollars out 
of the pockets of criminals and into government coffers. That would create 
resources for more policing of hard drugs without making taxpayers dig deeper.

The windfall would also allow greater funding of anti-addiction and other 
social programs, which Dosanjh readily concedes are lacking.

More resources could go to better educating the public about the dangers of 
crystal meth. Currently, such campaigns are compromised because of a 
credibility gap -- users see marijuana dangers as being over-hyped, so 
anything said about crystal meth is regarded as similarly bogus.

The arguments for legalizing pot to better fight hard drugs are so strong 
that Ottawa's failure to move in that direction seems to be due to outside 
pressure. Either it's organized crime, hoping to keep pot illegal to keep 
profits flowing, or it's police agencies -- domestic or American -- nervous 
that their budgets will be slashed if this bogeyman is removed.
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