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Pubdate: Wed, 09 Mar 2005 Source: Winchester Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 Winchester Press Contact: http://www.winchesterpress.on.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2418 Author: Jeff Morris Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) WEED FUNDS KILLERS There are a couple of things about the RCMP grow-op ambush and murders that are disturbing and need to be said. First off, I need to make something clear. I am not a pot smoker. I have never been a pot smoker. I never will be a pot smoker. The closest I have ever come to being stoned involved painkillers after a head injury, a separated shoulder, or after having my wisdom teeth chiseled and manually jackhammered out of my mouth by a sick and cruel dentist. But don't think I'm going high-road on you. I'm not. Weed is just not for me. I say no, and whether other people do or don't is their business, not mine. I try not to judge pot smokers. I have issues with protestors who get stoned and throw bricks and paint at cops. When I worked in the U.S., some of our best graphic designers and creative people were fueled by their daily "4-20." Whatever it takes. But after last week's horrific tragedy in Alberta, my first and initial reaction was that it was time for all of the recreational users out there who fuel the demand for this industry to take a good, hard look in the mirror and ask yourself this one question: Do you have blood on your hands? So many people reacted in so many ways to these awful murders. I strongly disagreed with people who tried to use this tragedy as a reason for why marijuana should be legalized. Would legalizing marijuana end organized crime's involvement in grow-ops? No. As long as there is a secondary or black market for marijuana, there will be organized crime involvement. If it can be sold, it will be grown or stolen. I believe that because I worked in the trading card industry for more than a decade and was involved in having people arrested for forging autographs, theft, fraud and more. Merchandise was stolen from trucks regularly. Even the trucks were stolen. Many companies stopped selling to some retail chains because internal theft could not be controlled. Our industry also saw the remains of a sales executive found in a burned car. The fact that hockey cards, Pokemon cards, Tiger Woods autographs and bobble head dolls were decriminalized didn't stop organized crime putting its stamp on what should have been a fun and innocent business. Personally, I don't think marijuana should be legalized. I am terrified of people getting high and then getting behind the wheel of a car. Our government has allowed the image of marijuana to become trendy and hip. In fact, a recent survey in the daily media reported that kids see tobacco as more dangerous than marijuana. Most say marijuana is less dangerous than alcohol. Marijuana has not been presented to young people as a dangerous drug in the same way tobacco has. Instead, it is cool and accepted. How surreal is it that peanut butter is seen as more of a threat at our schools than dope is. This image has fueled recreational user demand, because people think they aren't doing anything wrong by smoking up. As it turns out, the killer of the RCMP officers was an evil person who set up an ambush. He would have killed officers whether pot was legal or not. It was a terrible tragedy. We should be focusing on the four men tragically killed and their families and why this demented whackjob killer was not dealt with earlier, rather than fooling ourselves into thinking that legalizing pot would eliminate drug-related violence. If you smoke pot, you likely disagree with me, and that's OK. I expect it. Again, I'm not judging you or trying to tell you what's right or wrong and I'm not trying to convince you to agree with my opinion that pot should remain illegal. I'm just asking you a simple question, and it's your own answer to yourself that counts, not what I think. Do you have blood on your hands? - --- MAP posted-by: Derek