HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Legalize Pot, a Key Drug Fuelling Gang Wars
Pubdate: Mon, 12 Nov 2007
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2007 The Vancouver Sun
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Ian Mulgrew, Vancouver Sun
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

LEGALIZE POT, A KEY DRUG FUELLING GANG WARS

Policy of Prohibition Only Helps Organized Crime Pocket the Profits 
 From a Multi-Billion Dollar Industry

Simon Fraser University economist Stephen Easton said it best -- 
marijuana is the low-hanging fruit for organized crime.

The rise of gangs in this province is due primarily to the immense 
profits to be had from B.C. bud.

It is another reason the war on drugs should be abandoned as a failure.

The growth of the massive provincial marijuana industry is a study in 
market dynamics and real-life supply and demand economics.

It had distinct phases, from the initial rich kids who arrived with a 
couple of keys, to the days of trans-oceanic smuggling operations 
involving tons of dope, to today's mature home-grown industry.

The rise of the gangs has accompanied and been driven by the 
revolution in indoor-growing technology accompanied by the 
development of marijuana-specific breeding and nutrient regimes.

Today, with a little knowledge, a small investment and a bit of 
nerve, anyone can get into the marijuana game.

The more money we have poured into criminal law-enforcement, the more 
the pot business has flourished, and the more the violence that 
accompanies its black market has proliferated.

The profitability of pot ensures that even if we catch more and more 
people, there's always a lineup of eager new recruits.

Look at the thriving above-ground marijuana-driven economy -- the 
plethora of local hydroponic supply stores, nutrient suppliers, head 
shops, smoking lounges, tea-rooms, seed companies and bong emporiums. 
If the numbers Easton has generated in his research into the 
subterranean market are correct, pot rivals forestry as our most 
valuable agricultural product.

After more than a quarter century of the U.S.-led jihad against dope, 
it's easier for our children to score a dime bag than a pack of 
smokes. That's wrong.

Pot is a multi-billion-dollar industry and organized crime is its 
biggest beneficiary.

Cannabis in my view is a primary reason we are plagued by gangs. 
Cocaine and other illegal drugs play a role, but pot generates much, 
much more money. It is indeed the low-hanging fruit plucked by 
everyone regardless of ethnic heritage.

And there are many, many, many more marijuana consumers compared with 
users of other illicit substances, which tend to be niche markets.

The widespread illicit activity associated with cannabis production 
and the bucketloads of cash that come with it have created the 
environment for the current gang war in the Lower Mainland. The cash 
flow from pot pays for flashy cars, nightclub romps, retina-slamming 
wardrobes, guns, attitude... The number of people involved in the 
cannabis industry is regularly pegged at upwards of 150,000, making 
marijuana one of the province's biggest employers.

I believe it's obvious the criminal prohibition isn't working.

A new approach is needed and I think we should legalize marijuana as 
one element in our fight against violence and gangsterism.

There are many benefits of adopting a new regulatory model instead of 
using the Criminal Code to deal with cannabis.

Legalization would allow us to better control access to pot (the 
liquor store checks ID; the corner dealer doesn't) and do a better 
job of keeping it out of the hands of our children.

We could offer more effective anti-drug education in our schools by 
abandoning myth-driven programs that demonize cannabis.

We could better address health concerns about recreational use 
without threatening smokers with criminal prosecution and incarceration.

We could redirect the enormous legal and law-enforcement resources 
now aimed at pot towards true social evils such as 
people-trafficking, robbery, violence...

Legalization also would seriously injure organized crime.

It would throw many of those involved in the underground economy out of work.

No one would grow pot in their basement or attic if it were regulated 
in the same fashion as tobacco or alcohol. So say goodbye to 
grow-rips and the dangers posed to neighbourhoods by the current 
guerrilla gardeners.

Similarly, no one will be down on the corner if nearby there's a 
liquor-store equivalent offering various cannabis products to adults 
as if they were locally produced wines.

As Senator Larry Campbell has been saying for years now, taxes from 
legalized pot could be directed to health, education and law enforcement.

Let's stop giving the money to thugs.

Legalization will not eliminate criminal gangs.

They have their fingers in many pies -- extortion, kidnapping, fraud, 
armed robbery... But legalization will staunch the most lucrative 
income stream fuelling organized crime and the gangsta lifestyle.

The end of the alcohol Prohibition sapped the strength of North 
American organized crime until after the Second World War.

Legalizing marijuana would have a similar effect -- and go a long way 
toward eliminating our present problems. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake