News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: LTE: Seed Seller and Senator Stir the Pot in the Debate About Illegal Dru |
Title: | CN BC: LTE: Seed Seller and Senator Stir the Pot in the Debate About Illegal Dru |
Published On: | 2008-01-28 |
Source: | Vancouver Sun (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-29 20:29:18 |
SEED SELLER AND SENATOR STIR THE POT IN THE DEBATE ABOUT ILLEGAL DRUGS
I'm tired of hearing from pro-drug/legalization activists about the
mythical "war on drugs." There's no such thing in Canada -- or even in
the U.S.
Just keep repeating a myth or a lie long enough and it becomes a
truth. The only real "war on drugs" is in Singapore, Sweden and a few
other places, and it has been totally successful.
The drug anarchy in the Downtown Eastside proves there's no war going
on; no one dares hurt the feelings of addicts and dealers.
We don't do tough love; we give candies to a sugar-addicted diabetic,
hoping he'll kick the addiction voluntarily. That's why we dare not
copy Sweden, but choose the non-solution Insite as a solution.
If China had not cracked down on opium in the past, there'd now be
thousands of opium dens and Insites like fast-food franchises -- and
hundreds of Downtown Eastsides over there.
Legalization? Criminals say: Bring it on (please); it'd make our jobs
so much easier.
D. L. Inge
Vancouver
I'm tired of hearing from pro-drug/legalization activists about the
mythical "war on drugs." There's no such thing in Canada -- or even in
the U.S.
Just keep repeating a myth or a lie long enough and it becomes a
truth. The only real "war on drugs" is in Singapore, Sweden and a few
other places, and it has been totally successful.
The drug anarchy in the Downtown Eastside proves there's no war going
on; no one dares hurt the feelings of addicts and dealers.
We don't do tough love; we give candies to a sugar-addicted diabetic,
hoping he'll kick the addiction voluntarily. That's why we dare not
copy Sweden, but choose the non-solution Insite as a solution.
If China had not cracked down on opium in the past, there'd now be
thousands of opium dens and Insites like fast-food franchises -- and
hundreds of Downtown Eastsides over there.
Legalization? Criminals say: Bring it on (please); it'd make our jobs
so much easier.
D. L. Inge
Vancouver
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