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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: Column: Heroin Is Never 'Safe'
Title:CN ON: Column: Heroin Is Never 'Safe'
Published On:2006-08-24
Source:Toronto Sun (CN ON)
Fetched On:2008-01-13 05:10:13
HEROIN IS NEVER 'SAFE'

VANCOUVER -- The big question in this town is whether or not the
federal Tories will renew the drug law exemption to keep the "safe"
injection site in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside up and running. It's
the same kind of taxpayer-funded drug den that's being considered for Toronto.

The leftists -- including three former Vancouver mayors -- are all
out in full force. Some of these people are against junk food in
schools, but if little Johnny wants to pump some junk into his arm,
they'll gladly use mom and dad's tax money to help him find a vein.
I'm starting to think that the only way to get lefties to stop
pushing for legalization of hardcore drugs is to get big corporations
like Halliburton or Pepsi to start making crack and heroin.

The mayors say that "scientific data" proves the clinic is a success.
Of course it does. Aren't the people doing the research the same ones
who will be out of work if the clinic shuts down? It's like saying,
"a survey of McDonald's employees proves that McDonald's makes the
best cheeseburgers in the world."

We keep hearing that the clinic "saves lives." This injection site is
so "safe" that hundreds of addicts have overdosed right inside the
clinic since it opened in 2003. They then head out into the tourist
district to shoot up some more and score drug money.

The province had to pass a Safe Streets Act to combat aggressive
panhandling. Now, further measures are being considered, including
limiting "napping in the street" to 10 minutes or less.

Heroin doesn't exactly give people that get-up-and-go feeling. You
can't have both a junkie haven and nap-free streets.

We're also hearing how these clinics have "reduced crime."

That's a stretch. A comparative analysis of the Vancouver Police
crime data for January through July of the years 2004 and 2006
(limited to these months because 2006 isn't over yet) reveals that in
the Central Business District, which includes the Downtown Eastside,
assault has actually increased by 38%, robbery by 27%, theft has
stayed the same (5,191 instances in 2004 versus 5,177 in 2006), and
break-ins have decreased by a mere 14%.

These rising crime stats exist despite the fact that, as a police
source told me, "The cops are so busy they do not report their work
correctly, as they can't ever follow up on all the cases. Certain
crimes get 'written off' in order to survive the workload. The result
is a public that loses faith in the system and stop reporting crimes,
as nothing is ever done. Hence the 'reduction' in crime."

Shooting heroin for "health" is like having sex for "virginity." If I
set up a Big Mac binge clinic, and people come in and stuff their
face under my watchful eye, it doesn't mean that it's safe or
healthy. And after they leave, they're going to go home and raid the
fridge. What they really need is Weight Watchers, not semantic re-jigging.

Likewise, when addicts show up at Insite, Vancouver's taxpayer-funded
heroin shooting gallery, they should be arrested for possession and
put into a mandatory detox program.

Either that, or safe-injection cheerleaders like Toronto's Stephen
Lewis, or any one of these three former Vancouver mayors, can apply
to have Prime Minister Steve Harper declare their family home a legal
drug den and personally help each addict overdose their way to good health.
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