News (Media Awareness Project) - CN QU: Column: Drug War Claims Another |
Title: | CN QU: Column: Drug War Claims Another |
Published On: | 2010-05-15 |
Source: | Montreal Gazette (CN QU) |
Fetched On: | 2010-05-18 09:17:09 |
DRUG WAR CLAIMS ANOTHER
The Stupidity and Insanity of Canada's War on Drugs Continue Unabated,
Defying All History, Facts and Plain Common Sense
It's certainly not the worst crime committed in the name of the war on
drugs.
That title probably belongs to the countless innocent people killed in
botched raids. Or the police officers who died in pursuit of the
impossible. Or the lives lost to easily preventable overdoses,
adulterations, and blood-borne diseases. Or the funding handed on a
silver platter to thugs, terrorists, and guerrillas, like those
killing our soldiers in Afghanistan. Or the civil liberties eroded,
the corruption fostered, the chaos spread. Or maybe it belongs to the
hundreds of billions of dollars governments have squandered in a mad,
futile, and destructive crusade.
Next to all that, the extradition of Marc Emery to the United States
is no great travesty.
Emery is the Vancouver activist who has spent most of his life
campaigning for the legalization of marijuana. To fund his efforts, he
ran a little seed company similar to thousands of other little seed
companies except when Emery's seeds were put in soil, watered, and
given sunlight, they grew into cannabis plants.
Showing rare good sense, Canadian officials decided that prosecuting a
man for selling the seeds of a common plant is not a public priority.
In effect, they permitted Emery's business, and others like it, to
operate. Health Canada officials were even known to direct those
licensed to possess medical marijuana to Emery, so patients could grow
their own medicine in the kitchen window.
But such modesty and pragmatism smacks of heresy to the holy warriors
of prohibition. Verily, the plant is evil unto the last seed.
In 2005, Emery was arrested by Canadian police acting at the behest of
the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Innocent Americans had been
lured into purchasing Emery's wicked wares, the DEA alleged.
Emery fought extradition for five years. On Monday, Justice Minister
Rob Nicholson ordered him handed over. Thanks to the insanely punitive
sentencing laws in the Land of the Incarcerated, Emery faced as much
as 20 years. He accepted a plea bargain for five.
Emery argued all along that he was a political target, that the DEA
was out to get him to silence a prominent advocate of marijuana
legalization. One might suspect Emery has delusions of grandeur,
except the DEA issued a press release in which the agency's chief is
quoted saying pretty much exactly what Emery alleges: "Today's DEA
arrest of Marc Scott Emery, publisher of Cannabis Culture Magazine,
and the founder of a marijuana legalization group, is a significant
blow not only to the marijuana trafficking trade in the U.S. and
Canada, but also to the marijuana legalization movement."
Incidentally, the DEA posts all its old press releases on its website
but that release has vanished. There is, however, a different press
release which makes no mention of the legalization movement.
But let's not get distracted by the mendacity of the DEA or the
embarrassing servility of a Canadian government willing to go along
with this farce. Let's stand back and ask the only question worth asking.
What the hell is the point of all this?
Marc Emery will only be the latest of millions upon millions of people
to be imprisoned for possessing or selling marijuana. The cost of this
effort, in liberty and dollars, has been immense. Is it worth it?
Now, please don't wave around this or that study showing marijuana
consumption can elevate this or that risk under certain circumstances.
Of course it can. Marijuana isn't "safe." No drug is. No substance is.
Drink too much fresh water too quickly and it will kill you. Saying
that marijuana isn't safe in no way supports the policy of
criminalization.
What would support criminalization is evidence showing that by putting
nice, tax-paying businessmen like Emery in prison, we so significantly
reduce marijuana consumption and related harms that the benefits of
the policy outweigh the costs. Is there such evidence? I've studied
the issue for more than a decade and I've never seen anything remotely
suggesting this is true. In fact, I've seen plenty of evidence that
criminalization has little or no effect on consumption rates and, ipso
facto, it does nothing to reduce related harms.
What criminalization does do is generate a long list of unintended
consequences, all of them bad. Take the Taliban. It's well known they
fund themselves, in part, by "taxing" opium growers and heroin
traffickers. Less well known is that the Taliban make big money from
Afghanistan's marijuana growers and hashish traffickers - which means
there's a good chance that when a Canadian soldier loses his legs to a
roadside bomb, the components of the bomb and the wages of the man who
planted it were paid for by the black market in marijuana.
There wouldn't be a black market in marijuana if it were legal and
regulated, and the profits of the marijuana trade would go to nice,
tax-paying businessmen like Marc Emery instead of gangsters, goons,
and medieval maniacs. Sounds pretty good, doesn't it? You would think
politicians would at least want to study the issue.
But they won't study it. They won't even talk about it. Wrapped in a
cozy blanket of ignorance and group-think, they're perfectly
comfortable with a policy that funds people who blow the legs off
Canadian soldiers and puts guys like Emery in prison.
This is no ordinary stupidity. It's criminal stupidity. Which is, come
to think of it, probably the worst of the many crimes committed in the
name of the war on drugs.
The Stupidity and Insanity of Canada's War on Drugs Continue Unabated,
Defying All History, Facts and Plain Common Sense
It's certainly not the worst crime committed in the name of the war on
drugs.
That title probably belongs to the countless innocent people killed in
botched raids. Or the police officers who died in pursuit of the
impossible. Or the lives lost to easily preventable overdoses,
adulterations, and blood-borne diseases. Or the funding handed on a
silver platter to thugs, terrorists, and guerrillas, like those
killing our soldiers in Afghanistan. Or the civil liberties eroded,
the corruption fostered, the chaos spread. Or maybe it belongs to the
hundreds of billions of dollars governments have squandered in a mad,
futile, and destructive crusade.
Next to all that, the extradition of Marc Emery to the United States
is no great travesty.
Emery is the Vancouver activist who has spent most of his life
campaigning for the legalization of marijuana. To fund his efforts, he
ran a little seed company similar to thousands of other little seed
companies except when Emery's seeds were put in soil, watered, and
given sunlight, they grew into cannabis plants.
Showing rare good sense, Canadian officials decided that prosecuting a
man for selling the seeds of a common plant is not a public priority.
In effect, they permitted Emery's business, and others like it, to
operate. Health Canada officials were even known to direct those
licensed to possess medical marijuana to Emery, so patients could grow
their own medicine in the kitchen window.
But such modesty and pragmatism smacks of heresy to the holy warriors
of prohibition. Verily, the plant is evil unto the last seed.
In 2005, Emery was arrested by Canadian police acting at the behest of
the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Innocent Americans had been
lured into purchasing Emery's wicked wares, the DEA alleged.
Emery fought extradition for five years. On Monday, Justice Minister
Rob Nicholson ordered him handed over. Thanks to the insanely punitive
sentencing laws in the Land of the Incarcerated, Emery faced as much
as 20 years. He accepted a plea bargain for five.
Emery argued all along that he was a political target, that the DEA
was out to get him to silence a prominent advocate of marijuana
legalization. One might suspect Emery has delusions of grandeur,
except the DEA issued a press release in which the agency's chief is
quoted saying pretty much exactly what Emery alleges: "Today's DEA
arrest of Marc Scott Emery, publisher of Cannabis Culture Magazine,
and the founder of a marijuana legalization group, is a significant
blow not only to the marijuana trafficking trade in the U.S. and
Canada, but also to the marijuana legalization movement."
Incidentally, the DEA posts all its old press releases on its website
but that release has vanished. There is, however, a different press
release which makes no mention of the legalization movement.
But let's not get distracted by the mendacity of the DEA or the
embarrassing servility of a Canadian government willing to go along
with this farce. Let's stand back and ask the only question worth asking.
What the hell is the point of all this?
Marc Emery will only be the latest of millions upon millions of people
to be imprisoned for possessing or selling marijuana. The cost of this
effort, in liberty and dollars, has been immense. Is it worth it?
Now, please don't wave around this or that study showing marijuana
consumption can elevate this or that risk under certain circumstances.
Of course it can. Marijuana isn't "safe." No drug is. No substance is.
Drink too much fresh water too quickly and it will kill you. Saying
that marijuana isn't safe in no way supports the policy of
criminalization.
What would support criminalization is evidence showing that by putting
nice, tax-paying businessmen like Emery in prison, we so significantly
reduce marijuana consumption and related harms that the benefits of
the policy outweigh the costs. Is there such evidence? I've studied
the issue for more than a decade and I've never seen anything remotely
suggesting this is true. In fact, I've seen plenty of evidence that
criminalization has little or no effect on consumption rates and, ipso
facto, it does nothing to reduce related harms.
What criminalization does do is generate a long list of unintended
consequences, all of them bad. Take the Taliban. It's well known they
fund themselves, in part, by "taxing" opium growers and heroin
traffickers. Less well known is that the Taliban make big money from
Afghanistan's marijuana growers and hashish traffickers - which means
there's a good chance that when a Canadian soldier loses his legs to a
roadside bomb, the components of the bomb and the wages of the man who
planted it were paid for by the black market in marijuana.
There wouldn't be a black market in marijuana if it were legal and
regulated, and the profits of the marijuana trade would go to nice,
tax-paying businessmen like Marc Emery instead of gangsters, goons,
and medieval maniacs. Sounds pretty good, doesn't it? You would think
politicians would at least want to study the issue.
But they won't study it. They won't even talk about it. Wrapped in a
cozy blanket of ignorance and group-think, they're perfectly
comfortable with a policy that funds people who blow the legs off
Canadian soldiers and puts guys like Emery in prison.
This is no ordinary stupidity. It's criminal stupidity. Which is, come
to think of it, probably the worst of the many crimes committed in the
name of the war on drugs.
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