News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: PUB LTE: Prohibition More Costly Than Drugs Themselves |
Title: | CN BC: PUB LTE: Prohibition More Costly Than Drugs Themselves |
Published On: | 2005-05-06 |
Source: | Abbotsford Times (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-16 14:03:59 |
PROHIBITION MORE COSTLY THAN DRUGS THEMSELVES
The Editor:
Since the 1908 Opium Act in Canada, our government and police have been
trying to eradicate drugs from our culture and there are now more drugs,
more of a variety of drugs, and more desire by more people to use drugs
than ever before.
We know after almost a century of trying, prohibition of drugs is
dangerous, counterproductive and does not work.
Half a trillion dollars and a quarter million Canadians have been wasted in
the last 40 years on efforts that do no more than destroy our families,
friends, neighbours and economy and create victims and criminals out of
decent people.
The plain fact that drugs are illegal costs the individual and society more
than drug use itself. People with serious self-injurious dependencies are
sick; just as sick as someone with cancer or AIDS and in fact, many do have
cancer and AIDS as well.
They are so desperate they may steal from and beat people for money to buy
drugs to ease their pain. Their lives revolve around their next fix because
they need it, just like you and I need food.
If a person with a heroin addiction has access to clean, quality heroin
without committing crimes to get it, everyone is safer.
What is wrong with giving it to them? Seriously.
If we don't, they will find a way to get it anyway. We know that.
Harm reduction models benefit the whole community by providing compassion
and motivation for a person to gain autonomy and develop skills to make
sound choices that contribute to society in a positive way.
I have spent quality time with people who have severe, debilitating drug
problems and I can tell you there is still a person inside somebody's
child, brother, mother or dad.
For me, there is no other way but to offer compassion and support and I am
ashamed that we, as a democracy, are holding people in cages for being sick
and closing down hospitals at the same time.
Carol Gwilt and Don Briere
Abbotsford
The Editor:
Since the 1908 Opium Act in Canada, our government and police have been
trying to eradicate drugs from our culture and there are now more drugs,
more of a variety of drugs, and more desire by more people to use drugs
than ever before.
We know after almost a century of trying, prohibition of drugs is
dangerous, counterproductive and does not work.
Half a trillion dollars and a quarter million Canadians have been wasted in
the last 40 years on efforts that do no more than destroy our families,
friends, neighbours and economy and create victims and criminals out of
decent people.
The plain fact that drugs are illegal costs the individual and society more
than drug use itself. People with serious self-injurious dependencies are
sick; just as sick as someone with cancer or AIDS and in fact, many do have
cancer and AIDS as well.
They are so desperate they may steal from and beat people for money to buy
drugs to ease their pain. Their lives revolve around their next fix because
they need it, just like you and I need food.
If a person with a heroin addiction has access to clean, quality heroin
without committing crimes to get it, everyone is safer.
What is wrong with giving it to them? Seriously.
If we don't, they will find a way to get it anyway. We know that.
Harm reduction models benefit the whole community by providing compassion
and motivation for a person to gain autonomy and develop skills to make
sound choices that contribute to society in a positive way.
I have spent quality time with people who have severe, debilitating drug
problems and I can tell you there is still a person inside somebody's
child, brother, mother or dad.
For me, there is no other way but to offer compassion and support and I am
ashamed that we, as a democracy, are holding people in cages for being sick
and closing down hospitals at the same time.
Carol Gwilt and Don Briere
Abbotsford
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