News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: Editorial: Our Laws Go To Pot |
Title: | CN ON: Editorial: Our Laws Go To Pot |
Published On: | 2005-03-05 |
Source: | Toronto Sun (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-16 21:49:00 |
OUR LAWS GO TO POT
The Liberals' suck and blow approach to enforcing our marijuana laws,
quite frankly, sucks.
Suddenly Jean Chretien's jokes about taking up pot smoking once the
Liberals decriminalized it don't seem so funny, do they?
Remember what our former prime minister said -- while he still had the
job -- as the Liberal faithful laughed with delight?
"Perhaps I will try it when it will no longer be criminal. I will have
my money for my fine and a joint in the other hand."
Terrific. How the hell were the police supposed to crack down on
grow-ops when the leader of the country was making "nudge, nudge,
wink, wink" jokes about the illegal product they produce?
This isn't about the morality of smoking pot.
It's about the contradictory messages the Liberals stuck our police
forces with, which continues under Paul Martin.
And it's about the Liberals' soft approach to all crime.
On the one hand, they say the want the police to crack down on illegal
grow-ops, without giving them either the financial or legal resources
they need to do the job. On the other, through their plan to
decriminalize marijuana, they're telling the public it's no big deal
to buy the product those grow-ops produce.
We warned the Liberals these mixed messages would lead to disaster. A
disaster that, as it turns out, has broken Canada's heart.
In a six-part series last December, we pointed out that for all the
Liberals' jokes about smoking pot, grow-ops were a
multi-billion-dollar business run by vicious criminals and gangs.
That Canada's proximity to the United States would always generate a
huge demand for illegal pot, regardless of whether it was
decriminalized or legalized here.
We produced 10 specific, doable measures that all levels of government
could immediately enact to eliminate grow-ops.
We argued for mandatory minimum sentences with no chance of parole for
growing and trafficking offences, not a maximum sentence of 14 years
which the Liberals have proposed. Maximum sentences don't work because
judges don't impose them.
We quoted experts who warned grow-ops were a "ticking time bomb" in
terms of the risk to public safety and human health.
We noted as few as one in 100 grow-op operators goes to
jail.
The Liberals went right on laughing .
Which brings us to our final point.
There are many disturbing aspects to the murder of these four young
RCMP officers that have nothing to do with grow-ops.
They have to do with why James Roszko, a gun-loving, sadistic maniac
described by his own father as "the devil," with a long history of
violent, criminal and drug-induced behaviour, was even walking the
streets. Neighbours living close to his Alberta farm described him as
"dangerous," and "on the edge." He shot at passersby. He had spikes at
the end of his driveway.
He was known to police. He was also known to hate the RCMP, which
raises the question of why four young cops, one of them with two weeks
on the job, were sent to deal with him.
In short, Roszko was just the kind of thug who routinely takes
advantage of our lax justice system, headed up by a Liberal government
for whom law and order has never been a priority.
A Calgary cop -- Staff Sgt. Birnie Smith of the Southern Alberta
Marijuana Investigative Team -- said it best yesterday.
Maybe it takes something as terrible as the cold-blooded murder of
four young policemen to finally wake us up.
To finally make us angry enough to hold this Liberal government to
account for its woeful record on law and order, and to finally --
finally -- finally, make the Liberals pay a price for it.
The Liberals' suck and blow approach to enforcing our marijuana laws,
quite frankly, sucks.
Suddenly Jean Chretien's jokes about taking up pot smoking once the
Liberals decriminalized it don't seem so funny, do they?
Remember what our former prime minister said -- while he still had the
job -- as the Liberal faithful laughed with delight?
"Perhaps I will try it when it will no longer be criminal. I will have
my money for my fine and a joint in the other hand."
Terrific. How the hell were the police supposed to crack down on
grow-ops when the leader of the country was making "nudge, nudge,
wink, wink" jokes about the illegal product they produce?
This isn't about the morality of smoking pot.
It's about the contradictory messages the Liberals stuck our police
forces with, which continues under Paul Martin.
And it's about the Liberals' soft approach to all crime.
On the one hand, they say the want the police to crack down on illegal
grow-ops, without giving them either the financial or legal resources
they need to do the job. On the other, through their plan to
decriminalize marijuana, they're telling the public it's no big deal
to buy the product those grow-ops produce.
We warned the Liberals these mixed messages would lead to disaster. A
disaster that, as it turns out, has broken Canada's heart.
In a six-part series last December, we pointed out that for all the
Liberals' jokes about smoking pot, grow-ops were a
multi-billion-dollar business run by vicious criminals and gangs.
That Canada's proximity to the United States would always generate a
huge demand for illegal pot, regardless of whether it was
decriminalized or legalized here.
We produced 10 specific, doable measures that all levels of government
could immediately enact to eliminate grow-ops.
We argued for mandatory minimum sentences with no chance of parole for
growing and trafficking offences, not a maximum sentence of 14 years
which the Liberals have proposed. Maximum sentences don't work because
judges don't impose them.
We quoted experts who warned grow-ops were a "ticking time bomb" in
terms of the risk to public safety and human health.
We noted as few as one in 100 grow-op operators goes to
jail.
The Liberals went right on laughing .
Which brings us to our final point.
There are many disturbing aspects to the murder of these four young
RCMP officers that have nothing to do with grow-ops.
They have to do with why James Roszko, a gun-loving, sadistic maniac
described by his own father as "the devil," with a long history of
violent, criminal and drug-induced behaviour, was even walking the
streets. Neighbours living close to his Alberta farm described him as
"dangerous," and "on the edge." He shot at passersby. He had spikes at
the end of his driveway.
He was known to police. He was also known to hate the RCMP, which
raises the question of why four young cops, one of them with two weeks
on the job, were sent to deal with him.
In short, Roszko was just the kind of thug who routinely takes
advantage of our lax justice system, headed up by a Liberal government
for whom law and order has never been a priority.
A Calgary cop -- Staff Sgt. Birnie Smith of the Southern Alberta
Marijuana Investigative Team -- said it best yesterday.
Maybe it takes something as terrible as the cold-blooded murder of
four young policemen to finally wake us up.
To finally make us angry enough to hold this Liberal government to
account for its woeful record on law and order, and to finally --
finally -- finally, make the Liberals pay a price for it.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...