News (Media Awareness Project) - CN AB: PUB LTE: Re-think Pot Prohibition |
Title: | CN AB: PUB LTE: Re-think Pot Prohibition |
Published On: | 2004-11-30 |
Source: | Medicine Hat News (CN AB) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 08:28:21 |
RE-THINK POT PROHIBITION
An Open Letter To All Members Of Parliament:
It must be obvious to everyone by now prohibition of cannabis is a colossal
failure, and must de repealed in favour of regulation and taxation at once.
Cannabis is never going to go away, the war on drugs is over, and the
police and government lost. More people grow and use it than ever before,
and the police are so vastly outnumbered they could never catch up. The
only people really winning here are the criminals.
Cannabis is far more popular than prohibition. According to recent NORML
poll results, 53 per cent of Canadians said they support government
regulation of cannabis, compared to 37 per cent who are opposed. When asked
about the hundreds of millions of dollars Canada dedicates to marijuana
enforcement each year, 55 per cent of respondents said that was a poor use
of funds. Only 22 per cent said it was a good use of policing resources.
Considering prohibition is a system that spends nearly $2 billion annually
on enforcement, courts, and corrections, fails to achieve any of its stated
goals, ruins tens of thousands of lives every year, endangers people's
lives, makes cannabis easier for teens to access than alcohol or tobacco,
robs Canadians of their civil rights and civil liberties under the charter,
robs sick and dying Canadians of a valuable source of medicine, robs
Canadians of additional billions in annual potential tax revenue, gives
police far too much power to invade people's privacy, and benefits
organized crime to the tune of untold billions annually. The mild dangers,
if any, do not warrant such extreme measures. Even if cannabis were more
dangerous than alcohol or tobacco, prohibition would still be the wrong way
to go about reducing use, abuse, and harm.
On the other hand, regulation and taxation of cannabis would dry up the
black market, reduce violence and prostitution, create jobs, save billions
every year, generate billions more in annual tax revenue, reduce teen
access to cannabis and free up police resources.
Let's face it, if prohibition were going to work it would have worked by now.
Russell Barth
Ottawa
An Open Letter To All Members Of Parliament:
It must be obvious to everyone by now prohibition of cannabis is a colossal
failure, and must de repealed in favour of regulation and taxation at once.
Cannabis is never going to go away, the war on drugs is over, and the
police and government lost. More people grow and use it than ever before,
and the police are so vastly outnumbered they could never catch up. The
only people really winning here are the criminals.
Cannabis is far more popular than prohibition. According to recent NORML
poll results, 53 per cent of Canadians said they support government
regulation of cannabis, compared to 37 per cent who are opposed. When asked
about the hundreds of millions of dollars Canada dedicates to marijuana
enforcement each year, 55 per cent of respondents said that was a poor use
of funds. Only 22 per cent said it was a good use of policing resources.
Considering prohibition is a system that spends nearly $2 billion annually
on enforcement, courts, and corrections, fails to achieve any of its stated
goals, ruins tens of thousands of lives every year, endangers people's
lives, makes cannabis easier for teens to access than alcohol or tobacco,
robs Canadians of their civil rights and civil liberties under the charter,
robs sick and dying Canadians of a valuable source of medicine, robs
Canadians of additional billions in annual potential tax revenue, gives
police far too much power to invade people's privacy, and benefits
organized crime to the tune of untold billions annually. The mild dangers,
if any, do not warrant such extreme measures. Even if cannabis were more
dangerous than alcohol or tobacco, prohibition would still be the wrong way
to go about reducing use, abuse, and harm.
On the other hand, regulation and taxation of cannabis would dry up the
black market, reduce violence and prostitution, create jobs, save billions
every year, generate billions more in annual tax revenue, reduce teen
access to cannabis and free up police resources.
Let's face it, if prohibition were going to work it would have worked by now.
Russell Barth
Ottawa
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